Author Topic: Secrets of the Burnt Magna Carta Revealed (Photos)  (Read 1207 times)

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Secrets of the Burnt Magna Carta Revealed (Photos)
« on: October 12, 2014, 05:54:01 pm »
Secrets of the Burnt Magna Carta Revealed (Photos)
LiveScience.com
By Stephanie Pappas  October 11, 2014 9:56 AM



A close-up of the Magna Carta, written in Medieval Latin.



The Magna Carta charter, written in 1215, required that the king of England, King John, cede absolute power. Four copies of the document were created at the time, one of which was badly damaged in a fire in 1731. Now, scientists have used multispectral imaging to reveal for the first time since the damage the details of both the parchment and text. Here's a look at what the researchers found.

Close-Up

A close-up of the Magna Carta, written in Medieval Latin. This document, penned in 1215, required King John of England to give up some of his absolute power and encoded certain rights for feudal barons, including Habeus corpus, or the right to a jury trial. The Magna Carta was a huge milestone in governance, representing the first time a king had to cede absolute power to the rule of law. (Photo Credit: Joseph Turp, Copyright British Library.)

Salisbury Magna Carta

Four copies of the Magna Carta were made and stamped with King John's seal in 1215, when the nobility banded together to limit the monarch's absolute power. This one is held at Salisbury Cathedral. Another is at Lincoln Cathedral, and the final two reside in the collection of the British Library in London. All four documents are identical in wording and text, though one of the British Library's was damaged in a fire in 1731. (Photo Credit: Ash Mills, Salisbury Cathedral)

Undamaged charter



An original copy of the Magna Carta from 1215 held at the Salisbury Cathedral.


The British Library's undamaged 1215 copy of the Magna Carta. King John's attempts to mollify the feudal barons by agreeing to the contract staved off war for only a short period. John was an unpopular king and came into conflict with the nobility over taxes (this conflict has been dramatized in many modern versions of "Robin Hood"). He submitted to the Magna Carta, but turned to the Pope for help; the Pope, in turn, nullified the document within a few months.

As a result, the nobility rebelled outright, launching the First Barons' War to try to replace King John with Prince Louis of France. King John ended up bringing about the war's end by dying in 1216, and his young son Henry took the throne. The Magna Carta was reissued with Henry's name replacing John's. Though it would change in content over the decades, the document became an inspiration for the foundation of constitutional law, and parts of it directly inspired the U.S. Constitution. (Photo Credit: Joseph Turp, Copyright British Library)

Lincoln Magna Carta

The Lincoln Cathedral's copy of the 1215 Magna Carta, one of four surviving documents from the charter's first year. On Feb. 3, 2015, all four 1215 Magna Cartas will be displayed side-by-side at the British Library in London for the 800th anniversary of the sealing of the document. The public can enter a lottery for free tickets to the event through October 2014 at the British Library website. (Photo Credit: Lincoln Cathedral)

Burnt Magna Carta



The British Library's undamaged 1215 copy of the Magna Carta.


The fourth of four original copies of the Magna Carta from 1215 was damaged in the Cotton Library Fire on Oct. 23, 1731. This collection belonged to Sir Robert Cotton, who died in 1631, and included manuscripts such as Beowulf and some of the earliest manuscripts of the Bible. Almost every book in the Cotton collection went up in flames, according to the British Library. The manuscripts fared better, with only 13 destroyed, but many others were damaged. Among these damaged parchments was the 1215 Magna Carta. (Photo Credit: British Library)

Imaging the Magna Carta

The "Burnt Magna Carta" is positioned for multispectral imaging. This noninvasive technique allows conservation scientists to photograph the document under a range of light conditions, including parts of the spectrum outside of human vision. The result is a series of images that can reveal more than the naked eye can see alone. (Photo Credit: British Library)

Recovering text

Using ultraviolet light, British Library scientists were able to photograph the text of the 1215 Burnt Magna Carta that is invisible to the human eye. The text is the same seen in the three undamaged versions of the charter from 1215, but has not been read since the 1731 fire. "It was actually quite a surprise that so much text was recovered," British Library imaging scientist Christina Duffy told Live Science. (Photo Credit: British Library)



The Lincoln Cathedral's copy of the 1215 Magna Carta, one of four surviving documents from the charter's first year.



Magna Carta preservation

Conservator Kumiko Matsuoka of the British Library prepares temporary housing for the Burnt Magna Carta. The document was placed in a secure frame in the 1970s and had not been removed for 40 years. In preparation for the 800-year anniversary of the sealing of the charter, British Library scientists removed the parchment and created a new, modern frame to preserve it in its current state. (Photo Credit: British Library)

Out of the frame

Conservation scientist Paul Garside carefully removes the 1970s wooden frame from the Burnt Magna Carta. The frame had degraded since the 1970s and was no longer the top-quality material needed to house such a fragile document, imaging scientist Duffy told Live Science. (Photo Credit: British Library)

Unmounting the document



The fourth of four original copies of the Magna Carta from 1215 was damaged in the Cotton Library Fire on Oct. 23, 1731.


