In the late 1300s, Dutch and German adherents of the devotio moderna – ‘modern devotion’ – movement were encouraged to keep rapiaria. The name for these notebooks derives from the Latin rapere, meaning to seize; we might call them ‘grab-bags’. In these devotional notebooks, the pious collected phrases or ideas from their scriptural reading, and added their own spiritual insights; the act of writing led to further rumination, helping the writer benefit from the wise words they copied. The Imitation of Christ – a hugely popular book – started life as the rapiarium of its author, Thomas à Kempis,
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