Many of Paris's manuscripts aside from his
Chronica contain multiple texts and often begin with a large assortment of prefatory material, often including full-page miniatures. Some have survived incomplete, and the various elements now bound together may not have been intended to be so by Paris. Unless stated otherwise, all were given by Paris to his monastery (from some inscriptions it seems they were regarded as his property to dispose of). The monastic libraries were broken up at the
Dissolution. These MSS seem to have been appreciated, and were quickly collected by bibliophiles. Many of his manuscripts in the
British Library are from the
Cotton Library., a present to
Henry III of England. Illustration from the II,
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge • .
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, MSS 26 and 16, 362 × 244/248 mm. ff 141 + 281, composed 1240–53. His major historical work (see below), but less heavily illustrated per page than others. These two volumes contain annals from the creation of the world up to the year 1253. The content up to 1234 or 1235 is based in the main on Roger of Wendover's
Flores Historiarum, with additions; after that date, the material is Paris's own, and written in his own hand from the annal for 1213 onward. There are 100 marginal drawings (25 + 75), some fragmentary maps and an itinerary, and full-page drawings of
William I. MS 16 has very recently had all prefatory matter re-bound separately. :A continuation of the
Chronica, from 1254 until Paris's death in 1259, is bound with the
Historia Anglorum in the British Library volume below. An unillustrated copy of the material from 1189 to 1250, with much of his sharper commentary about
Henry III toned down or removed, was supervised by Paris himself and now exists as British Library Cotton MS Nero D V, fol. 162–393. •
Flores Historiarum.
Chetham's Hospital and Library, Manchester, MS 6712. Only part of the text, covering 1241 to 1249, is in Paris's hand, though he is credited with the authorship of the whole text, which is an abridgement of the
Chronica with additions from the annals of Reading and of Southwark. Additional interpolations to the text make it clear the volume was created for
Westminster Abbey. It was apparently started there, copying another MS of Paris's text that went up to 1240. Later it was sent back to the author for him to update;
Richard Vaughan argues this was in 1251–2. The illustrations are similar to Paris's style but not by him. Later additions took the chronicle up to 1327. •
Historia Anglorum. British Library, Royal MS 14 C VII, fols. 8v–156v. 358 × 250 mm, ff 232 in all. A history of England, begun in 1250 and perhaps completed around 1255, covering the years 1070–1253. The text is an abridgement of the
Chronica, also drawing on Wendover's
Flores Historiarum and Paris's earlier edited version of the
Chronica. Bound with it is the final part of Paris's , covering the years 1254–1259 (folios 157–218), and prefatory material including an itinerary from London to Jerusalem and tinted drawings of the kings of England. All is in Paris's own hand, apart from folios 210–218 and 154v–156v, which are in the hand of the scribe who has added a note of Matthew Paris's death (f. 218v). The
Chronica concludes with a portrait of Paris on his death-bed, presumably not by him. By the 15th century this volume belonged to
Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, son of
Henry IV, who inscribed it "Ceste livre est a moy Homffrey Duc de Gloucestre". Later it was held by the
bishop of Lincoln, who wrote a note that if the monks of St Albans could prove the book was a loan, they should have it back. Otherwise, it was bequeathed to
New College, Oxford. The fact that the book was acquired by a 16th-century Earl of Arundel suggests that Duke Humphrey's inscription was not entirely accurate, as New College would probably not have disposed of it. •
Abbreviatio chronicorum (or
Historia minor), British Library Cotton MS Claudius D VI, fols. 5–100. Another shortened history, mainly covering 1067 to 1253. Probably begun , it remained unfinished at Paris's death. Illustrated with thirty-three seated figures of English kings illustrating a
genealogy. It also contains the most developed of Paris's four maps of Great Britain. •
Chronica excerpta a magnis cronicis. British Library Cotton MS Vitellius A XX, folios 77r–108v. Covers from 1066 to 1246. Written at some point between 1246 and 1259. Not definitely by Paris, but evidently written under his supervision, with some of the text in his own hand. •
