Thomas Markaunt


Thomas Markaunt was a Fellow and benefactor of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge University. He is best known for his sizeable and valuable bequest of seventy-five books to Corpus Christi library, which were lent out among the college's scholars, in a system of . He is also known for his compilation of early University records, known as 'Markaunt's book', which gained him a, sometimes disputed, reputation as an antiquarian. While the majority of his original library has not survived the centuries, the extensive electio records and surviving books have been the subject of much study.

Biography

Thomas Markaunt was born around 1382 to Cassandria and John Markaunt. He first appears in Corpus Christi records in 1413/14, as a ' of the University. Some later historians have asserted Markaunt gained a Bachelor of Theology during his time at Cambridge, but, while his Fellowship at the college required a Catholic priest's holy orders, such a claim is unsubstantiated by contemporary records. Similarly, Thomas Fuller unfoundedly claimed Markaunt attended Peterhouse, a claim repudiated by Robert Masters. Markaunt served as senior proctor of the University in 1417-18, when he was involved in a town and gown controversy. Some scholars of the University had posted a page of vulgar poetry to the gate of the Mayor of Cambridge's house. Markaunt was tasked with defending these scholars, criticising the town for prior incidents where the University was victimised. In 1418, the Mayor and formally complained about the university, citing Markaunt's name and position in the complaint, how it is now known.
After this period, Markaunt is only sporadically accounted for in college records. On 14 October 1430, he was one of four witnesses for the University in the so-called 'Barnwell process', then forty-eight years old, according to contemporary records. This 'process' was concerned with establishing the college's privileges as above those of the bishop. From 1437 to 1439, he is listed in college records as directly below the Master of the college in order of seniority. Having recently become a
' and of the college, Markaunt died on 19 November 1439. He left behind a will, made on 4 November. His memorial in MS 232 reads:

Bequest of books

In his will of 4 November, Markaunt bequeathed seventy-five books—consisting mainly of standard university textbooks, classical texts, and commentaries—to Corpus Christi college. These books were neatly catalogued - numbered, priced, particularized, and recorded with an incipit - in a register found in one quire of a parchment manuscript of Corpus Christi. This manuscript also contains Markaunt's will, and an exhaustive borrowing register of the books, in six quires. Markaunt had obviously been a keen and wealthy bibliophile, as the total value of these books amounted to £104 12s 3d with the most expensive volume, an anthology of Aristotle and his commentators entitled Liber moralis philosophie or Moralia magna, valued at £10.
This collection had been contrived under specific rules, so that they would be entrusted to Fellows of the college under oath or pledge, who would be decided by choice, or . Such systems were common in English and French universities at the time, and were well-established in monastery libraries, though Corpus Christi was much smaller than most colleges, so its systems was more concerned with "provid each fellow with as complete a collection of texts of Aristotle, logical texts, and commentaries on Aristotle by Averroës as his position warranted", rather than extracurricular items. In MS 323, the rules of this loan system are laid out, and a register of the borrowers of these books - with the date, the Fellow's name, and the title of the book - catalogued from 1440 to 1517 and laid out in tedious detail. The system determined, in detail, how custodians would be chosen, and what prayers would have to be recited to keep the books on loan, though the college didn't rigorously follow them, with Markaunt intending for the rules to be flexible.
Through the 15th and 16th-centuries, Markaunt's books slowly disappeared from the college's collections. The first to disappear was the cheapest in the collection, a 12d volume on philosophy, in 1460, and these books continued to disappear as Markaunt's system of electiones became less popular among scholars, up until 1517, when the records of electiones cease. Matthew Parker, Archbishop of Canterbury and Fellow/Master of Corpus Christi, attended the college at an opportune time to record the circumstances of the books, but left no records, and erased the legacy of Markaunt with his own sizeable bequest. As of 1987, medieval historian C. R. Cheney was only able to identify five books of Markaunt's that still remained in the college's collection.

"Markaunt's book"

While in charge of the defense of the University in 1417, Markaunt compiled a collection of useful and relevant records, for his own personal use, transcribing several ancient statutes and privileges of the college. This book is now known as 'Markaunt's book' or 'register' and contains several invaluable historical resources of the college, including a unique collection of the university's statutes, and short account of the college's ceremony of inception. Robert Hare used it extensively in his antiquarian works on Cambridge, and, after the college lost it twice, it was presented for him for safekeeping. In 1594, it was presented to the University, but it had been misplaced twice by the time of Thomas Fuller, who sombrely predicted that the invaluable work would never be recovered again. Fortunately, the work was recovered by Thomas Baker, and is currently stored in the University archives.
Markaunt's proposed authorship of the book has been criticised by Walter Ullmann, in absence of any "prima facie evidence of an internal or external character to justify the ascription", the transcription of some records produced after Markaunt's death, and no contemporary attribution to Smith inside the book.. This claim has been criticized by M. B. Hackett, citing the fact that the Liber priuilegiorum in Markaunt's catalogue is identical to the modern 'Markaunt's book', which he takes as sufficient proof the book is "none other than Markaunt's".
This collection of statutes has been regarded by archivist M. B. Hackett as "a most valuable and in some ways unique record of royal and episcopal priveliges, papal bulls and miscellaneous deeds". Catherine Hall, writing for the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, maintains that, while "not unique of its kind", Markaunt's book "is of exceptional interest" and "modern scholarship still remains lastingly indebted to Markaunt for his transcripts and the records of his library". Because of this collection of books, Markaunt has gained a legacy as an antiquarian, especially among the college's historians, with Masters describing him as "one of the most eminent antiquaries of his time", but there survives no evidence of his antiquarian predilections beyond this, and his sizeable collection of books, according to Cheney. Hall has similarly been critical of this identification, claiming that the book "won for its compiler an unfounded reputation as an antiquary".