Secrets of the Monastery Scriptoriums:
Creation of Manuscripts
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Medieval monastic scriptoria were sophisticated production centers where monks created handwritten books for over a thousand years. These workshops became the foundation of Western literary culture, preserving and transmitting the ancient heritage and Christian texts to posterity.
Scriptoria functioned as highly organized industries with a clear division of labor, specialized technologies for the production of parchment and ink, and unique methods of copying and decorating manuscripts.
2 Organization of work and division of duties
3 Materials and production technologies
4 Architectural features of scriptoria
5 The process of creating a manuscript
6 Regional centers and features
7 The decline of monastic scriptoria
8 The legacy of monastic scriptoria
History of the emergence and development of scriptoria
The first European scriptoria appeared in the sixth and seventh centuries in southern Italy, France, Ireland, and Spain. The rise of monastic institutions in the early sixth century defined European literary culture and selectively preserved the literary history of the West. Monks copied Jerome’s Latin Vulgate and the commentaries of the early Church Fathers for missionary purposes and for use within the monastery.

The term "scriptorium" comes from the Latin word "scriptor", meaning a scribe or copyist. The scriptorium was understood not so much as a separate room within the monastery, but rather the process of producing manuscripts. Until the 8th century, copyists did the work on their knees, then, judging by iconographic data, at tables.
The era of Charlemagne was a period of flourishing scriptoria. The scriptorium of the Tours monastery of Saint Martin, whose abbot was Alcuin, enjoyed the greatest fame. This period was marked by the standardization of Carolingian minuscule and the active copying of both religious and secular texts.
Until the 13th century, books were copied exclusively by monks. Some of them even worked "on the side", extracting a certain profit. Copying manuscripts still seems to be the most typical daily work of monks, although their activities were not limited to this type of occupation.
Organization of work and division of duties
Scriptoria most often had a division of labor, with close collaboration between monks who prepared the parchment, marked out the lines for the writing space, copied the text, and painted decorative initials, borders, and miniatures. In the copying process, there was a clear division of labor between the monks who prepared the parchment for copying by smoothing and chalking the surface, those who marked the parchment and copied the text, and those who illuminated the text.
Illuminators worked in collaboration with scribes in complex interactions that preclude a simple understanding of monastic manuscript production. Sometimes a single monk handled all these stages of manuscript preparation. Monastic production provided a valuable medium of exchange.
A monk would copy three, five, six sheets of quarto format per day. Work in scriptoria was considered pleasing to God and honorable. From the point of view of Peter the Venerable, copying was the most useful work, as it allowed the hermit to “grow the fruits of the spirit and knead the dough for the heavenly bread of the soul.”
Not all monks could write, and not all had legible handwriting and good eyesight for long hours of work. However, the art of writing was much more widespread among monastics than in the world. Even nuns could write, since they said: she is destined to become a nun, since she can sing and read well.
Specialization and professional roles
Scribes, translators, bookbinders, editors, artists, parchment makers, and jewelers worked on the book. Laymen also helped the monks. Since the 13th century, laymen and clergy have also begun to copy books.
Each type of handwriting used in the scriptorium may have been unique to a particular monastery and then practiced in the houses founded by that monastery. Each letter and each contraction of a word consisted of a deliberate sequence of strokes — the "ductus" of that letter or contraction. The shape, direction, and order of the strokes were determined by the chosen style of writing.
Materials and production technologies
Making parchment
Most medieval manuscripts were written on specially treated animal skins called parchment or vellum, which were considered more durable and slightly elastic. The skins were first soaked in a lime solution to loosen the fur. After the fur was removed, the skin was stretched, scraped, and stretched again while still damp.
As the skins dried, the craftsman adjusted the tension so that the skins remained taut. This cycle of scraping and stretching was repeated over several days until the desired thickness was achieved. According to Theophilus, the production of parchment involved the following steps: the raw skins were thoroughly washed with water, then soaked for several days.
The hides were placed in a mixture of slaked lime and water for eight days (sixteen days in winter). After the hair was removed, the hides were soaked again in a mixture of slaked lime and water for the same amount of time. This was followed by another wash and a two-day soak in water. The skins were then attached to a drying frame and stretched evenly at the edges.
