Rotulus

Rotulus
Volumen y Rotulus.jpg

A rotulus is a roll designed for writing on, in which a long narrow strip of papyrus or parchment, written on one side, was wound like a blind[clarification needed] about its wooden staff.

Rotuli formed the earliest kind of "volume" (volumen from volvere, to roll up) of which we have knowledge. Many such rolls have been recovered in their primitive form from the excavations at Herculaneum and elsewhere. In the fourth and fifth centuries, however, these rolls began to give place to codex books bound as we know them now, i.e. a number of written leaves were laid flat one on top of the other and attached together by their corresponding edges, but for certain purposes rolls were still retained.

Rotuli persisted for:

  • certain legal records (from which is still derived the title of the judicial functionary known as the "Master of the Rolls")
  • manuscripts, such as those used for the chanting of the Exultet;
  • and especially the documents employed in sending round the names of the deceased belonging to monasteries and other associations which were banded together to pray mutually for each other's dead.

Mortuary rolls

These "mortuary rolls" (in French "rouleaux des morts") were called in Latin "rotuli". They consisted of strips of parchment, sometimes of prodigious length, at the head of which was entered the notification of the death of a particular person deceased or sometimes of a group of such persons. The roll was then carried by a special messenger ("gerulus", "rotularius", "rollifer", "tomiger", "breviator", were some of the various titles given him) from monastery to monastery, and at each an entry was made upon the roll attesting the fact that the notice had been received and that the requisite suffrages would be said.

By degrees a custom grew up in many places of making these entries in verse with complementary amplifications often occupying many lines. These records, some of which are still in existence, preserve specimens of ornate verse composition. They afford materials both for the study of palaeography and also for a comparative judgment of the standard of scholarship prevalent in these different centres of learning.

The use of these mortuary rolls flourished most in the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries. Some are of prodigious size. That of the Abbess Matilda of Caen, the daughter of William the Conqueror, was 72 feet long and eight or ten inches wide, but this no doubt was exceptional.

References

Attribution
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed (1913). "Rotuli". Catholic Encyclopedia. Robert Appleton Company.  The entry cites:
    • Léopold Victor Delisle, Rouleaux des morts du IX au XV siecle (Paris, 1866);
    • ____, in Bibl. de l'ecole des Chartes, series II, vol. III; Sur l'usage de prier pour les morts;
    • Thurston, A Mediaeval Mortuary-card in The Month (London, Dec., 1896);
    • Nichols in Mem. Archaeolog. Institute (Norwich, 1847);
    • Molinier, Obituaires français au moyen-âge (Paris, 1886);
    • Ebner, Gebetsverbruderungen (Freiburg, 1891);
    • Wattenbach, Schriftwesen im Mittelalter (3rd ed., Leipzig), 150-74.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • rotulus — rotúlus s. n. Trimis de siveco, 10.08.2004. Sursa: Dicţionar ortografic  ROTÚLUS s.n. Pergament în formă de fâşie lungă care poate fi înfăşurată pe un sul. [< germ. Rotulus, cf. lat. rotulus]. Trimis de LauraGellner, 13.09.2007. Sursa: DN … …   Dicționar Român

  • ROTULUS — APUD INFIMAE Latinitatis Auctores, est scapus chartarum, h. e. chartae in volumen corrotundatae: ex voce Rutulus. Rutulus autem erat baculus rotundus, quô cumulus mensurae derui et exaequari consuevit. Glossae, rutulum exponunt ἀποψήκτιον.… …   Hofmann J. Lexicon universale

  • Rotŭlus — (v. lat.), 1) ein Bündel Acten od. gerichtliche Verhandlungen. Zeugenrotulus, die aus den Artikeln u. Interrogatorien, sowie aus den Protokollen über die Zeugenvernehmungen bewirkte Zusammenstellung der Fragen an die Zeugen u. deren Antworten… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Rotūlus — (lat., Rotul, Rotel), ein Bündel Akten; auch das Verzeichnis derselben. Zeugenrotulus, ehedem die unter gerichtlicher Autorität gefertigte Zusammenstellung von Zeugenaussagen; daher rotulieren, dieselben auszeichnen …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Rotulus — Rotulus, lat., Rotel, Rodel, gerichtlicher Rodel, Protokollirung des Verhörs und der Zeugenaussagen; Verzeichniß …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • Rotulus — Ein Römer liest eine Schriftrolle. Von einem Sarkophag im Garten der Villa Balestra. Schriftrolle (auch Buchrolle, Volumen oder Rotulus) ist die aus einer gerollten Papyrus oder Pergamentbahn bestehende typische Buchform des Altertums (siehe… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Rotulus, S. — S. Rotulus (23. Febr.), Martyrer in Sirmium. S. S. Rutilus. (III. 396.) …   Vollständiges Heiligen-Lexikon

  • Rotulus — Ro|tu|lus 〈m.; , tu|li; veraltet〉 1. ein Stoß Urkunden 2. Aktenverzeichnis 3. Theaterrolle * * * Ro|tu|lus, der; , ...li [mlat. rotulus, ↑Rolle]: 1. (veraltet) a) Stoß Urkunden; b) [Akten]verzeichnis. 2. (veraltet …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Rotulus — Ro|tu|lus der; , ...li <aus (m)lat. rotulus »Rädchen; Rolle«, Verkleinerungsform von lat. rota »Rad, Scheibe«>: 1. (veraltet) a) Aktenbündel; b) [Akten]verzeichnis. 2. (veraltet) Theaterrolle …   Das große Fremdwörterbuch

  • rotulus — noun A roll of parchment or papyrus that was written on to make a permanent record …   Wiktionary

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