Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Medieval Religious Document From 1245 Now In UBC Library Collection

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2015 11:53 AM
    VANCOUVER — The University of British Columbia has obtained a 770-year-old religious document that its professors say will be an invaluable resource for students and teachers.
     
    The handwritten decree on parchment was issued by Pope Innocent IV to affirm the rights of the San Michele monastery in Trent, Italy.
     
    The so-called papal bull document is believed to be the oldest of its kind in Canada. Included with the 62-by-58-centimetre document, made from sheep or calf skin, is the pope's lead seal, or "bulla" in Latin, the reason it's called a papal bull.
     
    Access to such documents is normally tightly restricted, but this decree will be available to anyone who wants to study it.
     
    "I'm going to use it in all my classes on the European Middle Ages," said UBC history instructor Richard Pollard. "This is the foundational Western document. It's a wonderful illustration of papal power in the 13th century."
     
    Legal scholars will find it useful for what it can tell them about early legal traditions, while library science professors and students will learn about document production and preservation from examining the decree, he said.
     
    Its text was written by hand in an ornate, precise writing font called papal chancery minuscule with a quill pen. It's signed by Pope Innocent IV and 13 witnesses, one of them a future pope, Nicholas III.
     
    The University bought the document from British antiquarian book dealer Bernard Quaritch Ltd. UBC's Rare Books and Special Collections librarian Katherine Kalsbeek said it cost $15,000, a good price for a document that old and well-preserved.
     
    The document has just been unveiled now because when it arrived last summer, it was folded, and had been for centuries. That required gently flattening it using a humidification chamber to relax and uncrease it, Kalsbeek said.
     
    Many of these types of documents are in Europe, and the few in North America are in collections like New York's Morgan Library and Museum, where people have to apply to see them.
     
    Josh Timmermann, a master's history student at the library to examine the papal bull in person, said few people actually get permission to see such documents.
     
    "For undergraduates who are accustomed to reading about the Middle Ages in a textbook, they can have this direct, unmediated contact with the medieval past that they couldn't have otherwise."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Government should do more to help Canada's troubled police officers

    Government should do more to help Canada's troubled police officers
    TORONTO - Some recent suicides among Canada's police officers have mental health advocates redoubling calls for more aggressive government action and greater public sympathy for the emotional well-being of law enforcement professionals.

    Government should do more to help Canada's troubled police officers

    Call growing louder for national prescription drug plan in Canada

    Call growing louder for national prescription drug plan in Canada
    OTTAWA - It's a buzzword in the medical community, although one that hasn't quite caught fire yet with Canadians at large: pharmacare, a national program that would see prescription drugs covered through a publicly funded system rather than out of pocket.

    Call growing louder for national prescription drug plan in Canada

    Rob Ford to return to hospital Tuesday for second round of chemotherapy

    Rob Ford to return to hospital Tuesday for second round of chemotherapy
    TORONTO - Rob Ford's brother says the ailing Toronto mayor will begin a second round of chemotherapy on Tuesday. Doug Ford says he will back in hospital then for the cancer treatment.

    Rob Ford to return to hospital Tuesday for second round of chemotherapy

    Vancouver Fire Crews Battle Large Blaze At Granville Gardens Building

    Vancouver Fire Crews Battle Large Blaze At Granville Gardens Building
    VANCOUVER - Vancouver's assistant fire chief says it's too early to confirm whether a blaze that ripped through an unoccupied assisted-living facility was suspicious.

    Vancouver Fire Crews Battle Large Blaze At Granville Gardens Building

    Canada Contributing To Telescope Involved In Search For Extraterrestrials

    Canada Contributing To Telescope Involved In Search For Extraterrestrials
    MONTREAL - Canada is contributing to a new space telescope that one scientist says may help in the search for signs of extraterrestrial life.

    Canada Contributing To Telescope Involved In Search For Extraterrestrials

    Canada deploying 2nd mobile lab in battle against Ebola outbreak in West Africa

    Canada deploying 2nd mobile lab in battle against Ebola outbreak in West Africa
    Canada is sending a second mobile laboratory and the team to run it to West Africa in an effort to battle the Ebola outbreak, Health Minister Rona Ambrose announced Saturday.

    Canada deploying 2nd mobile lab in battle against Ebola outbreak in West Africa