, the college's greatest benefactor The collection was begun in 1376, shortly after the college's founding, and much improved by a bequest from
Matthew Parker in 1574, the college's Master between 1544 and 1553. He served as
chaplain to
Anne Boleyn,
Vice-Chancellor of
Cambridge University, and
Archbishop of Canterbury from 1559 to 1575. It was during this time that he formed a fine collection of manuscripts, salvaged from the libraries of
dissolved monasteries. As part of his collection process, Parker employed a number of scholars, scribes, and book artisans to acquire, curate, maintain, and edit his manuscripts.
Stephen Batman, one of Parker's chaplains, boasted to have collected 6,700 books over the course of four years for the Archbishop, though very few of them were selected for the library:"Among whose Bookes remayned, althoughe the moste parte according to the tyme, yet some worthy the viewe and safe kéeping, gathered wythin foure yeares, of Diuinitie, Astronomie, Historie, Phisicke, and others of sundrye Artes and Sciences (as I can truely auouche, hauing his Graces commission wherevnto his hande is yet to be séene) sixe thousand seauen hundred Bookes, by my onelye trauaile, whereof choyse being taken, he most gratiouslye bestowed many on Corpus Christi Colledge in Cambridge."In his correspondence, Parker often discussed his curatorial process. Writing to
William Cecil in 1573, Parker defended his collection of manuscripts as part of his duty to preserve and print "such rare and written authors that came to my hands, until the days of King Henry the VIIIth, when the religion began to grow better." With this purpose in mind, Parker claimed to "have within my house in wages, drawers and cutters, painters and limners, writers, and bookbinders." In another letter to Cecil from 1565, Parker described the process of supplementing missing pages of text within his manuscripts by having his skilled scribes imitate the style and layout of other medieval models. Noticing that an early English Psalter of Cecil's (in this case, Parker was describing the
Vespasian Psalter) lacked the first psalm, Parker suggested moving a miniature of David with his harp from the 30th folio to the opening of the book and supplying the missing portions in an imitative style "counterfeited in antiquity." Though he had already been collecting manuscripts for many years, Parker received official support from the Privy Council in 1568 to continue his search for important historical and religious documents throughout the country. This letter is now preserved in the Parker library in CCCC MS 114a, p.49. As one of the architects of the
Elizabethan Settlement and the modern
Church of England, Parker was keenly interested in collecting and preserving manuscripts from
Anglo-Saxon England as evidence of an ancient English-speaking church independent of Rome. Parker wished to demonstrate an
apostolic succession for the English Church. The original gift from Parker consisted of about 480 manuscripts and around 1000 printed books spanning the 6th–16th centuries. The historian James D. Wenn has suggested that Parker may have enjoyed the protection of
Sir Rowland Hill of
Soulton, Shropshire, during his period of disfavour under Mary I, when this collection would have been in danger, along with Parker himself; Hill was the publisher of the
Geneva Bible and joined Parker as a Commissioner for Ecclesiastical Cases in 1559. As early as the sixteenth century, this collection was recognised as a unique treasure, and Parker did not bequeath it without any strings. Within the terms of his endowment, Parker stated that if any more than a certain number of books were lost, the rest of the collection would pass first to
Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge and then (in the event of any more losses) to
Trinity Hall, Cambridge. Every few years, representatives from both of those colleges ceremonially inspect the collection for any losses. Parker placed a similar condition on the silver that he also bequeathed to the college, and these stipulations are part of the reason that Corpus Christi College retains to this day the entirety of the library and the silver collection, as they were unable to sell off (or melt down) the less valuable parts of either collection without losing both. The collection has been housed in the
Wilkins' Room, along the length of the south side of
New Court within the college, since 1827. The ground floor, which was until 2006 the college's student library, has been converted into a temperature-controlled, fire-proof vault and separate reading room for visiting academics. The current
librarian is Philippa Hoskins, elected as the second Donnelley Fellow Librarian in 2019. In 2004 the college established
The Friends of The Parker Library, a small subscription-based club in order to raise money and secure the future of the library. ==List of Parker librarians==