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      • Seals, Matrices & Documents
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    • Sponsored Conference Sessions (1993‒)
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    • Panels at the M-MLA Convention (2016-2019)
      • Abstracts of Papers for the M-MLA Convention
      • Panels at the M-MLA Convention (from 2016)
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      • 2023 Activities and 2024 Planned Activities
    • Seminars, Workshops, Colloquia & Symposia (1989–)
      • Seminars on ‘The Evidence of Manuscripts’
      • Symposia on ‘The Transmission of the Bible’
      • The New Series (2001-)
        • 2019 Anniversary Symposium Program: The Roads Taken
        • 2019 Anniversary Symposium Registration
        • 2019 Anniversary Symposium Registration Open
      • RGME Symposia: The Various Series
      • The Research Group Speaks: The Series
      • Meetings of the Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
      • RGME Online Events
    • Abstracts of Papers for Events
      • Abstracts of Papers for Seminars on ‘The Evidence of Manuscripts’
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    • Business Meetings
    • Photographic Exhibitions & Master Classes
    • Events Archive
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      • “Insular, Anglo-Saxon, and Early Anglo-Norman Manuscript Art at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge” (1997)
        • Mildred Budny, ‘Catalogue’
        • The Illustrated Catalogue (1997)
      • The Illustrated Handlist
      • Semi-Official Counterfeiting in France 1380-1422
      • No Snap Decisions: Challenges of Manuscript Photography
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Sanskrit and Prakrit Manuscripts, Continued: More Leaves for Manuscript Sample XII?
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2026 RGME Colloquium at The Grolier Club: Report
Medieval Missal Fragment as Early-Modern Cover
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A Sister Leaf from a Miniature Latin Vulgate Bible
A Little Latin Vulgate Bible Manuscript Leaf in Princeton
J. S. Wagner Collection. Leaf from from Prime in a Latin manuscript Breviary. Folio 4 Verso, with part of Psalm 117 (118) in the Vulgate Version, set out in verses with decorated initials.
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Episode 22: “Encounters with Local Saints and Their Cults”
Private Collection, Ege's FBNC Portfolio, Dante Leaf, Verso, Detail. Reproduced by Permission.
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Workshop 8: A Hybrid Book where Medieval Music Meets Early-Modern Herbal
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Ronald Smeltzer on “Émilie du Châtelet, Woman of Science”
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Starters’ Orders
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Ronald Smeltzer on “Émilie du Châtelet, Woman of Science”

April 9, 2025 in Announcements, Event Registration, Events, Manuscript Studies, Princeton Bibliophiles and Book-Collectors

The RGME and
Princeton Bibliophiles & Collectors
present a hybrid meeting

Ronald Smeltzer speaks about
“Émilie du Châtelet, Woman of Science”

Wednesday, 23 April 2025
5:00–6:30 pm EDT (GMT-5)

Princeton Public Library
Conference Room
Witherspoon Street
Princeton, New Jersey 08540

In Person and By Zoom
Registration Required

[Posted on 8 April 2025, with updates]

Partnership for the Meeting

Frontispiece to the Institutions de Physique (1740). Image Public Domain.

Co-sponsored by the Princeton Bibliophiles & Collectors
and the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

This special event produces a Hybrid Visit in partnership between the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (RGME) and the Princeton Bibliophiles & Collectors (PB&C), an affiliate of the Friends of the Princeton University Library (FPUL).

The meeting will take place in the Conference Room of the Princeton Public Library, Witherspoon Street, Princeton 08540. Parking is available in the Spring Street Parking Lot nearby.

The PB&C, led by Ronald Smeltzer, and the RGME, directed by Mildred Budny, have collaborated before with some RGME Symposia held at Princeton University (2018, 2019) before the Covid Pandemic. Now we move forward with a new form of collaboration.

With this event, the Meetings of the PB&C resume after a hiatus. The RGME shares the organizational tasks, manages the registration, and adds an online functionality for a fully hybrid event. This practice reflects RGME practices for its online events since 2021 and developments since 2024 for its In-Person Visits, with a hybrid feature, to Special Collections of various kinds, both private and public. This meeting represents the first in this year’s RGME In-Person Visits, for which several are scheduled for later this year.

The meeting will take place, as customary in recent years for the PB&C, at the Princeton Public Library, for which the Conference Room has been reserved. The RGME will bring the online function, through an interactive Zoom Meeting. This step corresponds with the RGME’s tradition since 2021 of providing online access for our events. This meeting also represents a development in Princeton for the RGME to hold an In-Person Visit — with online access for a fully hybrid occasion — to Special Collections of various kinds, private and public, as we resumed in November 2024.

The Speaker and Subject

Private Collection, Choisel, Château de Breteuil. Portrait of Emilie du Chatelet st her desk by Maurice Quentin de la Tour (1704–1788). Oil on canvas, 1750. Image via Wikimedia Commons.

Ronald K. Smeltzer will describe highlights of his years’-long interest in collecting and researching materials relating to Émilie du Châtelet (1706–1749), French mathematician and physicist. Some results of this work have appeared in the landmark exhibition at the Grolier Club,

  • Extraordinary Women in Science & Medicine: Four Centuries of Achievement, co-curated by Ronald K. Smelzer, Robert J. Rubin, and Paulette Rose (2013).

Now, Ronald will speak informally about reflections on this subject, with a view to Du Châtelet’s life, life’s work, collaboration with Voltaire (1694-1788), and early death at the age of 42. Among her many scholarly accomplishments are the Instutitions du Physique (Paris, 1740, with a second edition in 1742, translated also into German and Italian in 1743) and her translation into French of the Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy by Isaac Newton (1643-1727).

Ronald’s collecting interests and discoveries concern a variety of published and unpublished materials, gathered over many years. Ronald’s collecting interests and discoveries concern a variety of published and unpublished materials, gathered over many years. His talk illustrates merits of gathering into one collection an ensemble of materials about a particular subject, including different copies of a given edition, which may, upon inspection and comparison, exhibit significant differences. As he says about the discoveries, “It is important to look.”

At our meeting, we have the opportunity to hear from the scholar-collector about his experiences in forming the collection and bringing their discoveries to wider knowledge. Among the sources are manuscript materials. It might be possible, in person, to see several examples from the collection. Here we might learn more about them, in person and online, from Ronald himself.

Please join us if you can. We look forward to welcoming you.

Thanks

We thank the Friends of the Princeton University Library and also the Princeton Public Library for help with arranging and hosting this landmark event for the RGME in association with the PB&BC.

Registration

Please register to attend the event. There are two registration portals, for attendance in person or online.

Registration to Attend IN PERSON
Space is limited for the In-Person Event.

Please be sure to register so that we can know whom and how many to expect to attend in person. Registration is free. We invite Voluntary Donations for the RGME, a Section 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization principally run by volunteers.

  • https://www.eventbrite.com/e/ronald-smeltzer-talks-about-emilie-du-chatelet-woman-of-science-online-tickets-1310959468059

Registration to Attend ONLINE

  • https://www.eventbrite.com/e/ronald-smeltzer-talks-about-emilie-du-chatelet-woman-of-science-online-tickets-1310959468059

After registration, the RGME will send the Zoom Link to registrants a few days before the event.  To safeguard the security of our online events, the Zoom Link will not be sent by Eventbrite or by Zoom. Please do not share the Zoom Link with others; ask them to register for their own Zoom Link, so that we can keep track of attendance and monitor access to the Zoom Waiting Room.

If you have issues with the registration or Zoom Link, please turn to us for help. Send your questions to rgmesocial@gmail.com.

*****

Frontispiece to the Institutions de Physique (1740). Image Public Domain.

Image: Frontispiece for the First Edition of the Institutions de Physique (Paris, 1740), center, with an image of female figure in classical dress climbing to the Temple of Truth. Image Public Domain.

*****

 

Image: Title Page for the First Edition of the Institutions de Physique (Paris, 1740). Image Public Domain.

*****

Private Collection, Choisel, Château de Breteuil. Portrait of Emilie du Chatelet st her desk by Maurice Quentin de la Tour (1704–1788). Oil on canvas, 1750. Image via Wikimedia Commons.