Production of ink and writing instruments
Making everyday objects in the Middle Ages often took a lot of time and effort. If you needed ink, for example, and had to make it yourself, it could take weeks before you could dip your quill into the inkwell. Several methods of making ink in the Middle Ages are known, as instructions for making them have survived.
An early 12th-century prescription by Theophilus Presbyter called for cutting hawthorn wood in April or May before the flowers or leaves appeared, gathering it into small bunches, and leaving it in the shade for two, three, or four weeks until completely dry. Then, using wooden mallets, these thorns were pounded on a hard piece of wood until the bark was completely stripped off, which was immediately placed in a barrel of water.
After filling two, three, four or five barrels with bark and water, they were left to stand for eight days until the water had drawn all the juice out of the bark. This water was then placed in a very clean pot or cauldron, placed on the fire and heated. From time to time, a little bark was added to the pot to boil off any juice left in it.
There were two different types of ink. In the scriptorium, ink was stored in ink horns. Quite a few medieval recipes for making ink have survived. A scribe could not write without a pot of ink. The container was portable, presumably with a screw cap, and was attached by a cord to an oblong pencil case.
Preparing materials for writing
Not all medieval manuscripts were written on parchment. The Middle Ages retained a long legacy of papyrus production. The word papyrus refers to a thick type of paper made from the pith of the papyrus plant. Until the 7th or 8th century, this fragile Egyptian reed made an inexpensive material suitable for written scrolls, but was not sufficient for texts bound into books.
Papyrus pages tended to break off when turned over repeatedly, and the folds were not strong enough to withstand the constant pressure of sewing threads on the spine. Papyrus, which was not durable, was usually made in the form of a scroll.
Architectural features of scriptoria
Due to the widespread destruction of monastic buildings during the Dissolution of the Monasteries, it is difficult to say with certainty what a typical scriptorium looked like. However, surviving rooms once used for writing provide some clues, as does fragmentary contemporary evidence such as architectural plans.
Walter Horn and Ernst Born’s study of the surviving plan of the monastery of St. Gallen provides an idea of the optimal layout of the scriptorium. Seven desks for scribes are located along the north and east walls; seven windows located between these desks provide the scribes with sufficient light. In the center of the room is a large rectangular piece of furniture measuring two by three meters.
It is logical to interpret this as a table with shelves underneath for storing books during the copying process. Along the western and southern walls of the room are wall benches that provided seats for overseers and a resting place for scribes. The writing desks were one meter by one meter. Thus, seven monks could work at the same time at comfortable tables in ideal light conditions.
The most important part of a scriptorium was its ability to transmit light. The stunningly intricate and minute letterforms and precision of illumination in many manuscripts show how important it was for scribes to work in well-lit conditions. The scriptorium in St. Gallen was ideally positioned facing east to make the most of the morning light.
In some religious houses, such as the former Abbey of St Peter in Gloucester – now Gloucester Cathedral – manuscript production took place within the cloisters. Each monk sat in a carrel, a niche containing a table at which he could work. One can certainly point to the extensive collection of manuscripts from the abbey as evidence of a concerted programme of scribal activity, but there is no evidence of a separate, purpose-built writing room.
The process of creating a manuscript
Preparatory stages
The stages of making a medieval manuscript consisted of parchment making, writing, and binding. The sheets were cut from parchment, and each book of sheets might require more than one skin. If a luxury Bible was being made, thousands of sheets might be needed.
The sheets were folded into bifolia (Latin for two sheets or pages). The sheets were pierced as guides for marking, using a knife or other metal point. The sheets were marked with dry point (using a sharpened stylus) or lead point. The markings determined the position, number, and spacing of lines of text on the folio (page or sheet).
If the customer was feeling generous, they would leave nice big margins and lots of space between the lines. Bifolia were collected into a book or quire. Quires often consisted of four bifolia (called quaternions), making eight folios. Books were made up of multiple quires folded and sewn together.
Writing techniques and materials
The quill may have been a goose quill, and may have been obtained from the lakeshore in late summer when the geese were moulting. The wing from which the quill was taken mattered: the right wing produced feathers that curved towards the scribe. The tip of the quill was cut at an angle, creating a characteristic wedge shape that gave different thicknesses to the ascending and descending strokes.
