Scriptorium

![This late 15th-century miniature of Jean Miélot (died 1472)[1]:36 depicts the author at work: he is shown compiling his Miracles de Nostre Dame, in which this miniature appears.](/uploads/202502/09/Escribano5228.jpg)


Scriptorium, literally "a place for writing", is commonly used to refer to a room in medieval European monasteries devoted to the writing, copying and illuminating of manuscripts by monastic scribes. Written accounts, surviving buildings, and archaeological excavations all show, however, that contrary to popular belief such rooms rarely existed: most monastic writing was done in cubicle-like recesses in the cloister, or in the monks' own cells (Schwakhofer, Melinda. "Scriptorium." Inspiraculum. 30 July 2012.). References in modern scholarly writings to 'scriptoria' more usually refer to the collective written output of a monastery, rather than to a physical room.