Image: Portrait of Gabrielle Émilie Le Tonnelier de Breteuil, marquise du Châtelet (1706-1749), French mathematician and physicist. Oil on canvas. By Maurice Quentin de La Tour – http://enlenguapropia.files.wordpress.com/2013/06/emilie_chatelet.jpg viahttps://gallica.bnf.fr/essentiels/du-chatelethttp://classes.bnf.fr/pdf/Chatelet.pdfhttps://web.archive.org/web/20211016012211/http://classes.bnf.fr/pdf/Chatelet.pdf, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=29159624

*****

Tags: Émilie du Châtelet, Friends of the Princeton University Library, Institutions du Physique, Isaac Newton, Princeton Bibliophiles and Book Collectors, Ronald K. Smeltzer, Voltaire, Women of Science
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Starters’ Orders

February 25, 2025 in Announcements, Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evience, Manuscript Studies, RGME Competition, RGME Friends' Meetings, RGME Recipes

“Starters’ Orders”
Competition for Favorite Recipes

Appetizers, Hors d’Oeuvres,
Canapés, and Starters

Round 2
of the Competition
for the Favorite Recipes of the Friends
of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

Logo (2024) of the Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

[Posted on 25 February 2025, with updates]

Following the completion of Round 1 and the awards of its Prizes and the creation of its Award Certificates for the Prize Winners, we turn to Round 2.

For Round 1 and its Entries, see:

  • Three-Step Program, Lemonade Included
  • RGME Favorite Recipes for Lemonade, Etc.

 

After exploring recipes for Lemonade, Etc., and awarding prizes for the winning entries in our Friends Meeting 3 (27 January 2025), we sought suggestions for the subject of Round 2 in our Competition for Favorite Recipes (and stories about them) for the RGME Friends Favorite Recipes Cookbook.

Prizes for the Favorite Recipes for “Lemonade, Etc.” Wrapped and ready to send. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

Our Favorite Recipe Competition now turns to Round 2. The theme for this round was chosen at our Fifth Meeting (23 February 2025).  We wondered: Shall we move from drinks such as lemonade to hors d’oeuvres, entrées, soups, salads, etc., or go straight to desserts? At once came the collective answer: “Starters!”

Starters’ Orders

So we order Starters for our next Round of Recipes.

For this round, we consider Appetizers, Hors D’Oeuvres, Canapes, Finger Food, and Starters of many kinds.

Whatever they are called, this multi-form and multi-purpose variety of foodstuffs is designed to perk the appetite (as “amuse-bouches” or the like), serve as bite-size morsels of deliciousness, stave off hunger in place of a meal when time or opportunity constrains, start a round of courses for a full meal, or stand in between courses as a sort of intermission within an elaborate meal.

Their creation can draw upon a wide range of ingredients and culinary traditions, along with time-tested recipes perhaps handed down in the family. They might also take inspiration from improvisations drawing together what is on hand in the pantry, in the fridge, on the shelves, in the garden or orchard, in the market, or in the shop. They might comprise single ingredients or types of ingredients — such as a handful of nuts, a selection of olives, a piece or pieces of cheese, a nibbling of crudités — or combinations of flavors, textures, and tastes, such as with sauces or dips for fruits and vegetables, raw or cooked.

They serve many purposes and take multiple forms. For example, one widespread genre, Canapes, might be described as:

“a type of starter, a small, prepared, and often decorative food, consisting of a small piece of bread (sometimes toasted) or cracker, wrapped or topped with some savoury food, held in the fingers and often eaten in one bite.”

————— Canapes

What are some of your favorites, and do you have stories about them? Let us know!

As for this Round on the ride to our RGME Friends’ Favorite Recipes Cookbook, shall we call it “Starters’ Orders”?

“Angels on Horseback”. Photograph by Lana via e Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic lic.

Given the name of this game, might there, among the entries, be room for one or other of these offerings, which involve sticks or skewers?

  • Devils on Horseback
  • Angels on Horseback

Prizes and Incentives

As with Round 1, prizes (provided by a donation) await the winning entries. Please send in your entry, with title, description, and story. Sending more than one entry is allowed, indeed encouraged.

We will review the entries and award prizes at one of our Friends’ Meetings. See their schedule:

  • Meetings of the Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

Also please visit our Eventbrite Registration Portal for information about our events and registration for them.

  • RGME Eventbrite Collection

A list of customary or popular offerings in this broad category might jog your memory and perk your interest.

  • Category: Appetizers

*****

From Soup to Nuts

We aim, over time, to gather recipes and stories to fill a cookbook. In this way, we can compare notes and share experiences reflecting the range and breadth of our RGME community. A full-course meal, perhaps, in a veritable Feast.

13-Course Place Setting. Photograph (2019) By Hopefulromntic21 – Own work, via Wikimedia Commons via CC BY-SA 4.0.

*****

Comments, questions, or suggestions?

Send your entries and contact the Friends via

  • friends.of.rgme@gmail.com

*****

Haarlem, Frans Hals Museum, Still Life with Fruits, Nuts, and Cheese (1613) by Floris Claesz van Dyck (1575–1651). By Floris van Dyck – The Yorck Project (2002) 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei (DVD-ROM), distributed by DIRECTMEDIA Publishing GmbH. ISBN: 3936122202., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=150586

Note on the Image: Haarlem, Netherlands, Frans Hals Museum, “Still Life with Fruits, Nuts, and Cheese” (1613) by Floris Claesz van Dyck (1575–1651). Credit: By Floris van Dyck – The Yorck Project (2002) 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei (DVD-ROM), distributed by DIRECTMEDIA Publishing GmbH. ISBN: 3936122202., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=150586.

*****

Tags: Appetizers, Favorite Recipes, Friends of the Reaearch Group on Manuscript Evidence, Hors d'Oeuvres, Lemonade, Recipe Competition, RGME Cookbook, Starters
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Workshop 4. “Manuscript Fragments Compared”

February 16, 2025 in Announcements, Manuscript Studies, Research Group Workshops

RGME Workshops
on
“The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.”
(Formerly: “Examining Original Sources”)

Workshop 4
“Manuscript Fragments Compared”

Sunday 23 February 2025
1:00- 2:30 p.m. EST (GMT-4) by Zoom

We cordially invite you to join us for our next RGME Workshop on the “Evidence of Manuscripts Etc.” The series gives the opportunity collectively to examine original sources, in manuscript and other written forms. Beginners and experts are welcome; we can learn together.

The Series

Originally this series was planned as a two-part series of workshops to consider the medieval “Farell Leaf” on loan to the RGME Library and Archives from the Collection of Jennah Farrell. After rich discussions concerning the fragment and evidence for its production and provenance, most probably as part of the Saint Albans Bible (dismembered in 1964), our workshops have turned into a series for teaching manuscripts and related studies.

Collection of Jennah Farrell, Single Leaf from the Book of Numbers in a Medieval Latin Vulgate Bible manuscript: Recto, top. Photography by Mildred Budny.

Workshop 4

Workshop 4 introduces a comparative study. The plentiful genre of medieval Latin Vulgate Bibles is a rich field in Manuscript Studies. Work on cases of deliberately disbursed manuscripts has yielded in the last two decades a selection of stand-out works. Among them is the Saint Albans Bible, known through numerous studies in print and online. Examples include

  • “Breaking Bad: The Incomplete History of the Saint Albans Bible” (1 Nov 2019)
  • The Book, The Leaf, The Knife, and Some Bother
  • The St Albans Bible (20 June 2021)

Since Workshop 3, another leaf from the medium-format Saint Albans Bible has come to our attention. It stands in the collection of our Associate, Richard Weber – from whose collection our blog on Manuscript Studies has reported other discoveries. Its portion from the Acts of the Apostles offers comparison with the Farrell Leaf from the Book of Numbers, with a view toward the presentation of both Old and New Testaments within its former single volume.

Now see:

  • The Weber Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible

Collection of Richard Weber, Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible, Recto: Top Right. Photograph by Richard Weber.

In our workshop, the case of that manuscript is joined by another fragmented Bible, dismembered instead by the biblioclast Otto F. Ege: namely his large-format Ege MS 14, represented by a leaf now on loan to the RGME for teaching purposes. Over the years, our blog has contributed discoveries to knowledge of that manuscript (see Manuscript Studies). For our workshop, Richard Weber reports his leaf from that manuscript as well.

Private Collection, Leaf from ‘Ege MS 14’. Part of the Book of Jeremiah, Recto, Detail. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

Resources for the Quest

The different agents of destruction for these two books provide instructive case studies for the different but overlapping resources available in print and online for the detective work of fragmentology, in the quest to trace the steps of re-distribution of leaves from these Bibles, with a view toward identifying the locations of survivors and virtually reconstructing their original books, insofar as possible.

We welcome participants to join the quest and come forward with questions, updates on any work they have been doing on the Farrell Leaf, or suggestions for potential avenues of study in future workshops.

Registration

Registration is required and free. We are grateful for Voluntary Donations accompanying your Registration to help support our nonprofit educational organization powered principally by volunteers.

  • Workshop 4. “Manuscript Fragments Compared”: Tickets

Note that our Workshop series now appears on our Eventbrite Registration Portal:

  • RGME Workshops on “Examining Original Sources”: Tickets: Tickets

If you have issues with the Zoom Link or connecting, please contact

  • director@manuscriptevidence.org or rgmesocial@gmail.com .

