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oa Diebold Lauber’s Workshop in Alsace
Manuscripts at the Beginning of the Age of Mechanical Reproduction
- Amsterdam University Press
- Source: Queeste, Volume 32, Issue 1, Oct 2025, p. 87 - 108
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- 01 Oct 2025
Abstract
In German medieval philology, the manuscript production of the fifteenth century has long held a rather poor reputation. This article reconsiders that perception by reevaluating the manuscript culture of the period, focusing on the influential workshop of Diebold Lauber in Hagenau in Alsace. Lauber, a scribe and book dealer, actively marketed illustrated vernacular texts, including classics such as Parzival and Tristan, to a noble clientele. His workshop modernised book production, introducing standardised layouts, full-paged coloured pen drawings, and chapter structuring, merging traditional content with innovative paratextual features. A close comparison of three manuscripts of Wolfram of Eschenbach’s Parzival reveals nuanced illustration programs and a conservative approach to old courtly texts, likely reflecting the preferences of Lauber’s noble customers, who identified with the ideals of High Medieval knighthood. Earlier regarded as formulaic and impersonal, the standardised features of these codices are now seen as the most notable innovations of Lauber’s workshop, and as effective tools for recontextualising classical texts at the threshold of the age of mechanical reproduction.