A company I follow on Facebook (18thcenturybibles.org) shared a really interesting web post by Medieval book historian Erik Kwakkel. You can read more of Erik's interesting posts on his page: http://erikkwakkel.tumblr.com/
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"Thin pieces of metal that are bluntly attached to precious
illuminated pages. It is not something you see every day in a medieval
book - or imagined to see at all in such delicate objects. They are
pilgrim’s badges, mementos purchased during pilgrimages to holy sites in
medieval Europe. They are really not very different from the Eiffel
Towers, baseball caps or Big Bens that we carry home in our suitcases
today: they are mass-produced, cheap and highly portable souvenirs. If
you went to see the shrine of St Thomas Becket, you would take a badge
home, partly to show that you had been (like this one). The badges above are special because the pilgrim attached them to
the pages of his prayerbook when he came home, which is how they
survived. The shiny pieces of metal are religious instruments, of
course, but they also proudly emphasize that the owner of the book went
on a real pilgrimage: been there, done that!"
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