Information about the series

  • RGME Workshops on “The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.”

  • The Bridge of Signs

  • Handlist of Recources for Manuscript Studies and Fragmentology

Workshop 5 is planned for Sunday March 2025 at 1:30-2:30 pm EST (GMT-5) by Zoom.

Please join us if your timetable allows. We look forward to welcoming you.

*****

Questions? Suggestions?

  • Leave your comments or questions below
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  • our Facebook Page
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  • our Bluesky nest @rgmesocial.bluesky.social)
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Join the Friends of the RGME.

Please make a Donation in Funds or in Kind for our nonprofit educational corporation powered principally by volunteers. Your donations and contributions are welcome, and can go a long way. They may be tax-deductible to the fullest extent provided by the law.

  • Donations and Contributions
  • 2025 Annual Appeal

We look forward to seeing you at our events!

*****

Tags: Collection of Richard Weber, Fragmentology, Jennah Farrell Collection, Latin Vulgate Bibles, Manuscript studies, Medieval manuscripts, Otto Ege MS 14, Otto F. Ege, RGME Workshops on the Evidence of MSS Etc., Saint Albans Bible
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“Thresholds and Communities”

February 8, 2025 in Announcements, Manuscript Studies, Theme of the Year

“Thresholds and Communities”
Our Theme for 2025

[Posted on 5 February 2025, with updates]

Milan, Casa Campanini, Entry Gate. Designed by Alfredo Campanini (1873–1926). Photograph by Giovanni Dall’Orto (26 February 2008), Share Alike 1.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Giovanni Dall’Orto, Attribution, via Wikimedia Commons

For the Year 2025, the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence chooses the Theme of “Thresholds and Communities” for exploration as part of its activities and projects.

We began the year’s activities with Episode 19 of our online series wherein “The Research Group Speaks”, in a roundtable discussion introducing the theme and our planned activities. The discussion considered multiple aspects, meanings, and approaches to Thresholds, functioning also as Gateways, Portals, Doors, and Entrances of many kinds.

  • Episode 19: “At the Gate”

For activities planned for the year, see:

  • 2024 and 2025 Activities

As the year progresses, we will ‘visit’ thresholds of different kinds as we observe their variety. Likewise we will visit communities of various kinds, from the past, present, and perhaps future, as we cultivate the community of the RGME, its participants, audience, friends, and others in the wider world.

Doorways as Grand Entrances

For example, appreciating the photography which showcases the creativity of the design and monumentality of the construction, we might admire the portal to the Casa Campanini, constructed between 1903 and 1906 and designed by the architect Alfredo Campanini (1873–1926). Standing at 11 Via Bellini in Milan, Italy, the main entrance is flanked by a pair of caryatids formed in concrete by the sculptor Michele Vedani (1874–1969). Designed by Campanini and created by Alessandro Mazzucotelli (1865–1938), the wrought iron gate is decorated with graceful floral motifs.

Milan, Casa Campanini, Art Nouveau Style, completed in 1906. Designed by Alfredo Campanini. Image via Dhona, via https://www.facebook.com/groups/Italian.liberty/posts/9132766936775312/.

Thresholds in Literature

We begin with a survey of passages referring to one or more “threshold” in the Bible.

  • “Threshold” in the Bible
    Judges 19:27
    1 Kings 14:17
    2 Chronicles 3:7 (the threshold of the Temple, lined with gold)
    Isaiah 6:4
    Ezekiel 46:2 (guards at the threshold of the Temple)
    Zephaniah 1:9
    1 Samuel 5:4-5 (dismembered parts of the fallen idol Dagon laid at the threshold of the temple of idols)
    — Illustrated, for example, in the Morgan Crusader Bible
    (New York, Morgan Library and Museum, MS M.361, fol. 21r)

    Jeremiah 35:4

Copenhagen, Entrance to Carlsberg Brewery, built 1901.
Image via https://www.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=122224750046226885&id=61556806553551&post_id=61556806553551_122224750046226885&rdid=4h6i5pJiunR2zey7.

Import of a Theme, Place, or Possibility

In addition to physical spaces, “Thresholds” in metaphysical, spiritual, and metaphorical terms are places of transition, which represent beginnings and endings. Navigating them can pose challenges or difficulties. Some of them might not be meant to be traversed, as barriers or points of demarcation. Not always is their passage guaranteed, advisable, or bi-directional. Their presence can be worthy of respect, awe, wonder, admiration, and contemplation.

They offer points of boundary, division, and potential meeting-points for communities.

More to come.

Wells Cathedral, Medieval Door to Undercroft. Wood dated dendochronologically to circa 1265. Image via https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=374843081890636&id=100080948424342&set=a.155695930472020.

Theme and Opportunities

Our events in 2025 on multiple subjects continue to respond to the theme in a myriad of ways. We give thanks to its inspiration and guiding principles.

For example, parts of our 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium on Fragments invoked the explorations across the thresholds into communities of distinctly different kinds enshrined in the Divina Commedia by Dante Alighieri. See:

  • 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium on Fragments

Florence, Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore, Domenico di Michelino, Dante Alighieri with Florence and the Realms of the Divine Comedy (Hell, Purgatory, Paradise). Oil on canvas, 1465. Image Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dante_Domenico_di_Michelino.jpg.

Places and Fields of Studies to Enter

Entrance to Swift Hall and the Department of History at Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York. Photograph by Mildred Budny (2025).

Pertinacity

Entrances and Communities across time.

Transept and nave of the Abbey Church of Notre-Dame of the Abbey of Jumièges (Seine-Maritime, France). Photograph by Delphine Malassingne (20 September 2014), CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Abbatiale_Notre-Dame,_Jumi%C3%A8ges.jpg

Possibilities and Choices

“At the Threshold”. Two cats, footprints, snow, and the story of “The Road Not Taken”. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

We look forward to our next year and its theme. Watch this space!

Now see:

  • Transformations and Renewals: RGME Theme for 2026.

*****

Tags: "Thresholds and Communities", Casa Campanini, Morgan Crusader Bible, Wells Cathedral
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Episode 21. “Learning How to Look”

January 18, 2025 in Announcements, Manuscript Studies, Research Group Speaks (The Series)

“The Research Group Speaks”
Episode 21

“Learning How to Look”
A Roundtable

Saturday 24 May 2025
1:00–2:30 pm EST (GMT-5) by Zoom

[Posted on 17 January 2025]

As the series wherein “The Research Group Speaks,” we respond to suggestions and requests as the series unfolds. For information about the series, please see:

  • “The Research Group Speaks”: The Series

London, British Library, Yates Thompson MS 5, fol. 12r. Book of Hours, 15th century, France, perhaps Tours. Saint Matthew, Evangelist, with book, spectacles, and lion attribute. Image via https://blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2019/02/medieval-spectacles.html

The Plan

For this Episode, by request, a group of experts, scholars, students, and interested observers will compare notes and share experiences. We examine the painstaking yet rewarding quest to learn how to look at objects or materials.

Cases in point will come from the detailed study of manuscripts and printed books, photographs, human anatomy, numismatics, prints and drawings, textual transmission, the natural world, and other spheres. From personal experience, our speakers may report on how they learned how to look, at various stages in their lives and studies, and what tips or methods they find helpful in the process.

We might provide some references as guides or handbooks for this instruction, whether self-taught, mentored, or a combination. For example, to what extent does the process of learning carefully how to look at one body of material transfer to another, that is, to another body of material or to another observer?

Related to this quest for learning how to look more fully at objects and original sources, so as better to understand them, is the need to consider how to describe what it is that we see. Describing can develop understanding the nature of the object more clearly. Putting that recognition into words with precision calls upon accuracy of terminology or nomenclature.

That complex subject might itself call for another Episode of its own. Let us see how this Episode take shape, and where it might lead.

Speakers include (in alphabetical order):

Nan Anantharaman, Mildred Budny, Michael Allman Conrad, David W. Sorenson, and others.

Vitas Patrum Folio 5A. Photography © Mildred Budny

Private Collection, Vitae Patrum, Folio 5A. Photography by Mildred Budny.

Registration

See the registration portal for our events.

  • RGME Eventbrite Collection

For this Episode, you can register through its own portal:

  • Episode 21 “Learning How to Look” Tickets

Registration for the Episode is free. The Zoom Link will be sent to you directly shortly before the event.

We welcome Voluntary Donations with your registration. See also:

  • Contributions and Donations
  • 2025 Annual Appeal

Thank you for joining us!

*****

Questions? Suggestions?

