- Abecediary
An Abecediary is the full
alphabet carved in stone or written in book form, historically found in churches, monasteries and other ecclesiastical buildings. It can also be spelt Abecedary and is pronounced as 'Abbey-see-duh-ree'.Purpose
Abecediaries are generally considered to be medieval teaching aids, particularly for the illiterate. The alphabet may have been thought to possess supernatural powers along the lines of the
runic alphabet . Each letter would have had a symbolic meaning to the devout.An example, the first seven letters or so of which were found in 1967, is from the long demolished Church of St Mary of the Grey Friars in
Dumfries , Scotland. In this case the letters are inscribed in the Lombardic script of the 1260s and the complete structure would probably have stood near the high altar.One of the oldest examples is now in use as a gravestone in Kilmalkedar, near
Dingle , Co. Kerry. It has the appearance of a standing stone and is known as the Alphabet' stone, displaying as it does an alphabet dating from early Christian times.Bord, Janet and Colin. (1973) "Mysterious Britain". Pub. Garnstone. ISBN 0-85511-1801. P. 47.]Trivia
St Mary's church was the scene of the murder at the high altar of the
Red Comyn byRobert the Bruce Transactions of the Dumfrieshire and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society. LXXIII. 1999. "Two Medieval inscribed stones from Dumfries." P. 224 - 225.]Abecedarian psalms and hymns exist, these are compositions in which, like
Psalm 119 in Hebrew, distinct portions or verses commence with successive letters of the alphabet. [http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=2&q=abecedary Definitions] ]ee also
*
Abecedarium
* [http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/A_Researcher's_Guide_to_Local_History_Terminology A Researcher's Guide to Local History terminology]References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.