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) Where are the earliest parchment documents stored?
6) What is the difference between parchment and vellum?
7) When and why was parchment replaced by paper?
8) Why was the skin soaked in water?
9) What could speed up the process of making parchment?
10) What for were the skins placed on a stretching frame?
11) What are palimpsests?
12) What did they use to make parchment smooth and white?
3. Describe the process of making parchment using the Passive Voice:
Example: The skin was flayed.
4. Find the English equivalents in the text:
5. Match the words on the left with their definitions on the right:
6. Do you know the translation of these words?
7. What do you know about these people and places? Find information and make a report:
Herodotus
Library of Alexandria
The British Museum
Gutenberg
Ramses II