Conservator Gavin Moorhead undertakes the delicate task of removing the damaged Magna Carta from its 1970s-era mounting. The materials for the new frame have been tested to ensure that they don't off-gas volatile compounds that could damage the 800-year-old manuscript, Duffy said. (Photo Credit: British Library)

Magnified Magna

Imaging scientist Christina Duffy examines a magnified section of an original Magna Carta to assess its condition. The researchers were not interested in restoring the documents, Duffy said. Instead, the goal was to preserve them and ensure they succumb to no further damage. Attempting to remove damage could end up altering the fragile charters even more. (Photo Credit: British Library)

Damaged state

A full view of the Burnt Magna Carta, one of the four surviving manuscripts from 1215. A 1731 fire damaged this copy, rendering much of the text illegible. (Photo Credit: British Library)

Scrawl marks

Under 50-fold magnification, the damage to the Burnt Magna Carta is apparent. Much of the ink has faded to nothing, leaving only a few scrawled marks of the original Latin calligraphy. Multispectral imaging can recapture much of what was lost, creating images that show what the document looked like originally in 1215. (Photo Credit: British Library)


http://news.yahoo.com/secrets-burnt-magna-carta-revealed-photos-135634113.html

Offline Geo

Re: Secrets of the Burnt Magna Carta Revealed (Photos)
« Reply #1 on: October 12, 2014, 08:19:22 pm »
Its amazing that, after 8 centuries, all four copies even still exist.

Offline Buster's Uncle

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Burnt Magna Carta Read for First Time in 283 Years
« Reply #2 on: October 12, 2014, 08:39:56 pm »
Burnt Magna Carta Read for First Time in 283 Years
LiveScience.com
By Stephanie Pappas  October 11, 2014 10:02 AM



Using ultraviolet light, British Library scientists were able to photograph the text of the 1215 Burnt Magna Carta that is invisible to the human eye.



More than 280 years after it was damaged in a fire, one of the original copies of the Magna Carta is legible again.

Written in 1215, the Magna Carta required the king of England — King John — to cede absolute power. Today, the Magna Carta is seen as a first step toward constitutional law rather than the hereditary power of royalty. There were four copies of the document created at the time. One, held by the British Library, was badly damaged in a fire in 1731.

Now, researchers have used a technique called multispectral imaging to decipher the text of the "Burnt Magna Carta" without touching or further damaging the delicate parchment. This imaging allowed conservation scientists to take pictures of the document that virtually erase the damage and show details of the parchment and text.

"It was in such a terrible state, we couldn't read any of it, really," said Christina Duffy, a British Library imaging scientist. "It was actually quite a surprise that so much text was recovered."


Damaged document

The imaging is part of the preparations for the 800th anniversary of the sealing of the Magna Carta, when King John imprinted his royal seal on the document and was bound by oath to abide by its demands. The British Library holds two of the original copies of the Magna Carta from 1215, including the burnt version. The other two copies are held at Lincoln Cathedral and Salisbury Cathedral.

On Feb. 3, 2015, the four copies will be displayed side-by-side at the British Library in London for the first time ever. The public can enter a lottery for free tickets to the viewing, which will be available to 1,215 winners. Registration is available on the British Library website.

The Burnt Magna Carta has not been examined for decades, Duffy told Live Science. In the 1970s, it was set in a very secure frame, she said. That out-of-date frame has been removed in anticipation of the February 2015 anniversary, giving scientists the chance to get a closer look at the document.


Revisiting the text

The British Library team had no interest in trying to restore the smoke-damaged document, Duffy said, but wanted to preserve it as-is.

"There are different ways you can treat it," she said. "But a lot of them would be wet processes, so you might have to dampen certain areas, and we don't want to introduce any moisture at all to the charter."

Instead, the scientists used multispectral imaging, essentially photographing the burnt parchment in a variety of LED lights, spanning the spectrum from ultraviolet to infrared — outside the range of human vision.

"If you're interested in the ink, the ultraviolet light gives you the best information. If you are interested in the actual texture of the parchment itself, the infrared would be better," Duffy said. "You end up with multiple images of essentially the same thing, but giving you different information."

In these images, text that is invisible to the naked eye is suddenly visible. The Burnt Magna Carta is basically identical in text to the other three copies from 1215, Duffy said. The team is still processing the multispectral imagery and will conduct the same process on other old documents related to the Magna Carta, she said. Both the British Library's original Magna Carta manuscripts will be displayed between March 13, 2015 and Sept. 1, 2015, in an exhibit called "Magna Carta: Law, Liberty, Legacy."


http://news.yahoo.com/burnt-magna-carta-read-first-time-283-years-140252053.html

 

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