"Cotton's Library" reveals what can happen to a museum-quality
collection before it reaches the safety of a museum (and sometimes even
after). It is the story of an embryonic British national library
assembled more than 400 years ago by Sir Robert Cotton. Boasting
masterpieces of medieval illumination, the sole manuscript sources of
Beowulf and "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight," and two of four surviving
1215 copies of Magna Carta as well as many priceless historic records,
Cotton's library was and is an irreplaceable treasure of the
English-speaking world. Cotton and his successors nonetheless struggled
for centuries to preserve his library for, and sometimes from, formal
government custodianship. Overcoming war, repression, greedy heirs,
intriguing rivals and disastrous fires, they ultimately succeeded, to
our own great benefit. "Cotton's Library" tells how they did it.