Sign-Language-bib - 11/1/09 "An Annotated Bibliography on Monastic Sign Lexicons (MSL), Finger Alphabets and Mnemonics until 1600 CE." by Lady Ásfríðr Ulfvíðardóttir. NOTE: See also the files: Sign-Lang-Wed-art, Deaf-History-bib, disabilities-msg, SCA-SL-art, sign-lang-msg, Sign-Lang-Wed-art, 15C-Eyeglsses-art, eyeglasses-msg. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This article was submitted to me by the author for inclusion in this set of files, called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org Copyright to the contents of this file remains with the author or translator. While the author will likely give permission for this work to be reprinted in SCA type publications, please check with the author first or check for any permissions granted at the end of this file. Thank you, Mark S. Harris...AKA:..Stefan li Rous stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ An Annotated Bibliography on Monastic Sign Lexicons (MSL), Finger Alphabets and Mnemonics until 1600 CE. Compiled by Ásfríðr Úlfvíðardóttir In general, studies and articles about this broad topic can be divided into two fields: Deaf history, and 'traditional' classical and medieval history (Bragg, 1997; 2). These two groups generally do not overlap, which is a shame as both fields can provide a more complete picture than just one or the other ever could. I prefer to refer to the sign lists that were written down and used by medieval monks as a sign lexicon rather than a sign language, as there is no known accompanying grammar with these lists. As illustrated by Bakarat (1975), these lexicons were likely designed to inhibit idle chatter of monks and nuns, instead of facilitate communication as a sign language would. • Ambrose, Kirk "A Medieval Food List from the Monastery of Cluny" in Gastronomica (6:1 2006) pp.14-20 • Just as it implies, a list of all of the monastic signs used to indicate different foods from an 11th century manuscript at Cluny, also known as "Signa Loquendi". • Aungier, George James The History and Antiquities of Syon Monastery: The Parish of Isleworth, and the Chapelry of Hounslow. (J.B. Nichols and son, 1840) pp. 405-409 • The 15th century sign list used at the Brigittine monastery at Syon, England. • Bakarat, Robert A. The Cistercian Sign Language (Cistercian Publications: Kalamazoo, Michigan 1975) ISBN 0-87907-811-1 • Discusses modern, 20th century monastic sign lexicon. • Provides the best example of how the monastic sign systems were designed to hinder communication between hearing people, rather than improve communication for deaf people. It severely restricted idle chatter between monks as it is difficult to form complex sentences. • Banham, Debby Monasteriales Indicia: The Anglo-Saxon Monastic Sign Language (Norfolk, England: Anglo Saxon Books, 1993) ISBN: 0951620940 • Discussion and translation of the Anglo-Saxon manuscript Cotton.Tiberius.A.III. • Barley, Nigel F. "Two Anglo Saxon Sign Systems Compared" in Semiotica Volume 12 (1974) pp. 227-237 also in Umiker-Seboek, Jean and Seboek, Thomas A. [eds] Monastic Sign Languages (Mouton de Gruyter: Berlin 1987) ISBN: 3-11-010927-1 pp. 53-66 • Discusses monastic signs and memory aides • Has a different manuscript of the Monisteriales Indicia, with pictures of monks making the hand signs. • Bonet, John Pablo Reducción de las letras y arte para enseñar a hablar a los mudos (Simplification of the Letters of the Alphabet and Method of Teaching Deaf-Mutes to Speak) (1620) • Is believed to be derived from the 1593 text Refugium infirmorum by Fray Melchor de Yebra, that has since been lost. See Plann (1997) for more information. • Online at the Biblioteca Nacional de España: http://bibliotecadigitalhispanica.bne.es/webclient/DeliveryManager?application=DIGITOOL-3&owner=resourcediscovery&custom_att_2=simple_viewer&pid=180918 • Online at Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes: http://www.cervantesvirtual.com/servlet/SirveObras/signos/12826516449063734198624/index.htm • Bragg, Lois "Visual-Kinetic Communication in Europe Before 1600: A Survey of Sign Lexicons and Finger Alphabets Prior to the Rise of Deaf Education" Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education 2:1 Winter 1997 • Highly recommended read. • Discusses monastic sign lexicons • Mentions a finger alphabet published in 1592 which is almost identical to the modern one-handed 'international alphabet' of today. • Bruce, Scott Gordon Uttering no human sound: Silence and sign language in western medieval monasticism. (Ann Arbor, Mich. : U.M.I. 2000) [Princeton Univ. Dissertation] • This is the bible of monastic sign . Not only does it focus entirely on the social aspects of MSL, the appendices in the back contain translations of numerous medieval MSL lists. Amazing! • Translation of Hirsau Sign List • Bruce, Scott G. Silence and Sign Language in Medieval Monasticism: The Cluniac Tradition, c.900-1200 (Cambridge: University Press, 2007) ISBN: 0-521-86080-6 • More polished, publication based on PhD thesis. Appendices not as large as original thesis. • Translation of Hirsau Sign List • Carruthers, Mary J. The Book of Memory: A Study of Memory in Medieval Culture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990) • Focus on finger alphabets and gestures as mnemonic devices. • Conde-Silvestre, Juan C. "The code and context of monasteriales indicia: a semiotic analysis of late Anglo-Saxon monastic sign language." Studia Anglica Posnaniensia (36) 2001. pp. 145-169 • Available online at The Free Library: http://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+code+and+context+of+Monasteriales+Indicia:+a+semiotic+analysis+of...