The Art and Science of Medieval Manuscript Restoration
The first stage in any restoration project is assessment. Conservators examine a manuscript under magnification and use non-invasive imaging techniques, such as multispectral photography, to reveal text that has faded or been deliberately erased. This stage is crucial because every intervention carries a degree of risk, and modern conservation ethics insist that treatments should be reversible wherever possible. The guiding principle is to do the minimum necessary to stabilise the object rather than to make it look new.
Parchment presents particular challenges. Unlike paper, it reacts strongly to humidity, expanding and contracting in ways that can crack the pigments laid upon its surface. Conservators may gently humidify a buckled leaf to relax the fibres before flattening it under weights. Tears are often mended using thin strips of Japanese tissue and wheat-starch paste, both chosen because they are stable and can be removed later without harming the original.
The pigments themselves are a study in chemistry. Medieval artists used substances such as lapis lazuli for blue, lead white, and verdigris for green. Some of these are unstable: verdigris, for example, can corrode the parchment beneath it. Scientists now use techniques like X-ray fluorescence to identify pigments without taking samples, allowing conservators to anticipate problems.
Digitisation has transformed the field. By creating high-resolution digital copies, institutions can make manuscripts available to scholars worldwide while reducing physical handling of the originals. Yet most conservators agree that the digital image, however detailed, can never fully replace the material object, whose very imperfections tell the story of its long survival.