Shirburn Ballads
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The ''Shirburn Ballads'' is the name given to an early 17th-century
manuscript A manuscript (abbreviated MS for singular and MSS for plural) was, traditionally, any document written by hand or typewritten, as opposed to mechanically printed or reproduced in some indirect or automated way. More recently, the term has ...
collection of
Elizabethan The Elizabethan era is the epoch in the Tudor period of the history of England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1558–1603). Historians often depict it as the golden age in English history. The Roman symbol of Britannia (a female per ...
to early
Stuart Stuart may refer to: People *Stuart (name), a given name and surname (and list of people with the name) * Clan Stuart of Bute, a Scottish clan *House of Stuart, a royal house of Scotland and England Places Australia Generally *Stuart Highway, ...
-era
ballad A ballad is a form of verse, often a narrative set to music. Ballads were particularly characteristic of the popular poetry and song of Great Britain and Ireland from the Late Middle Ages until the 19th century. They were widely used across Eur ...
s that formerly resided in the collection of the
Earls of Macclesfield Earl of Macclesfield is a title that has been created twice. The first creation came in the Peerage of England in 1679 in favour of the soldier and politician Charles Gerard, 1st Baron Gerard. He had already been created Baron Gerard, of Bran ...
in the library at
Shirburn Castle Shirburn Castle is a Grade I listed building, Grade I listed, moated castle located at the village of Shirburn, near Watlington, Oxfordshire, Watlington, Oxfordshire. Originally constructed in the fourteenth century, it was renovated and remode ...
. As per the Ballad Index compiled by W.B. Olsen, it is one of a number of significant sources for ballads of that period. According to the relevant entry in the ''Catalogue of English Literary Manuscripts 1450–1700'', the main scribe may have been Edwarde Hull, whose name appears on leaf 155. It is believed that since the current set of leaves is numbered from 98 onwards, a further initial 97 leaves were once present but were lost prior to the set's binding in 1860. The collection is mainly known to scholars via an edited version that was published by the Reverend Andrew Clark in 1907 (refer Bibliography). Most or all of the included ballads derive from
broadside ballad A broadside (also known as a broadsheet) is a single sheet of inexpensive paper printed on one side, often with a ballad, rhyme, news and sometimes with woodcut illustrations. They were one of the most common forms of printed material between the ...
sources which were recorded as published for copyright purposes in relevant 16th-century sources, and include a subset for which the original broadside copy has not survived. Since 2007, the original work is now in the collection of the
British Library The British Library is the national library of the United Kingdom. Based in London, it is one of the largest libraries in the world, with an estimated collection of between 170 and 200 million items from multiple countries. As a legal deposit li ...
.


Description

As described in the 1907 transcript by Andrew Clark, the book comprises 162 leaves, written on both sides, each measuring 6 by 3 inches. Subsequently added numbers go from
eaves The eaves are the edges of the roof which overhang the face of a wall and, normally, project beyond the side of a building. The eaves form an overhang to throw water clear of the walls and may be highly decorated as part of an architectural sty ...
98 to 257, indicating that the first 97 are missing.Clark, 1907 It was (re?)-bound in 1860 by Hatton of Manchester, in half-calf gilt. The name 'Edwarde Hull' is found on the reverse of the leaf labelled 155, "possibly the main scribe of the MS";CELM, undated catalogue entry for Add. MS 82932, refer Bibliography other names appearing as additions include those of Thomas Sturgies "the right Oner of this booke", Edward Sturgis, Thomas Manton, Richard Manton, Richard Halford and William Halford. According to the current British Library catalogue entry, the contents were copied directly from black-letter broadsides from the reigns of Elizabeth I and James I; although most of their titles are known from earlier portions of the
Stationers' Register The Stationers' Register was a record book maintained by the Stationers' Company of London. This was a trade guild given a royal charter in 1557 to regulate the various professions associated with England's publishing industry, including prin ...
, the original printings of more than half have never been located. The text is mostly in a "single variable
Secretary script Secretary hand or script is a style of European handwriting developed in the early sixteenth century that remained common in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries for writing English, German, Welsh and Gaelic. History Predominating before th ...
", with annotations by possibly two other hands.British Library, undated catalogue entry for Add. MS 82932, refer Bibliography


