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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Life  





2 Works  





3 See also  





4 References  





5 External links  














Lea Ráskay






Magyar
 

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Ráskay's handwriting in the Legend of Saint Margaret, 1510

Lea Ráskay, O.P. (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈlɛɒ ˈraːʃkɒi]; early 16th century, sometimes also spelled Ráskai) was a Hungarian nun and scholar of the 16th century.

Life[edit]

Ráskay was likely a descendant of that old Hungarian aristocratic family which would have gotten its name after the village of Ráska, and until the end of the 16th century, held important positions in the courts of the Kings of Hungary.

Ráskay was a member of the Dominican monasteryonRabbit Island (today Margaret Island, Budapest), founded by King Bela IV of Hungary in 1252, to provide a closer home for their daughter, Margaret, later declared a saint, who had become a member of the Dominican Order. Ráskay was highly learned and well read, and is famous for copying and translating several Hungarian codices that without her work would not have survived. Among them the one for which she is best known: the Legend of Saint Margaret, about Saint Margaret of Hungary, who had lived in the same monastery nearly three hundred years before Ráskay.

She was assigned by the prioress of the monastery to copying manuscripts in its scriptorium, and was the librarian for the community, possibly between 1510 and 1527, according to her notes in specific codices. Ráskay also worked as a secretary, as a manuscript written in the name of Ilona Bocskay is known from her. With her collaborators, Ráskay was working on more books simultaneously. In 1529, when the monastery was evacuated because of the danger of the Ottoman forces, she fled, but took the most important codices to a safe place.

The place and date of her death are unknown.

Works[edit]

All the below works were written in Hungarian.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lea_Ráskay&oldid=1195718928"

Categories: 
15th-century births
16th-century deaths
Dominican nuns
Dominican scholars
Hungarian translators
16th-century Hungarian women writers
16th-century Christian nuns
16th-century Hungarian writers
15th-century Hungarian people
16th-century Hungarian people
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This page was last edited on 15 January 2024, at 00:15 (UTC).

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