-a092803252 • Daniels, Marilyn Benedictine Roots in the Development of Deaf Education (Bergin & Garvney: Westport, USA, 1997) ISBN: 0-89789-500-2 • Argues that Pedro Ponce de Leon successfully taught deaf students to speak through a monastic sign lexicon. • Finger spelling possibly used by Ponce may have been based on system devised by Melchor Yebra. • Chapter three describes how Juan Pablo Bonet taught students in the 17th century. • Eriksson, Per The History of Deaf People (Daufr: Sweden, 1993) ISBN: 91-630-6822-2 • Different drawing of Bedes' counting system, than the pictures usually used. • Jarecki, Walter "Signa loquendi: Die cluniacensischen Signa-Listen" Saecula Spiritalia, IV (Baden Baden: Koerner, 1981) ISBN: 3873204045 • German language • Is source for majority of Bruce's MSL lists. • Kluge, F. "Zur Geschichte der Zeichensprache. Angelsächsische Indicia Monasterialia" in Internationale Zeitschrift für allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft Vol. 2 (1885) pp. 117-140 • German translation of the the Indicia Monasterialia (Cotton.Tiberius.A.III). • Also has transcribed 15th century Syon list, in contemporary English. • Kylie, JG and Woll, B. Sign Language: The Study of Deaf People and Their Language (Cambridge, New York : Cambridge Univ. Pr. 1985) ISBN: 0-521-26075-2 • p.51 The finger spelling published in 1680, Digiti lingua, is very close to British (and associated languages) finger spelling. Note:Every other reference says Digiti lingua was published 1698. • Lee, Raymond [ed] A Beginner's Guide to Deaf History (British Deaf History Society: Doncaster UK, 2004) ISBN: 1-902-427-18-1 • Lots of pictures, is a good overview of MSL and Deaf history. • pp. 9-23: development of manual communication, including lots of pictures from manuscripts about manual alphabets. • Meyvaert, Paul "The Medieval Monastic Garden" in Elisabeth B. MacDougall [ed.] Medieval Gardens (Washington, D.C. : Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 1986) pp. 23-54 • Some signs from the Hirsau sign list directly mentioned in the footnotes. • Padden, Carol and Gunsauls, Darlene Clark "How the Alphabet Came to be Used in a Sign Language" in Sign Language Studies (4:1, 2003) pp. 10-33 • Focus of the article is on finger spelling, and its' development through history. • Main interest is 19-20th centuries, but does mention up to 1600. • Penna, Mario "I 'Signa Loquendi' Cisterciensi in un Codice della Bibliotheca National di Madrid" in J Umiker-Seboek and TA Sebeok [eds.] Monastic sign languages. (New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 1987) pp. 495-532 • Italian Language • Translation of the 11th century Cluniac sign list. • Plann, Susan "Pedro Ponce de Leon: Myth and Reality" in John Vickery Van Cleve [ed] Deaf History Unveiled (Gallaudet University Press: Washington DC, 1993) pp. 1-12 ISBN: 1563680211 • Plann, Susan A Silent Minority: Deaf Education in Spain, 1550-1835 (University of California Press: Berkeley, 1997) • See: http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft338nb1x6/ • This book is very dense, but has extremely detailed information about the education of deaf Spanish nobility in the 16th century. • Romberch, Johann Host von Congestorium Artificiose Memorie (1533) • See: National Library of France http://gallica2.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k594964.r=.langEN • Originally published in 1520 • Is full of grids of 'memorial heuristics' of variations upon each letter of the alphabet, and its' possible representation. Along with animals, such as A for Aquila (eagle), and shapes of tools (C is a horseshoe) there is also a section devoted to shapes made with ones' hands. • Rossellius, Cosmas Thesaurus Artificiosae Memoriae (1579) • Rossellius was more interested in mnemonics for individual use, rather than developing a communication system between people. • Online at the Internet Archive: http://www.archive.org/details/thesaurusartifi00padogoog • Saint-Loup, Aude de "Images of the Deaf in Medieval Western Europe" in Renate Fischer et.al. Looking Back: A Reader on the History of Deaf Communities and their Sign Languages (Signum Verlag: Germany,1993) pp.379-402. ISBN 3-927731-32-3 • Lots of pictures, including artwork showing how people counted on their fingers. • Schmitt, J.-C. "The rationale of gestures in the West: Third to thirteenth centuries." In J. Bremmer & H. Roodenburg, H. [Eds.], A cultural history of gesture. (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. 1992) pp. 59-70 • Sherlock, D. "Anglo-Saxon monastic sign language at Christ Church, Canterbury". Archaeologia Cantiana, 107, 1989: 1-27. • Umiker-Seboek, Jean and Seboek, Thomas A. [eds] Monastic Sign Languages (Mouton de Gruyter: Berlin 1987) ISBN: 3-11-010927-1 • This book has copies of articles and translations from numerous sources, including the Brigittine sign list from Syon. • van Cleve, John Vickrey and Crouch, Barry A. A Place of their Own (Washington DC: Gallaudet University Press, 1989) • Focuses on Deaf history, but discusses de Yebra's fingerspelling from his 1593 Refugium Infirmorum. Released under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/us/ Bibliography by Rebecca Lucas, 2009. E-mail: rebe.lucas at gmail.com ------ If this article is reprinted in a publication, I would appreciate a notice in the publication that you found this article in the Florilegium. I would also appreciate an email to myself, so that I can track which articles are being reprinted. Thanks. -Stefan. Edited by Mark S. Harris Sign-Language-bib Page 4 of 4