Search results

Start typing

Detail from the title page of the Little Gidding Concordance
The Little Gidding Concordance

The story behind one of the treasures of the Royal Library

Summary

This page contains a collage depicting the Annunciation to the shepherds and the Nativity; extra dogs have also been added©

The Little Gidding concordances are fascinating evidence of the way this small and unique religious community lived and worked, and what they thought was important. Study, work and prayer were the central tenets of their lives, and they lived remarkably minutely organised and scheduled days. This approach to life and religion is much in evidence in the concordances.

From the occasional playful embellishment of a print to the painstaking assembling of verses and highly accomplished bindings, the concordances reveal the character of the community that made them. The inmates at Little Gidding firmly believed that repeated and structured reading, studying and memorising of Scripture was absolutely central to living well. They made the concordances to facilitate exactly this practice.

This page shows the skill used in the construction of the concordance, but also the skill of the original readers in deciphering the combination of word, symbol and image©
As well as being vibrant and fascinating constructions to look at and read, the concordances provide valuable evidence for historians of subjects that are notoriously elusive. Such ephemeral practices as reading are difficult to establish historically, as most people create no material record of the ways in which they read. As books that were made to aid and facilitate reading, the concordances tell us much about reading habits in the early seventeenth century.
 
The collection and use of prints is also often hard to pin down, as single printed sheets are vulnerable to being lost, torn, cut up and generally dispersed. The concordances are a wonderfully well-preserved body of evidence for the ways in which people acquired and used prints in this period.

This enormous work, intended to help a pious student in reading and understanding the Scripture, gives a wonderful insight into the period of the early seventeenth century generally, as well as bringing us close to the lives, thoughts and activities of one small religious community.


The income from your ticket contributes directly to The Royal Collection Trust, a registered charity. The aims of The Royal Collection Trust are the care and conservation of the Royal Collection, and the promotion of access and enjoyment through exhibitions, publications, loans and educational activities.