Название: History in Documents and a Document in History
Автор: Ольга Пасько
Издательство: ФГАОУВО "Южный Федеральный Университет"
Жанр: Учебная литература
isbn: 9785927525348
isbn:
It is widely regarded that the Han Dynasty Chinese court official invented the modern method of papermaking from wood pulp in 105 AD. However, true paper without writing has been excavated in China dating to the reign of Emperor Wu of Han from the 2nd century BC. It was used for purposes of wrapping or padding for protection of delicate bronze mirrors. Although paper used for writing became widespread by the 3rd century, paper continued to be used for wrapping and other purposes.
Toilet paper was used in China by at least the 6th century AD. Toilet paper continued to be necessary in China. During the Hongwu Emperor's reign in AD 1393 the Bureau of Imperial Supplies manufactured 720,000 sheets of toilet paper for the entire court produced of the cheap rice-straw paper. For the emperor's family alone, 15,000 special sheets of paper were made, in light yellow tint and even perfumed.
During the Tang Dynasty paper was folded and sewn into square bags to preserve the flavor of tea. During the same period, it was written that tea was served from baskets with multi-colored paper cups and paper napkins of different size and shape. During the Chinese Song Dynasty not only did the government produce the world's first known paper-printed money, or banknote, but paper money which was bestowed as gifts to deserving government officials were wrapped in special paper envelopes.
In America, archaeological evidence indicates that paper was invented by the Mayans no later than the 5th century AD. It was in widespread use among Mesoamerican cultures until the Spanish conquest. In small quantities, traditional Maya papermaking techniques are still practiced today. The paper was thin and translucent, not like modern western paper, and thus only written on one side. Books were invented in India, of palm leaves where we derive the name leaf for a sheet of a book. The first paper mill in Europe was in Spain in1120. Paper was manufactured in both Italy and Germany by 1400, just about the time when the woodcut printmaking technique was transferred from fabric to paper.
1. Answer the following questions:
1) What is a papermaking process?
2) What type of wood is used to make paper?
3) What substances are incorporated into paper and why?
4) What is the origin of the word “paper”?
5) When and where was the modern method of papermaking invented?
6) When and where was papyrus invented?
7) What materials were used for writing in China before paper?
8) What purposes was paper used for in China?
9) What for was paper used during the Tang and Song Dynasties?
10) What types of toilet paper were used by emperor`s court in China?
11) What other peoples made paper?
12) How are the Mayas linked to the papermaking process?
2. Find the English equivalents in the text:
3. Match the words on the left with their definitions on the right.
Text 7. Parchment
1. Read the text and translate the words and phrases given in bold:
Parchment is a thin material made from calfskin, sheepskin or goatskin. It is used as a material for writing on, for documents or the pages of a book, codex or manuscript. Parchment is not waterproof. Herodotus mentioned writing on skins as common in his time in the 5th century BC. He stated that the Ionians of Asia Minor had been accustomed to give the name of skins to books. This word was adapted by Hellenized Jews to describe scrolls.
Parchment was developed in the city of Pergamum. Perhaps, the word “parchment” evolved from this name in about 263–241 BC. In the 2nd century BC a great library was set up in Pergamum that rivalled the famous Library of Alexandria. Writing on prepared animal skins had a long history. The earliest of such documents are: a fragmentary roll of leather of the Sixth Dynasty preserved in the Cairo Museum; a roll of the Twelfth Dynasty now in Berlin; the mathematical text now in the British Museum; and a document of the reign of Ramses II. Early Islamic texts are also found on parchment. One sort of parchment was called vellum. This word was used to mean fine parchment. This parchment was made from calfskin.
There was a short period during the introduction of printing where parchment and paper were used interchangeably: although most copies of the Gutenberg Bible are on paper, some were printed on parchment. In the later Middle Ages, parchment was largely replaced by paper. Paper was much cheaper and more abundant than parchment. Parchment is also extremely affected by its environment and changes in humidity, which can cause buckling. Books with parchment pages were bound with strong wooden boards and clamped tightly shut by metal clasps or leather straps.
After being flayed, the skin is soaked in water for about one day. This removes blood and grime from the skin and prepares it for dehairing liquor. The dehairing liquor was originally made of fermented or vegetable matter, like beer. By the Middle Ages an unhairing bath included lime. The liquor bath was in wooden or stone vats. Sometimes the skins stayed in the unhairing bath for eight or more days depending how concentrated and how warm the solution was. Replacing the lime water bath also sped the process up.
After soaking in water the skins were placed on a stretching frame. The skins could be attached by wrapping small, smooth rocks in the skins with rope or leather strips. Both sides were left open to the air so they could be scraped with a sharp, semi-lunar knife to remove the last of the hair and get the skin to the right thickness. The skins were made almost entirely of collagen. They formed natural glue while drying and if you take off the frame they keep their form.
To make the parchment more aesthetically pleasing or more suitable for the scribes, special treatments were used. For example, parchment makers rubbed pumice powder into the flesh side of parchment while it was still wet on the frame. It was used to make it smooth and to modify the surface to enable inks to penetrate more deeply. Powders and pastes of calcium compounds were also used to help remove grease so the ink would not run. To make the parchment smooth and white, thin pastes of lime, flour, egg whites and milk were rubbed into the skins.
During the seventh through the ninth centuries, many earlier parchment manuscripts were scrubbed and scoured to be ready for rewriting, and often the earlier writing can still be read. These recycled parchments are called palimpsests. In some universities the word parchment is still used to refer to the certificate presented at graduation ceremonies, even though the modern document is printed on paper or thin card.
2. Answer the following questions:
1) What is parchment made from?
2) Where was parchment used?
3) When and where was parchment developed?
4) What is the origin of the word “parchment”?
5) СКАЧАТЬ