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- Rubrication abstract "Rubrication was one of several steps in the medieval process of manuscript making. Practitioners of rubrication, so-called rubricators, were specialized scribes who received text from the manuscript's original scribe and supplemented it with additional text in red ink for emphasis. The term rubrication comes from the Latin rubrico, "to color red".The practice usually entailed the addition of red headings to mark the end of one section of text and the beginning of another. Such headings were sometimes used to introduce the subject of the following section or to declare its purpose and function. Rubrication was used so often in this regard that the term rubric was commonly used as a generic term for headers of any type or color, though it technically referred only to headers to which red ink had been added. In liturgical books such as missals, red may also be used to give the actions to be performed by the celebrant or others, leading the texts to be read in black. Important feasts in liturgical calendars were also often rubricated, and rubrication can indicate how scribes viewed the importance of different parts of their text.Rubrication may also be used to emphasize the starting character of a canto or other division of text; this was often important because manuscripts often consist of multiple works in a single bound volume. This particular type of rubrication is similar to flourishing, wherein red ink is used to style a leading character with artistic loops and swirls. However, this process is far less elaborate than illumination, in which detailed pictures are incorporated into the manuscript often set in thin sheets of gold to give the appearance of light within the text.Quite commonly the manuscript's initial scribe would provide notes to the rubricator in the form of annotations made in the margins of the text. Such notes were effectively indications to "rubricate here" or "add rubric". In many other cases, the initial scribe also held the position of rubricator, and so he applied rubrication as needed without the use of annotations. This is important, as a scribe's annotations to the rubricator can be used along with codicology to establish a manuscript's history, or provenance.Later medieval practitioners extended the practice of rubrication to include the use of other colors of ink besides red. Most often, alternative colors included blue and green. After the introduction of movable type printing, readers continued to expect rubrication, which might be done by hand, if there were few rubrics to add, or by a separate print using a red-ink form, later the normal method. The "great majority of incunables did not issue from the press in a finished state ... hardly any incunable was considered 'finished' by its printer ...", suggesting that hand rubrication provided a sense of legitimacy to the efforts of early printers and their works. This fact, the notion that something about hand written rubrication completes a printed work by attributing to it a sense of legitimacy and finality, is further supported by the fact that red ink "was not merely decorative...red's original function was to articulate the text by indicating such parts as headings that were so essential to the function of manuscripts that the printers had to deal with them in some way"".
- Rubrication thumbnail Illuminated.bible.closeup.arp.jpg?width=300.
- Rubrication wikiPageExternalLink views.
- Rubrication wikiPageExternalLink FIRSTHIT.
- Rubrication wikiPageExternalLink 3509018.
- Rubrication wikiPageExternalLink dcrtn-il.html.
- Rubrication wikiPageExternalLink dcrtn-il.htm.
- Rubrication wikiPageExternalLink making-of-illuminated-manuscripts.htm.
- Rubrication wikiPageExternalLink making-of-illuminated-manuscripts.htm.
- Rubrication wikiPageID "636108".
- Rubrication wikiPageLength "8248".
- Rubrication wikiPageOutDegree "26".
- Rubrication wikiPageRevisionID "627680166".
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Annotation.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Canto.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Category:Illuminated_manuscripts.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Category:Textual_scholarship.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Codicology.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink De_diversis_artibus.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Gold.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Grapheme.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Illuminated_manuscript.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Illumination_(manuscript).
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Incunable.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Ink.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Latin.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Latin_language.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Light.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Manuscript.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Margin_(typography).
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Medieval.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Ages.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Missal.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Movable_type.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Provenance.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Red_letter_day.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Rubric.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Scribe.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink Theophilus_Presbyter.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink File:Illuminated.bible.closeup.arp.jpg.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLink File:IncunabulumDetail.JPG.
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLinkText "Rubrication".
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLinkText "rubricated".
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLinkText "rubrication".
- Rubrication wikiPageWikiLinkText "rubricator".
- Rubrication hasPhotoCollection Rubrication.
- Rubrication subject Category:Illuminated_manuscripts.
- Rubrication subject Category:Textual_scholarship.
- Rubrication hypernym Steps.
- Rubrication type Book.
- Rubrication type MilitaryConflict.
- Rubrication type Work.
- Rubrication type Book.
- Rubrication type Manuscript.
- Rubrication type Object.
- Rubrication type Work.
- Rubrication comment "Rubrication was one of several steps in the medieval process of manuscript making. Practitioners of rubrication, so-called rubricators, were specialized scribes who received text from the manuscript's original scribe and supplemented it with additional text in red ink for emphasis. The term rubrication comes from the Latin rubrico, "to color red".The practice usually entailed the addition of red headings to mark the end of one section of text and the beginning of another.".
- Rubrication label "Rubrication".
- Rubrication sameAs تحمير.
- Rubrication sameAs Rubrizierung.
- Rubrication sameAs Rubrication.
- Rubrication sameAs Rubricazione.
- Rubrication sameAs m.02z5n6.
- Rubrication sameAs Rubbricazzioni.
- Rubrication sameAs Q1365156.
- Rubrication sameAs Q1365156.
- Rubrication wasDerivedFrom Rubrication?oldid=627680166.
- Rubrication depiction Illuminated.bible.closeup.arp.jpg.
- Rubrication isPrimaryTopicOf Rubrication.