A composite manuscript made up of three distinct parts (Verses on monastic antiphons; Meditations of the monk of Farne; two treatises by Uhtred of Boldon) the first part appears to have been added at a later date. The authorship of the main works in the manuscript by Durham monks could indicate a Durham origin for the manuscript.
Parchment
Foliation
a6 (lacks 1),1-612 (6 lacks 12),74,810,912,108,118
Written in late 14th century hands
Of the Meditations part, Farmer writes “The scribe's subdivisions of the text do not always correspond with the author's thoughts; this fact, together with certain errors in the text which are most easily explained by defective copying, point to this MS not being the author's autograph. It contains few corrections, almost all in the scribe's own hand, and iti s almost contemporary with the author” (Farmer 1957, 156)
The list of contents on f.5v, written about 1400, only lists the second and third parts, implying that the first part was added later.
Written in England, Durham (?), later 14th century.
Attributed to John de Whitrigg by Farmer, due to allusion to St John in the text. He was resident on the Farne Islands for most of the time between 1353 and 1372; the other possible author is Richard of Sedgebrook who was Master of Farne 1358-63 and 1368-78.
Blank
A continuation of De substantialibus regulae monachalis.
A slightly later addition
Farmer, H., "The Meditations of the Monk of Farne", Analecta Monastica , IV (1957) 141-245
The Monk of Farne. The meditations of a fourteenth century monk , edited and introduced by Dom Hugh Farmer O.S.B. Translated by a Benedictine of Stanbrook (London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 1961)
Pantin, W. A., "Two treatises of Uhtred of Boldon on the monastic life" in Hunt, Pantin and Southern, Studies in medieval history presented to Frederick Maurice Powicke (Oxford: OUP, 1948), 363-85