- Sir Robert Cotton, 1st Baronet, of Connington
Sir Robert Bruce Cotton, 1st Baronet (
22 January 1570/1 –6 May 1631 ) was an Englishpolitician , founder of the famousCotton library .He was of a
Huntingdonshire parentage and educated atWestminster School , where he became interested in antiquarian studies underWilliam Camden , andJesus College, Cambridge (B.A. 1585). Starting with hisantiquarian notes on the local history of Huntingdonshire, he began to amass a library, in which the documents rivalled, then surpassed the officialPublic Record Office collections. He entered theParliament of England as a member forHuntingdon in 1601. He helped devise the institution of the title "baronet " as a means for KingJames I of England to raise funds. Despite his early period of goodwill with James I, during which he was made a baronet, Cotton's politics, based on his immersion in the documents, was essentially that "sacred obligation of the king to put his trust in parliaments" expressed in his published "The Dangers wherein the Kingdom now standeth, and the Remedye" (1628), which from the Court party's point-of-view was anti-royalist in nature; the authorities began to fear the uses being made of his library to support parliamentarian arguments: it was confiscated in 1630 and returned only after his death to his heirs.The Cottonian Library was the richest private collection of
manuscripts ever amassed; of secular libraries it outranked the Royal library, the collections of theInns of Court and theCollege of Arms ; Cotton's house near thePalace of Westminster became the meeting-place of theSociety of Antiquaries and of all the eminent scholars of England ("DNB "); it was eventually donated to the nation by Cotton's grandson and now resides at theBritish Library .The physical arrangement of Cotton's Library continues to be reflected in citations to manuscripts once in his possession. His library was housed in a room convert|26|ft|m long by six feet wide filled with
bookpress es, each with the bust of a figure fromclassical antiquity on top. Counterclockwise, these are catalogued as Julius (i.e., Julius Caesar), Augustus, Cleopatra, Faustina,Tiberius ,Caligula ,Claudius ,Nero ,Galba ,Otho ,Vitellius ,Vespasian ,Titus , andDomitian . (Domitian had only one shelf, perhaps because it was over the door.) Manuscripts are now designated by library, bookpress, and number: for example, the manuscript of "Beowulf " is designated "Cotton Vitellius A.xv", and the manuscript of "Pearl" is "Cotton Nero A.x".elected manuscripts
*Cotton Julius A.x "Old English Martyrology"
*Cotton Augustus II.106 "Magna Carta : Exemplification of 1215"
*Cotton Cleopatra A.ii "Life of St Modwenna"
*Cotton Faustina A.x "Additional Glosses to the Glossary in lfric's Grammar"
*Cotton Tiberius B.v "Labour of the Months"
*Cotton Caligula A.ii "A Pistil of Susan" (frag.)
*Cotton Claudius B.iv "Genesis"
*Cotton Nero A.x. "Pearl", "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight "
*Cotton Nero D.iv "Lindisfarne Gospels "
*Cotton Galba A.xviii "Athelstan Psalter"
*Cotton Otho C.i lfric's "De creatore et creatura"
*Cotton Vitellius A.xv "Beowulf ", "Judith"
*Cotton Vespasian D.xiv lfric's "De duodecim abusivis"
*Cotton Titus D.xxvi "lfwine's Prayerbook"
*Cotton Domitian A.viii "Anglo-Saxon Chronicle " (version E)ee also
*
Anglo-Saxon literature Further reading
*Sharpe, Kevin. "Sir Robert Cotton, 1586-1631: History and Politics in Early Modern England," (Oxford University Press, 1979)
External links
* [http://www.montaguemillennium.com/familyresearch/h_1631_cotton.htm Sir Robert Bruce Cotton]
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