  • Leave your comments or questions below
  • Contact Us

Visit our Social Media:

  • our FaceBook Page
  • our Facebook Group
  • our X/Twitter Feed (@rgme_mss)
  • our Bluesky nest @rgmesocial.bluesky.social)
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  • our LinkedIn Group

Join the Friends of the RGME.

Please make a Donation in Funds or in Kind for our nonprofit educational corporation powered principally by volunteers. Your donations and contributions are welcome, and can go a long way. They may be tax-deductible to the fullest extent provided by the law.

  • Donations and Contributions
  • 2025 Annual Appeal

*****

London, British Library, Yates Thompson MS 5, fol. 12r. Book of Hours, 15th century, France, perhaps Tours. Saint Matthew, Evangelist, with book, spectacles, and lion attribute. Image via https://blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2019/02/medieval-spectacles.html

Tags: Manuscript studies
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2025 Autumn Colloquium at the University of Waterloo

January 6, 2025 in Announcements, Co-Sponsorships with the RGME, Conference, Conference Announcement, DRAGEN Lab, RGME Recollections, University of Waterloo

This link for the

2025 Autumn Colloquium at the University of Waterloo

“Break-Up Books and Make-Up Books:
Encountering the Legacy of Otto F. Ege and Other Biblioclasts”

Friday to Sunday, 21–23 November 2025

redirects you to another link, which retains the record of a plan that could not come to fruition:

  • 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium at the University of Waterloo: A Failed Plan

That plan had to  be aborted.

1. The University and its DRAGEN Lab, which asked to host the 3-day international RGME hybrid colloquium in the first place and set the dates, changed plans with scant notice, despite remonstrations. It abandoned the project, at great financial and other costs to the RGME for the year 2024, during which our plans had focused in good faith on that partnership.

The University and its DRAGEN Lab, despite promises and demands that we provide the documentation and other organizational work, from our own projects and commitments, did not support the grant applications twice over, despite requesting us to help substantially to help to write and then revise for one and the next of two missed application deadlines of 1 March and 1 May. Resourcefully we offered a proposal (Prospectus for Collaboration and companion Memorandum) for a 15 June deadline with constructive, experienced suggestions for co-sponsorship nevertheless.

With no reply, we were left at considerable cost to plan the event without support.

2. Over time, regrouping and turning resourcefully to friends, colleagues, and institutions, the Colloquium found a host at Princeton instead. Thus we could honor the intentions and dedication of colleagues, near and far, who responded to my invitation for contributions when we first issued the call in January.

The outdated post about the 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium at the University of Waterloo: A Failed Plan remains online as a record of the original intentions for the colloquium and the first six months of preparations, when the University of Waterloo presented itself as co-sponsor and called upon our uncompensated expertise,  time, and organizational experience.

Poster 1. 2025 Autumn Colloquium: Save-the-Date. Poster set in RGME Bembino.

The event took place with a different structure and with different supporters and sponsors.

For the revised, revived version of the event, now see:

  • 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium on Fragments

Perhaps of interest are these descriptions of some practices and guidelines for co-sponsorship, drawn from RGME experience over decades, for hosted events at institutions in the United States and beyond:

  • Prospectus for Collaboration
  • and its companion Memorandum

Thank you for your patience and understanding.

*************

Updates

1. Foreground [25 February 2026]

It has come to our attention that representatives of the University of Waterloo continue to claim credit for the event, after the RGME managed, at great cost and hardship for a small organization with very few resources and no employees, no office spaces, and a very limited endowment (having to undergo being drained by exploitation of our skills and resources), to hold the 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium at the requested time and with the requested participant. Perhaps an acknowledgement of thanks, perhaps, for the RGME enforced, uncompensated labor is appropriate?

2. Background [20 November 2025]

The Journey Toward an Event

For years the RGME has promoted, showcased, undertaken, and published research on fragments of manuscripts and printed books, including cases dispersed by Otto F. Ege and other biblioclasts — as reported, for example, on our website, at a variety of our events, and in our blog (see its Contents List).

The RGME began to plan an event for 2025 on Otto Ege and fragments in response to a request during Session 4 on 25 October in our 2024 Autumn Symposium. Planning for it developed through discussions in conversation and at various RGME meetings through December.

With the suggestion in late December that the University of Waterloo might host the event, the RGME was invited by a representative of the University in early January 2025 to hold the event in hybrid format there, hosted by the DRAGEN Lab. The university chose the dates of 21-23 November 2025 for the event, which we confirmed with prospective participants. The university requested the RGME 1) to develop a program for the event through our network of international contacts in many spheres relating to work on the subject, 2) help to find major funding for the event, 3) co-write and then revise a major grant application for a Canadian government Connection Grant, and 4) undertake to produce the event — as the RGME had done successfully for such co-sponsored events over many years, including recently in hybrid format for the invited 2024 RGME Spring Symposium at Vassar College.

Accordingly, with that commitment, the RGME undertook to set up the program, find matching grants, help significantly to write the grant application and then revise it, at UWaterloo’s request. We did so on the understanding that the application would be submitted in timely fashion for the event as designed, and that the RGME would gain benefit from that investment of our time, work, focus, and expertise for the specific purpose, as agreed. When UWaterloo proved unable to honor that commitment, without proposing or discussing a viable, credible, alternative, we had to seek other, reliable sources of funding and support for the  2025 design, which had a specific date, set of RGME commitments, assigned RGME resources, and cast of contributors dedicated to it.

The success of the rescue operation to enable the colloquium to take place on time within 2025, as needed at short notice, forms a testimony to collaborative good resourcefulness and good will. We thank all individuals and institutional sponsors who worked together to make it possible.

  • 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium on Fragments

Private Collection, Leaf from ‘Ege MS 14’. Part of the Book of Jeremiah, Recto, Detail. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

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2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium at the University of Waterloo: A Failed Plan

January 5, 2025 in Announcements, Conference, Conference Announcement, Event Registration, Events, Manuscript Studies, RGME Colloquia, University of Waterloo

NOW OLD:
Plans have changed.
See
2025 RGME Autumn Colloqium on Fragments

and

2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium at the University of Waterloo with background

—————

[Note: This outdated post remains as a record
of the first intentions for the event
and its first six months of preparation
]

2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium
at the University of Waterloo

“Break-Up Books
and Make-Up Books:

Encountering and Reconstructing
the Legacy of Otto F. Ege
and Other Biblioclasts
“

Friday to Sunday 21–23 November 2025
in Hybrid Format (pending funding)
or Online by Zoom

Colloquium ‘Home Page’
for information and updates

[Posted on 5 January 2025, with updates. As of June 2025, the University of Waterloo is not a co-sponsor or host for the event. The renewed version of the initial plan retains its structure, but not that location or partner, while it honors the commitment by contributors who responded to the initial call. 

For the revised version at Princeton, see

  • 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium on Fragments. 

For background on the necessary change, see 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium at the University of Waterloo.]

Motto

“Yet will I leave a remnant, that ye may have some that shall escape the sword among the nations, when ye shall be scattered through the countries”
— Ezekiel 6:8

Waterloo, University of Waterloo, DRAGEN Lab, Vellum Leaf from a Book of Hours, Recto.

By request, in collaboration with the University of Waterloo, the RGME prepares a special 2025 Autumn Colloquium on the phenomena of widely dispersed remnants of dismembered manuscripts and other written materials scattered at the hands of biblioclasts such as Otto F. Ege (1888–1951), for a variety of purposes more and less laudable. We will showcase work being done in various centers and by many individuals on these materials, as part of long-term, laborious, significant, and sometimes dispersed research to identify, reclaim, and, insofar as possible, virtually reconstruct the originals and place them in context.

We seek to gather perspectives on the challenges and opportunities presented by the dispersed manuscript or other materials which survive, albeit disordered or reordered, after passing through the hands of collectors-turned-biblioclasts, for whatever reasons.

A main focus, given the number and variety of projects dedicated to them, will be the manuscripts and other materials dispersed by Otto F. Ege and his collaborators, notably his wife/widow Louise and the New York book-dealer and book-breaker Philip C. Duschnes (1897–1970). Yet, not least because many of their remnants have joined or become intermixed with fragments dispersed by others and through diverse processes in varied collections, it is worthwhile to consider that complex factor for their effective study as well.

We seek to showcase the work of these projects, compare notes about issues and methods of research, and set the legacy of those biblioclasts in the context of others working as predecessors, contemporaries, or followers, as they also redirected the course of manuscript and related studies by disrupting and dislocating its evidence.

The ‘delivery methods’ of dispersal range from assemblages of sets of fragments as specimens in Portfolios, Leaf-Books, Albums, Scrapbooks, or Loose Leaves which might circulate in mats with or without labels, on their own, or in groups sans identifying information. In effect, many of these remnants were cast out on their own as no-name ‘orphans’ whom expertise, serendipity, and circumstance might recognize as ‘foundlings’ or find forever homes, whether virtual or actual. (See The “Foundling Hospital” for Manuscript Fragments.)