Liber Additamentorum. British Library Cotton MS Nero D I, ff 202 in all, contains maps, the illustrated
Vitae duorum Offarum, the
Gesta Abbatum (the lives of the first 23 abbots of St Albans with a miniature portrait of each), coats of arms, as well as a large number copies of original documents such as letters. The from-life original version of his well-known drawing of an elephant is in this volume, as is a large drawing of Christ, not by Paris. from the
Trinity College, Dublin Life of St Alban •
Life of St Alban etc., dating controversial (1230–1250),
Trinity College, Dublin Library, Ms 177 (former Ms E.I.40) 77 ff with 54 miniatures, mostly half-page. 240 × 165 mm. Also contains a
Life of St Amphibalus, and various other works relating to the history of
St Albans Abbey, both also illustrated. The
Life of St Alban is in French verse, adapted from a Latin
Life of St Alban by
William of St Albans, ca. 1178. The manuscript also contains notes in Paris's hand (see above) showing that his manuscripts were lent to various aristocratic ladies for periods, and that he probably acted as an intermediary between commissioners of manuscripts and the (probably) lay artists who produced them, advising on the calendars and iconography. •
Life of King Edward the Confessor 1230s or 40s,
Cambridge University Library MS. Ee.3.59. This is the only surviving copy of this work, but is believed to be a slightly later copy made in London, probably by court artists, of Paris's text and framed illustrations. Based on the Latin Life of Edward the Confessor by
Aelred of Rievaulx, 1162. •
Life of St Thomas of Canterbury, British Library, Loan MS 88 – Four leaves (the "Becket Leaves") survive from a French-verse history of the life of
Thomas Becket with large illuminations. Based on the Latin
Quadrilogus compiled by
Elias of Evesham at
Crowland Abbey in 1198. The illuminations are attributed to Paris by
Janet Backhouse, but not by
Nigel Morgan. Vaughan had previously noted that the leaves from the
Life of St Thomas and the
Life of King Edward are of different sizes, and written by different scribes, neither of them Paris himself, so they are not likely to be part of the manuscript that Paris wrote of having lent to the Countess of Arundel; but that, "to judge from the script and the style of illumination" they are "very close copies of Matthew [Paris]'s original". •
Life of St Edmund, a French-verse history of the life of
Edmund Rich, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1233 to 1240. Based on Paris's own Latin prose life of Rich, composed in the late 1240s, which drew on a collection of materials made at
Pontigny, statements from
Robert Bacon and
Richard Wych, Bishop of Chichester, and other materials including from Paris's own histories. A 14th-century copy of the prose life has survived in British Library Cotton MS Julius D VI, folios 123–156v. One copy of the verse life that was in Cotton MS Vitellius D VIII was destroyed in the
fire of 1731; but another copy was discovered in the early 1900s at
Welbeck Abbey and is now in the British Library. •
Liber Experimentarius of
Bernardus Silvestris, and other fortune-telling tracts.
Bodleian Library, Oxford, Ms. Ashmole 304, 176 × 128 mm, ff72. Many illustrations: author portraits (many of ancient Greeks –
Socrates,
Plato,
Euclid,
Pythagoras), birds, tables and diagrams of geomantic significance. Several later copies of the text and illustrations survive. Provenance before 1602 unknown. • Miscellaneous writings by
John of Wallingford (the Younger), British Library, MS Cotton Julius D VII, 188 × 130 mm, ff. 134. 1247–58. Mostly scribed by
John of Wallingford, another monk of St Albans, who also probably did some drawings. A portrait of John, a map of the British Isles, and a
Christ in Majesty are all accepted as by Paris. The main text is a chronicle, highly derivative of Paris's. This was John's property, left to his final monastery at
Wymondham. Also, fragments of a Latin biography of
Stephen Langton. Various other works, especially maps. A panel painting on oak of
St Peter, the only surviving part of a
tabernacle shrine (1850 × 750 mm), in the Museum of
Oslo University has been attributed to Paris, presumably dating from his visit in 1248. Local paintings are usually on pine, so he may have brought this with him, or sent it later. ==Paris as an artist==