Probatio pennae

Probatio pennae (also written probatio pennę; in Medieval Latin; literally "pen test") is the medieval term for breaking in a new pen, and used to refer to text written to test a newly cut pen.

[1] A scribe would normally test a newly cut pen to see if it wrote well by writing a few lines of text on a piece of blotting paper.

Sometimes these blotting papers survived due to being used afterwards as book binding material; they often provide unique, less "serious" textual material that would otherwise have been lost.

A famous example is "Hebban olla vogala", one of the first fragments of Dutch literature, which survived from an eleventh-century probatio pennae in Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Bodley 340.

[2] This writing system–related article is a stub.

An eleventh-century probatio pennae : one of the first known Dutch language fragments ( Hebban olla vogala ).