A quill was prepared, which could have been a goose feather and could have been obtained from the lakeshore in late summer when they moult. A feather from the bird’s right wing was better suited to right-handed people, as it naturally curved toward the scribe’s hand. The quill was sharpened with a special knife, a penknife, which created a split point that allowed the flow of ink to be controlled.
Most trained calligraphers used either gouache or stick ink. Both are pigmented with binders. The water added to them served only to transport the pigment to where it was needed. Once the water evaporated, the binder bound the pigments together and bonded them to the support, in this case parchment. This ensured archival quality.
Regional centers and features
Among the most famous monasteries with developed scriptoria were the twin monasteries of Wearmouth and Jarrow in north-east England (home of the Venerable Bede), St Martin of Tours in France, Santo Domingo de Silos in northern Spain, and Monte Cassino in southern Italy. Styles of binding varied as much as styles of writing and decoration, each depending on its geographical location and period of production.
In the early Middle Ages, the type of handwriting used in the scriptorium may have been unique to a particular monastery and then practiced in the houses founded by the monastery. Some handwritings were definitely cursive or runny, with strokes connecting letters in interlocking patterns.
Comparisons of characteristic regional, periodic, and contextual handwriting styles do reveal social and cultural connections between them, as new handwritings were developed and spread by traveling people, according to what these people represented, and by the examples of manuscripts that passed from one monastery to another.
Reformation movements and their influence
High Medieval monastic communities seeking institutional renewal had a number of strategies at their disposal. One of the most common was the revival (or creation) of a scriptorium, expanding book production, and increasing the community’s repertoire of texts to revitalize its cultural life.
Scholars have often targeted such moments of textual production as a way to understand the practices and ideology of reform. For the 11th and 12th centuries, studies have often focused on the texts copied during this period, particularly the renewed commitment to patristic texts, monastic classics, and biblical texts.
In recent decades, scholars have also paid more attention to the material matrices of these texts, examining format, decoration, and layout as evidence of the roles that manuscripts played in the renewal of monastic culture. In material terms, some of the most characteristic artifacts of the monastic revivals between 1000 and 1150 were the large-format, lectern-sized pandects, often called “giant Bibles.”
The decline of monastic scriptoria
From the 13th century onwards, scriptoria fell into decline. Book production began to be taken over by urban artisans. As cities grew and book production passed into the hands of artisans, scriptoria lost their importance. By the late Middle Ages, secular manuscript workshops had become commonplace, and many monasteries bought more books than they produced themselves.
Increasingly, lay scribes and illuminators from outside the monastery also assisted the church scribes. The monastic communities that produced these enormous manuscripts often did so as part of reform programs. These giant Bibles served not only liturgical purposes, but also symbolized the spiritual renewal and cultural prestige of the monastery.
The shift from monastic to secular book production reflected broader changes in medieval society. The rise of universities, increasing lay literacy, and the development of urban culture created a new demand for books that monastic scriptoria could no longer meet. Commercial workshops could work faster and produce books in greater quantities.
The legacy of monastic scriptoria
Monastic scriptoria left an indelible mark on Western culture. They preserved and transmitted the classical heritage of antiquity, laying the foundation for the intellectual revival of the late Middle Ages. The techniques developed in scriptoria — from parchment making to calligraphic styles — continued to be used centuries after their decline.
The products of the monasteries provided a valuable medium of exchange and facilitated cultural ties between different regions of Europe. Manuscripts traveled between monasteries, spreading not only texts but also artistic styles, technical innovations, and intellectual ideas. This process of cultural exchange laid the foundations for the formation of a pan-European intellectual tradition.
Before the advent of movable type for printing in the mid-15th century, books produced in Western Europe were planned, written, decorated, and bound by hand. For much of the Middle Ages, beginning in late antiquity, the centers of book production were located in monastic scriptoria, where monks labored to produce books as part of their daily religious duties.
Scriptoria functioned as sophisticated production centers that combined spiritual practice and technical skill. Monks copied texts, thereby preserving and interpreting cultural heritage, creating works of art that served religious, educational, and aesthetic purposes. Their work required not only literacy but also deep knowledge of material making, calligraphy, and artistic design.