Our Colloquium highlights the processes of recovery by multiple, interlinked, and interlocking means, as we gather representatives from the fields of manuscript studies and fragmentology to share their stories, processes, progress, and accomplishments.

New Haven, Yale University, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Otto F. Ege Collection, Leaf in Ege’s Mat from ‘Ege MS 14’. Opening page of the Apocalypse / Revelations in a large-format Lectern Bible in the Latin Vulgate Version. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

Scope

The University of Waterloo and the RGME propose to co-host an international Colloquium with hybrid functionality, for access by a wide audience with interests in multiple subjects. Our two educational organizations in Canada and the United States respectively combine experience and skills to produce a scholarly event with companion publications pre- and post-event, to promote and disseminate research work and discoveries in multiple, interrelated fields of study.

Waterloo, University of Waterloo, DRAGEN Lab, Vellum Leaf with music and notation for liturgical chants: Recto.

Our plan takes its starting point from the wish to gather expertise and perspectives from a different collections of manuscript materials — such as at the Medieval DRAGEN Lab (Digital Research Arts for Graphical & Environmental Networks — and the rich variety of new and long-term projects (both institutional and individual) dedicated to research on the medieval Western manuscripts despoiled and dispersed by Otto F. Ege and his collaborators.

These initiatives include the new project by the Cantus database (Cantus: A Database for Latin Ecclesiastical Chant – Inventories of Chant Sources) to produce a database of the musical manuscript fragments in Ege’s Portfolio of Fifty Original Leaves from Western Manuscripts (FOL). This notorious Portfolio was issued in multiple sets now widely dispersed in public or private collections through North America and beyond. Like others of Ege’s Portfolios, some sets are lost, or lost track of; some have themselves become fragmented, as parts have been removed, as specific manuscript specimens were further disjointed from their relatives, original or newer companions in the biblioclasts’ assemblages. Some of these ‘orphans’ or cast-offs have lost their identifying Ege mats or labels, further to complicate the issues of identification, recognition, and retrieval.

The RGME’s long-term project of research in these fields focuses on the variety of Ege’s Portfolios overall.  Dedicated to specific genres of books, such as Famous Books or Famous Bibles, they include not only manuscript fragments but also a multitude of printed materials ranging from incunabula (up to the year 1500) to the twentieth century; all were selected and arranged by Ege and his circle as specimens of the graphic arts and book arts for instruction and display. (For examples, see our blog on Manuscript Studies and its Contents List for Ege materials.)

Private Collection, Leaf from ‘Ege MS 14’. Part of the Book of Jeremiah, Recto, Detail. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

Research on the surviving evidence on many fronts and in multiple centers can bring expertise to bear upon specific genres (such as manuscripts containing music). So, too, it reveals the processes of workshop practices over decades in the destruction, re-constitution, and further distribution of the original books. For example, such elements have bearing upon the provenance of individual fragments and potential impact upon that of other fragments whose provenance might not otherwise be known.

Collection of Richard Weber, Leaf from Otto Ege MS 14, recto. Photograph by Richard Weber.

Given the progress of these and other projects in various centers concerned with Ege’s legacy, the time is right to bring their representatives (established scholars, curators, collectors, and others, as well as younger scholars) together to compare notes, showcase their work, and strengthen contacts between individuals and centers across borders.

By examining the book-breaking practices overall by “Ege & Co.” in the wider context of biblioclasts over time, including many of Ege’s contemporaries, predecessors, and followers, we might gain fuller knowledge of the individually as well as collectively destructive habits and their legacy. Likewise by comparing notes, surveying the results so far of different projects, and, it might be, identifying more of the seemingly lost fragments in unknown or unexpected places, our Colloquium could cross thresholds and open more gateways to wider knowledge.

Such larger contexts provide wider horizons and more comprehensive awareness of the destructive tendencies towards books in given times and places. They can demonstrate, by examination and comparison, the particular characteristics or ‘style’ of the collector, book-breaker, book-seller, and the resulting forms as altered pieces or bodies of evidence for the lost and damaged originals. Among notable predecessors for the genre can be counted the albums of “visually appealing” manuscript fragments created by Samuel Pepys (1633–1703) or the cuttings prepared by John Ruskin (1819-1900) and others.

Examining the complex legacy of these various re-creators of medieval manuscripts and other written materials and the range of projects dedicated to them from perspectives and fields of many kinds, sometimes integrated across a broad spectrum encompassing expertise in the arts and sciences, can advance knowledge in individual projects as well as in wider discourse relating to the transmission of written evidence from generation to generation and century to century, with losses, discoveries, and reconstitutions along the way.

Our focus for the co-sponsored Autumn Colloquium is the legacy of book-breakers, book-destroyers, and book-recreators active in multiple centers in Europe, the British Isles, and North America (at least), with the fragments produced by their activities and transmitted to diverse locations worldwide, often without appropriate identifying information. Our task, as receivers of the evidence from such disruptions, is to make sense of the evidence, identify it appropriately, recognize its characteristics as bodies of witnesses with a complex history, compare information about diverse projects (in many centers) relating to these materials, gather feedback, and disseminate the results to a wide audience.

Waterloo, University of Waterloo, DRAGEN Lab, Vellum Leaf from a Book of Hours, Recto, detail.

Purpose

This 2025 Colloquium stands within the long tradition of symposia, colloquia, workshops, and other scholarly events of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, now entering its second quarter-of-a-century as a nonprofit educational corporation based in Princeton, New Jersey. The RGME is dedicated to the study of manuscripts and other written records across the centuries. This year our theme is “Thresholds and Communities”.

Waterloo, University of Waterloo, DRAGEN Lab, Vellum Leaf with music and notation for liturgical chants: Verso.

For the 2025 Autumn Colloquium on 21–23 November, the RGME collaborates with the University of Waterloo and its range of programs and projects, including the Cantus Database and the DRAGEN Lab.

The Advisory Committee for the Colloquium comprises:

  • Mildred Budny, Director, Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
  • Debra Lacoste, Cantus Database, University of Waterloo; The Institute of Mediaeval Music; Digital Analysis of Chant Transmission, Dalhousie University
  • David Porreca, Associate Professor; President, Faculty Association of the University of Waterloo; Co-Director, Medieval Studies Undergraduate Program; Department of Classical Studies and Department of History, University of Waterloo

Spanning three days with half-days on Friday and Sunday, the Colloquium will include a series of sessions with presentations and Q&A, roundtable discussions/panels, hands-on workshops, and exhibitions of several kinds.

To augment the scholarly sessions of presentations and discussions, we plan for displays of original materials in manuscript or other forms and demonstrations of the sounds of music represented in medieval manuscript fragments. Among them is a SoundWalk which allows passersby to access audio recordings of specific musical passages preserved on medieval leaves in collections including the DRAGEN Lab and the Cantus Database.

A Reception ending each day’s sessions will lead from the scholarly program to further conversations.

Participants

Participants represent a wide range of interests, approaches, subjects, centers, and materials.

Speakers, Respondents, Panelists, Hosts, and Presiders

Rejoined Pieces of a Leaf from a Book of Hours. Private Collection, reproduced by permission.

Rejoined Pieces of a Leaf from a Book of Hours. Private Collection. Photography by Mildred Budny.

Participants include (in alphabetical order):

Alison Altstatt (University of Northern Iowa)
Steven Bednarski
(DRAGEN Lab, University of Waterloo)
Mildred Budny (Research Group on Manuscript Evidence)
John P. Chalmers (Retired)
Katharine C. Chandler (University of Arkansas)
Lisa Fagin Davis (Medieval Academy of America)
Juilee Decker (Rochester Institute of Technology)
Augustine Dickinson (University of Hamburg)
Scott Ellwood (Grolier Club Library)
Steven Galbraith (Rochester Institute of Technology)
Hannah Goeselt (Massachusetts Historical Library)
Scott Gwara (University of South Carolina and King Alfred’s Notebook LLC)
Elizabeth Hebbard (Indiana University Bloomington and Peripheral Manuscripts Project)
Josephine Koster (Winthrop University)
Debra Lacoste (University of Waterloo, Cantus Database, and Dalhousie University)
David Porreca (University of Waterloo)
Eleanor Price (University of Rochester)
Agnieszka Rec (Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library)
Irina Savinetskaya (Syracuse University)
Kate Steiner (Conrad Grebel University College and University of Waterloo)
Anna Siebach–Larsen (University of Rochester)
Richard Weber (Independent Scholar)
N. Kıvılcım Yavuz (University of Leeds)

And others . . .

