The Hengwrt manuscript was written by the same scribe as the lavishly illustrated
Ellesmere manuscript, which, following the examples of the editors
Frederick Furnivall and
W. W. Skeat, was thought to be superior to Hengwrt and used as the base text for many modern editions of the
Canterbury Tales. Since the work of
John M. Manly and
Edith Rickert in compiling their
Text of the Canterbury Tales (1940), however, the Hengwrt manuscript has had a much higher degree of prominence in attempts to reconstruct Chaucer's text, displacing the previously prominent Ellesmere and
Harley MS. 7334. Recent scholarship has shown that the variant spellings given in the Hengwrt manuscript likely reflect Chaucer's own spelling practices in his East Midlands / London dialect of
Middle English, while the Ellesmere text shows evidence of a later attempt to regularise spelling; Hengwrt is therefore probably very close to the original authorial
holograph. The scribe of the Hengwrt and Ellesmere manuscripts has been identified by Linne Mooney, a palaeographer at the
University of York, as
Adam Pinkhurst, a documented member of the
Worshipful Company of Scriveners. The attribution has been widely accepted, and other manuscripts have since been added to Pinkhurst's scribal canon. However, other scholars, including
Jane Roberts, who drew Mooney's attention to Pinkhurst in the first place, have expressed skepticism about the identification on various palaeographical, literary, and historical grounds. ==Order==