History

According to the work itself, the collection was at one time in the ownership of Thomas Sturgies or Sturgis, and later passed into the collection of the
Earls of Macclesfield Earl of Macclesfield is a title that has been created twice. The first creation came in the Peerage of England in 1679 in favour of the soldier and politician Charles Gerard, 1st Baron Gerard. He had already been created Baron Gerard, of Bran ...
who kept it as a component of their extensive library at
Shirburn Castle Shirburn Castle is a Grade I listed building, Grade I listed, moated castle located at the village of Shirburn, near Watlington, Oxfordshire, Watlington, Oxfordshire. Originally constructed in the fourteenth century, it was renovated and remode ...
(shelf-mark, Shirburn North Library 119 D 44), where it was catalogued by Edward Edwards in 1860, apparently when it was re-bound, and was located there some time prior to 1907 (possibly in 1893 per this note) such that it could be examined and transcribed by the historian and editor the Reverend Dr Andrew Clark. The volume was still in the possession of the Macclesfield family (in the person of the 9th Earl) when he departed the Castle in 2004, from whom it was purchased by private treaty by the British Library in 2007.


Contents

The contents of the folio are as listed in the Andrew Clark published volume; for a more detailed listing in the context of other ballad collections of the period, refer W.B. Olsen's exhaustive "Broadside Ballad Index", which contains 71 references to items in the collection (marked "SHB"). Tunes are indicated for the majority of the ballads by a text instruction, for example no. VII, "All careful Christians, mark my song" is labelled "To the tune of ''Wigmor's Galliard''", however in four instances the actual tune is provided in notation (refer example illustrations with this article).


Significance

Andrew Clark, in the "Introduction" section to his transcript of the ballads, points out the following areas of significance of the collection: *it preserves a number of ballads not found in the "great collections" (the latter often more voluminous), and possibly some are unique to this set *it extends back to the Elizabethan/James I era, the texts for a number of ballads otherwise known only from later versions *it provides alternative texts for scholarship, some arguably better than later printed copies, and *it provides an example of the "library of ballads" which would have furnished relevant English households in around the time of Shakespeare. Clark does note, however, the absence of any "Robin Hood" ballads, speculating that possibly, some could have been contained in the now-missing initial 97 leaves.Clark, p. 6, "Relation of the Shirburn MS. to the printed collections."


Availability and digitisation

By contrast with some of the Library's other manuscript holdings, as at 2023 the work is not available online via the British Library and can only be accessed in the reading room where " letter of introduction srequired to view this manuscript". However, three 2-page spreads from the original ms were reproduced as facsimiles in Andrew Clark's 1907 publication, which can be viewe
here
(this one also reproduced at the head of the present article)
here
an
here
For the entire 1907 transcript, refer "Bibliography", below.


References


Bibliography

* The British Library Archives and Manuscripts Catalogue
The Shirburn Ballads: collection of eighty English ballads and songs of the 16th and early 17th centuries; transcribed circa temp. James I (between 1603-1625). ... Add MS 82932 : (1603-1625)
* Catalogue of English Literary Manuscripts 1450–1700 (CELM):

' ("Shirburn Ballads" entry under "Add. MS 82932"). * Clark, Andrew, 1907: ''The Shirburn ballads, 1585–1616. Edited from the MS.'' Clarendon Press, Oxford, 380 pp. Available at https://archive.org/details/shirburnball100claruoft, another copy via HathiTrust at https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022205275&seq=7. * Firth, C.H., 1911: "The ballad history of the reign of James I." ''Transactions of the Royal Historical Society (Third Series)'', 5: 21–61. doi:10.2307/3678360 * Gammond, Peter, ed., 1991: ''The Oxford Companion to Popular Music''. Oxford University Press. (Entry on broadside ballads, pp. 82-83). * Rollins, Hyder E., 1917: "Notes on the "Shirburn Ballads" ". ''The Journal of American Folklore'', Jul.-Sep., 1917, vol. 30, no. 117: 370-377. Available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/534380.pdf . * Swaen, A. E. H., 1907: "Review of "The Shirburn Ballads, 1585-1616" by Andrew Clark". ''The Modern Language Review'', 3(1), 76–80. doi:10.2307/3712894


External links

*Th
English Broadside Ballad Archive (EBBA)
at the
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