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The term "chancery hand" can refer to either of two very different styles of historical handwriting. A chancery hand was at first a form of handwriting for business transactions that developed in the Lateran chancery (the ''Cancelleria Apostolica'') of the thirteenth century, then spread to France, notably through the Avignon Papacy, and to England after 1350.〔Fisher, John, Malcolm Richardson, and Jane L. Fisher, ''An Anthology of Chancery English'', 3〕 This early "chancery hand" is a form of blackletter. Versions of it were adopted by royal and ducal chanceries, which were often staffed by clerics who had taken minor orders. A later cursive "chancery hand", also developed in the Vatican but based on humanist minuscule (itself based on Carolingian minuscule), was introduced in the 1420s by Niccolò Niccoli; it was the manuscript origin of the typefaces we recognize as ''italic''. ==English chancery hand== In medieval England each of the royal departments tended to develop its own characteristic hand: the chancery hand used in the royal chancery at Westminster from the mid-century was employed for writs, enrolments, patents, and engrossing of royal letters; its use continued for the enrollment of acts of Parliament until 1836.〔 *(UK National Archives, "Palaeography" )〕 The English chancery hand was already an arcane specialty by the time of the Restoration. Samuel Pepys recorded (Thursday 12 July 1660): 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「chancery hand」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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