Some Results

RGME tradition produces illustrated Program Booklets for major events such as this Colloquium, with participants’ abstracts and selected accompanying illustrations, to grant insider glimpses for our audience (at the event and after) not necessarily familiar with the wide range of subjects and materials under discussion.

A recent example from our 2024 Autumn Symposium “At the Helm” can be downloaded from the RGME website: 

  • 2024 Autumn Symposium Booklet

Waterloo, University of Waterloo, DRAGEN Lab, Vellum Leaf from a Book of Hours, Recto, with the Opening of the Liturgical Kalendar for the Month of February.

We explore sources of funding and sponsorship for the event as a whole.  Information about the results would emerge as these explorations advance. Our aim is to have an in-person event with online access (for speakers and audience) for a fully hybrid colloquium; the online functionality would occur by Zoom Meetings (rather than Webinars with closed access). If funding proves elusive for the in-person facets as well, the event will take place online by Zoom.

We hope to welcome you to the Colloquium.

*****

Note:  For information about the RGME Autumn Colloquium as it develops, please continue to visit this ‘Home Page’.

For related RGME events, please see, for example:

  • 2025 Spring and Autumn Symposia

Registration

To register for RGME events, please visit:

  • RGME Eventbrite Collections

To register for the Autumn Colloquium, we offer portals to attend online or in person respectively.

1) Register for ONLINE Attendance

  • 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium: Tickets for ONLINE Attendance

2) Register for IN PERSON Attendance

  • 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium: Tickets for IN PERSON Attendance

Registration Fees

Circumstances lead us to charge a modest registration fee to attend this 3-day event. The extra costs for preparations in several formats and from different locations require a registration fee to help to offset them.

When you register, we ask you please to add the Eventbrite handling fee for the transaction, as a contribution to the RGME’s costs for this event.

1) General Attendance: $60 US per person

2) Student Discount for Official Students: $35 US per person. When registering for the discount, please let us know your registered affiliation as a student.

The registration fee is waived only for Speakers and Presiders, for whose contributions we give thanks.

We also encourage you to consider adding a Voluntary Donation in support of the RGME, a Section 501(c)(3) nonprofit educational organization principally powered by volunteers.  See:

  • 2025 Annual Appeal
  • Donations

We thank you for your support and your interest in the Colloquium.

*****

Questions? Suggestions?

  • Waterloo, University of Waterloo, DRAGEN Lab, Vellum Leaf from a Book of Hours, Recto, with the Liturgical Kalendar for the Month of February: Top.

    Leave your comments or questions below

  • Contact Us
  • Sign up for our Newsletter and information about our activities.
    Send a note to director@manuscriptevidence.org or RGMEevents@gmail.com

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Join the Friends of the RGME.

Register for our Events by the RGME Eventbrite Collection.

Among them are the

  • 2025 Spring and Autumn Symposia (online or hybrid)
  • Episodes of “The Research Group Speaks” (online)
  • RGME Workshops on “The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.” (online, in person, or hybrid)
  • Meetings of the Friends of the RGME (online)

Please consider making a Donation in Funds or in Kind for our nonprofit educational corporation powered principally by volunteers. Your donations and contributions are welcome, and can go a long way. They may be tax-deductible to the fullest extent provided by the law.

  • Donations and Contributions
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We thank the hosts, co-organizers, advisers, and participants for generously contributing to this Colloquium.

*****

Waterloo, University of Waterloo, DRAGEN Lab, Vellum Leaf from a Book of Hours, Verso.

 

Tags: Albums of Manuscript Fragments, Biblioclasts, Broken Books, CANTUS Database, Dispersed Manuscripts, DRAGEN Lab, Early modern printing, Fragmentology, Leaf-Books, manuscript fragments, Manuscript studies, Medieval manuscripts, Otto Ege Portfolios, Otto F. Ege, Philip C. Duschnes, RGME Colloquia, University of Waterloo
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2025 Spring and Autumn Symposia

December 31, 2024 in Announcements, Conference Announcement, Manuscript Studies, RGME Symposia

2025
RGME Spring & Autumn Symposia

Agents and Agencies
in the Shaping
or Re-Shaping of Books

[Posted on 30 December 2024]

As in 2023 and 2024, for 2025 the RGME prepares an integrated pair of Spring and Autumn Symposia (as Parts 1 and 2 for the year). For those predecessors, see:

  • 2023 Spring and Autumn Symposia,
    with the year’s Theme of “Structures of Knowledge”
  • 2024 Spring and Autumn Symposia”,
    with the year’s Theme of “Bridges”

This year, they respond to our Theme for the Year, “Thresholds and Communities”.

First Steps

London, British Museum. Door-sill carved as a carpet. From Room I, door c, the North Palace of Ashurbanipal II at Nineveh. Photograph (2014) Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin FRCP(Glasg), CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.

First, in January 2025, to set the stage, our first Episode for the year for our online series “The Research Group Speaks” explores the theme of “Thresholds and Communities” and describes the year’s planned projects and activities. Their centerpiece is the pair of Spring and Autumn Symposia. For this episode and the theme, see:

  • Episode 19. “At the Gate”

This event and other activities through the year prepare the ground, follow-up, and follow-though for the Spring and Autumn Symposia.

The Interlinked Pair
of Symposia

British Library, Royal MS 14 E. v, vol. 1, fol. 3r. Image Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

Following the momentum of activities and enthusiasm in our 2024 Anniversary Year, the pair will draw upon the customary informal, but structured, approach of our events, symposia included.

These Symposia will take place online (like both our 2023 Symposia and our 2024 Autumn Symposium). Perhaps parts of them will also occur in-person (like our three-day 2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar College in hybrid format and our 2025 Autumn Colloquium at the University of Waterloo planned for hybrid format).

The dates and titles for these Symposia have been set. Details of their Programs are taking shape, as we continue to make preparations.

Agents & Agencies

As principal focus, our 2025 Symposia consider the myriad aspects and impact of agents and agencies (human and other) in the creation, dissemination, use, abuse, re-creation, safe-guarding, and enjoyment of books across time and place.

I. Spring Symposium (Part I of 2)

“Makers, Producers, and Collectors of Books:
From Author/Artist/Artisan to Library”

Friday to Sunday
28–30 March 2025 by Zoom

We explore the genesis and gestation of books, from first thoughts to processes of production leading to the finished product, and then to their owners and users.

For example, for the first stages, we might consider the author alone in his or her study, putting pen to page or thought to written word. Around him might, naturally, whether close at hand or in his memory or imagination, stand other books as examples or sources of inspiration, imitation, or perhaps plagarism.

British Library, Royal MS 14 E. 1, vol. 1, fol. 3r. Image Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

Note on the Image. Frontispiece/headpiece for the first volume of the Speculum Historiale (or Miroir historial) by Vincent of Beauvais (1184/1194 – c. 1264) in the Old French translation by Jean de Vignay (circa 1282/1285 – c. 1350). Bruges, circa c. 1478–1480, for Edward IV (1442–1483, king from 1461–1470 and again from 1471-1483). On this page, at the front of Vincent’s text, above its opening columns of script, the author sits as scribe in a book-furnished study, framed within an architectural arcade and set within an elaborate border containing the king’s arms below.

The work of composing, copying, revising, and producing draft, fair, or final copies of the texts (with images where and as indicated) could be undertaken by more than one author, artist, and/or artisan. If so, would they work in tandem, sequence, or competition? Well, that might depend.

Aachen, Schatzkammer, Aachen Gospels, fol. 13r. The Four Evangelists at Work. Circa 820. Image via Karolingischer Buchmaler um 820, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

As the work progresses, there arrive further stages which create the issue or publication of the book, which then may enter the world in processes of dissemination, instruction, and incorporation within an individual or collective collection — or, it might be, from collection to collection, in one shape or another. The changed shapes could, of course, pertain to the book itself and/or the ownership.

In the image below, we draw attention to the large, closed volume being held diagonally by a figure at far right, as he faces toward the king at the center. Given its context within the book and its historical setting, that very volume would contain as its frontispiece the image which we see here. Designed and engraved by Sébastien Le Clerc (1637—1714), the scene depicts an idealized visit by the king, Louis XIV of France (1638–1715, ruled from 1643), to the Académie Royale des Sciences founded in 1666.

Sébastien Leclerc I, Engraving on paper. King Louis XIV visits the Académie Royale des Sciences in an idealized view. Image Public Domain.

Note on the Image. Engraving on paper by Sébastien Leclerc I (1637–1714), 1671. Within a large room overlooking the gardens and containing a multitude of specimens, scientific apparatus, and other materials for study, Louis XIV (1638–1715, King of France from 1643) visits his Royal Academie des Sciences in an idealized view. Image Public Domain.

Various large-scale publications by this Academy employ Le Clerc’s image as their monumental frontispiece. Among them would be one held in this image by its author, as identifiable from images during his lifetime.

*****

II. Autumn Symposium (Part 2 of 2)

“Readers, Fakers, and Re-Creators of Books:
From Page to Marketplace and Beyond”

Friday to Sunday, 17–19 October 2025 by Zoom

In the Autumn Symposium, we follow up the explorations of the Spring Symposium as we turn to consider the ‘afterlives’ of books once they reach their audience, whether through the marketplace or other modes of presentation and distribution. Such conditions may acquire a life of their own, as readers, annotators, users, owners, thieves, despoilers, and others had or took a hand in shaping or reshaping their destinies — that is, of the books, those agents, and book history.

As examples, we may point to readers who would reshape the pages by placing their comments, revisions, scribbles, or sketches upon them. So, too, forgers as well as plagarists might appropriate others’ work as their own, say by reshaping its structure, grafting on other pieces, or extracting parts to re-assemble and redistribute in other forms for their own purposes. Such might occur, for example, as leaves or scraps were extracted, cut into further pieces, perhaps refolded, and reused as coverings or parts of bindings for other texts (manuscript or printed), or for other repurposed materials.

Justinian Wrapper folded from back with flap.

Budny Handlist 7: Medieval Leaf reused as Folder. seen from Back with Flap and Tie. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

A different form of reuse concerns the fragmentation of books for the purpose of extracting leaves or part-leaves to serve as specimens of script, decoration, illustration, and/or graphic design.

The 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium at the University of Waterloo in November 2025 is designed, picking up the pieces, to showcase the legacy of such despoilers or ‘biblioclasts’ who dispersed the fragments of manuscripts and printed books far and wide. The 2025 RGME Autumn Symposium considers such phenomena within the larger context of the ‘afterlives’ of books in many other forms as well.

New Acquisitions Exhibition at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library in November 2016: View of Some Parts of "Otto Ege Manuscript 14".

“A Long Shot”. New Acquisitions Exhibition at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library in November 2016: View of Some Parts of “Otto Ege Manuscript 14”.

The rôles of forgers, fakers, and frauds as agents in the production, re-creation, and distribution of books looms large in the history of books, perhaps from time immemorial. Our Symposium sets their activities or accomplishments into the context of “Agents and Agencies” as we examine the broad setting of books overall.

*****

Watch this space as the plans take shape.

For our activities planned for 2025, see:

  • 2024 Activities and 2025 Planned Activities

*****

Registration

To register for each symposium or both, please visit the RGME Registration Collection.

  • RGME Events

Registration is free. We encourage you to make a volunteer donation when you register, to help support our nonprofit educational corporation powered principally by volunteers.

After you register, the Zoom Link for the online event or the online functionality of a hybrid event will be sent to you before the event.

Eventbrite Registration

  • Episode 19. “At the Gate: RGME Activities for 2025”

Thank you for joining us!

*****

Questions? Suggestions?

  • Leave your comments or questions below
  • Contact Us

How to Join our Community

Visit our Social Media:

  • our FaceBook Page
  • our Facebook Group
  • our X/Twitter Feed (@rgme_mss)
  • our Bluesky nest @rgmesocial.bluesky.social)
  • our Instagram Page
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Join the Friends of the RGME.

Please make a Donation in Funds or in Kind for our nonprofit educational corporation powered principally by volunteers. Your donations and contributions are welcome, and can go a long way. They may be tax-deductible to the fullest extent provided by the law.

  • Donations and Contributions
  • 2025 Annual Appeal

*****

Christine de Pizan, La cité des dames, in the copy in Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des Manuscrits, Français 1179, folio 3 recto. Image Public Domain via gallica.bnf.fr.

*****

 

Tags: "Thresholds and Communities", Books as Agents, Manuscript studies, RGME Symposia, The Agency of Books
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Episode 19: “At the Gate: Starting the Year 2025 at its Threshold”

December 27, 2024 in Announcements, Event Registration, Manuscript Studies, Research Group Episodes for The Research Group Speaks, Research Group Speaks (The Series)

“The Research Group Speaks”
Episode 19
“At the Gate:
RGME Activities for 2025”
A Roundtable

Saturday 18 January 2025
1:00–2:30 pm EST (GMT-5) by Zoom

[Posted on 28 December 2025, with updates]

London, British Museum. Door-sill carved as a carpet. From Room I, door c, the North Palace of Ashurbanipal II at Nineveh, Iraq. 645-640 BCE. Photograph (2014) Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin FRCP(Glasg), CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.

To open our events for 2025, our first Episode of the year in the online series wherein “The Research Group Speaks” positions us “At the Gate” as we embark on a year with a Theme dedicated to “Thresholds and Communities“.

Here we discuss the aims and structures of our series of activities and projects for 2025, as their organizers, co-organizers, advisors, and participants join an informal roundtable.

We invite you to join us to learn about the plans as they develop, and contribute feedback as we start the year’s program.

Following Episode 18 in December 2024 on “Women as Makers of Books” at the close of our Anniversary Year, this next Episode introduces the Theme for the New Year, as it launches the suite of our multiple activities for 2025.

We introduce our Theme for the Year and present the plan for our events and publications.

Our Theme for 2025:
“Thresholds and Communities”

Our activities will address a wide variety of subjects, fields of study, and genres of materials as we focus especially upon original sources, representing witnesses to writing in multiple forms. They include manuscripts, printed books, maps, music, works of art, epigraphy, and other forms, in keeping with our interests in a rich variety of sources from the past and recent past.

Some activities continue strands and momentum from 2024 activities. For example, the 2025 Spring and Autumn Symposia build upon the accomplishments of the highly successful series in 2024 by focusing upon Special Collections and original materials and their uses for study, teaching, and more.

London, British Library, Harley MS 4431, fol. 4r.Christine de Pisan sits at work writing in an interior accompanied by a dog. France (Paris), c. 1410 – c. 1414. Image via https://blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2013/06/christine-de-pizan-and-the-book-of-the-queen.html.

London, British Library, Harley MS 4431, fol. 4r. Christine de Pisan sits at work writing. France (Paris), c. 1410 – c. 1414. Image via https://blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2013/06/christine-de-pizan-and-the-book-of-the-queen.html.

Similarly we build upon the inspiration of two Episodes for “The Research Group Speaks” which formed bookends or pendants for our Anniversary Year in January and December. The former considered the roles of Women Writers from the Medieval to Post-Modern Periods. The latter addressed Women as Makers of Books, by considering not only functions as authors but also activities as authorial book-designers or as calligraphers, illustrators, compilers, and editors, such as for successful serial publications.

The pair of Episodes focused upon the agency of women in and for books.

  • Episode 15. Women Writers from the Medieval to Post-Modern Periods
  • Episode 18. Women as Makers of Books

In 2025, we propose to examine, among other subjects, the multiple types and forms of agents and agencies in the making, producing, disseminating, collecting, reading, using, abusing, re-creating, and transmitting of books across time and place. Our programs shape accordingly.

Watch this space, and come to our Episode 19 to hear about the plans. We welcome your feedback and participation.

Panelists and Subjects

Panelists for our Roundtable include:

Phillip Bernhardt–House, Mildred Budny, Hannah Goeselt, Justin Hastings, and others.

Topics to consider include the processes of choosing the subjects, approaches, and structures of the events in their interconnected series. Our Speakers may describe the thought-processes, explorations, research, and consultations which underpin this creativity.

Plans for the year work to shape individual events or their series, and to integrate them into the full suite of events and publications of the RGME for the year round. Attendees are invited to offer suggestions and volunteer to participate in the events and their organization as well as their follow-up.

  • Episodes of “The Research Group Speaks”
  • Workshops on “The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.”
  • In-Person (and hybrid) Visits to Collections
  • Co-Sponsored 2025 Digital Medieval Studies Institute in Boston/Cambridge (March)
  • 2025 Spring and Autumn Symposia
    — Spring Symposium. “Makers, Producers, and Collectors of Books, From Author/Artist/Artisan to Library”
    — Autumn Symposium. “Readers, Fakers, and Re-Creators of Books, From Page to Marketplace and Beyond”
  • 2025 Autumn Colloquium
  • 2025 Conference Activities:
    — 2025 International Congress on Medieval Studies (ICMS) at Kalamazoo in May
    — 2025 International Medieval Congress (IMC) at Leeds in July
  • Meetings of the Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
  • Competitions for the Friends (such as Favorite Recipes for an RGME Recipe Book),
    — Prizes Included
  • Masterclasses (by Request)

Rome, Capitoline Museums, Front panel of a sarcophagus representing the four seasons. Marble, Roman artwork, middle of the 3rd century CE. Photograph by Jean-Pol GRANDMONT. Image via Capitoline Museums, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via

Reflections on the Theme

In this living context, our Speakers may address the Year’s Theme of Thresholds in wider ramifications.

1) Liminal Deities

Vatican City, Vatican Museums, Museo Chiaramonti, section XIV, no.17. Janus-type Double Herm. Marble, Roman copy after a Greek original. Image via Wikimedia via Creative Commons 3.0 Unported.

For example, Phillip Bernhardt–House might survey some rituals and divinities or beings whose charge or domain occupies, or relates to, thresholds of various kinds from antiquity onward. Among them are numbered

  • Janus, the Roman “God of all beginnings, gates, transitions, time, choices, duality, doorways, passages, and endings” (Janus)
  • Hecate, the Greek goddess of boundaries, crossroads, doorways, and city walls
  • Cardea, the Roman goddess of health, thresholds, and door hinges and handles
  • Heimdall, the Norse god associated with boundaries, borders, and liminal spaces
  • Hermes, Greek god of roads, merchants, travelers, trade, thievery/thieves, cunning, and animal husbandry; messenger of Zeus and psychopomp (“guide of souls). In particular, Hermes is associated with particular types of oracles (the Astragalomanteia and the Kledones; see also Cledonism and Cleromancy), as well as with words, language, and magic — comprising some of the most liminal but connective and ‘commercial’ activities of all.
  • Mercury, Roman messenger god and psychopomp; equivalent to the Greek Hermes, sharing some of his functions, such as being a god of commerce, travelers, merchants, and thieves.

London, British Museum, Drawing of a Hekate Triformis, perhaps as a Hekation or shrine, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

2) Thresholds as Emblems

Our Director would briefly describe characteristics of Thresholds/Portals/Gateways, as exemplified or embodied in language, literature, art, architecture, religion, ritual, and imagination. Such reflections have sometimes guided RGME and related activities, as with the Symposium held at Princeton University for our 2009 Anniversary Year.

  • Gathering At the Threshold: A Celebratory Symposium

As motto, she proposes a quotation from the introduction to the first issue of a short-lived periodical by the polymath Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832) under the name Propylaen (July 1798–1801). Regarding that enterprise, it can be observed that:

Through its German name, “Propyläen” (from the Greek προπύλαιον, propylaion, pl. προπύλαια, propulaia, an entryway to a building), which can be translated to English as “Propylaea“, the periodical, including its various themes, was to represent a uniquely cultural “entryway”; and thus, it symbolized the building that is life into which the artist is required to enter.

— Propyläen

Goethe’s Birthplace: Goethe-Haus, Grosser Hirschgraben, Frankfurt-am-Main, Innenstadt. Image: Dontworry, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Selected as a motto at the start of her own Ph.D. Dissertation (London, 1985), Goethe’s classic “Introduction” (Einleitung) to his serial publication states a sobering observation from eloquent and perhaps prescient experience.

THE YOUTH (Jüngling), when Nature and Art attract him, thinks that with a vigorous effort he can soon penetrate into the innermost sanctuary; the Man, after long wanderings, finds himself still in the outer court.

Such an observation has suggested our title. It is only on the step, in the gateway, the entrance, the vestibule, the space between the outside and the inner chamber, between the sacred and the common, that we may ordinarily tarry with our friends.

In German:

Der Jüngling, wenn Naur und Kunst ihn anziehen, glaubt mit einer lebhaften Streben bald in das innerste Heiligtum zu dringen; der Mann bemerkt, nach langem Umherwandeln, daβ er sich noch immer in den Vorhõfen befinde.

Eine solche Betrachtung hat unsern Titel veranlaβt: Stufe, Tor, Eingang, Vorhalle, der Raum zwischen dem Innern und Ausern, zwischen den Heiligen und Gemeinem kann nur die Stelle sein, auf der wir uns mit unsern Freunden gewönlich aud halten werden.

—— Preface to Propyläen

Sesterce of Nero, 54-68 AD, Reverse: Temple of Janus with Closed Doors. Patrick H. C. Tan Collection. Image: Classical Numismatic Group, Inc. http://www.cngcoins.com, CC BY-SA 2.5 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5>, via Wikimedia Commons

Registration

Please register to attend this online Episode. Registration is free, and we invite you to make a volunteer donation when you register, to help support our nonprofit educational corporation powered principally by volunteers.

After you register, the Zoom Link will be sent to you before the event.

Eventbrite Registration

  • Episode 19. “At the Gate: RGME Activities for 2025”

Thank you for joining us!

*****

Questions? Suggestions?

  • Leave your comments or questions below
  • Contact Us

Visit our Social Media:

  • our FaceBook Page
  • our Facebook Group
  • our X/Twitter Feed (@rgme_mss)
  • our Bluesky nest @rgmesocial.bluesky.social)
  • our Instagram Page
  • our LinkedIn Group

Join the Friends of the RGME.

Please make a Donation in Funds or in Kind for our nonprofit educational corporation powered principally by volunteers. Your donations and contributions are welcome, and can go a long way. They may be tax-deductible to the fullest extent provided by the law.

  • Donations and Contributions
  • 2025 Annual Appeal

*****

Paris, Porte Saint-Denis, from the South. Image: Photograph (10 September 2011) by Coyau / Wikimedia Commons/ via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Porte_Saint-Denis_01.jpg.

*****

Tags: "Thresholds and Communities", Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, Gates and Gateways, Janus, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Liminal Deities, Manuscript studies, Propylaen, RGME Roundtable, RGME Theme for the Year, The Research Group Speaks
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2025 International Medieval Congress at Leeds: RGME Program

December 9, 2024 in Announcements, Conference, Conference Announcement, Events, ICMS, International Medieval Congress, Leeds, Manuscript Studies

2025 International Medieval Congress
at Leeds:
RGME Program

32nd Annual IMC
Monday to Thursday 07–10 July 2025
(with In-Person and Virtual Components)

“Manuscripts as Worlds of Learning”
(3 Sessions + Roundtable)

“Knowledge Games and Games of Knowledge”
(1 Session)

Congress Theme: “Worlds of Learning”

Private Collection. Stereoscopic Photograph of Bridges of Paris, circa 1850s.

[Posted on 8 December 2024, with updates]

Building upon the successful completion of our RGME Inaugural Session at the International Medieval Congress (IMC) at the University of Leeds in July 2024, and responding to the strength and numbers of proposals for our Call for Papers for the IMC in 2025, we announce the Program for our sponsored activities at next year’s Congress.

For information about the Congress, see

  • its official website and
  • the Padlet Page showing the range of organised sessions advertising for papers (as part of the Call for Papers, now completed).

“Worlds of Learning” at Leeds in 2025

The Thematic Focus for the IMC in 2025 is “Worlds of Learning”. The broad scope is described in the general Call for Papers: IMC 2025 – ‘Worlds of Learning’.

The worlds to explore in and for learning are wide. We look to manuscripts as carriers, portals, and thresholds, in keeping with our chosen theme for 2025 RGME activities, “Thresholds and Communities”.

Our Aims

Our set of interlinked events planned for the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (RGME) focuses on the power and potential of manuscripts to contain, convey, and embody worlds of learning within their span.  In effect, given their structure and contents, as we approach them as beholder, user, reader, student, teacher, or admirer, they may carry worlds in our hands.

How might medieval manuscripts do so, variously for their medieval audience, later intermediaries, and our own times? How might and do they function as “Worlds of Learning” in their own right/write?  We explore.

As interest has grown, the two sessions (plus roundtable) which we planned for “Manuscripts as Worlds of Learning” grew into three (plus roundtable), amounting to four events.  See:

  • Call for Papers for “Manuscripts as Worlds of Learning”

We also present a Session with Papers devoted to “Game Knowledge and Knowledge of Games”, which follows up a strand in our RGME Inaugural Session this year.

  • “Knowledge Games and Games of Knowledge”: An RGME Session for IMC 2025

Following in succession the close of the Call for Papers, our choices for the programs for the sessions and roundtable, and the acceptance of all these sessions plus roundtable by the IMC, we present

  • a suite of events containing three Sessions with Papers accompanied by a Round Table with Discussion, all dedicated to “Manuscripts as Worlds of Learning”
    (Monday 7 July 2025)
  • a Session with Papers dedicated to “Knowledge Games and Games of Knowledge: A Global Perspective on How Manuscripts Conserve and Transmit Ludic Knowledge”
    (Tuesday 8 July 2025)
    Read the rest of this entry →

Tags: Games of Knowledges, International Medieval Congress, Knowledge Games, Manuscript studies, Manuscripts as Worlds of Learning, University of Leeds, Worlds of Learning
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