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2026 International Congress on Medieval Studies: Program
Episode 24. “Life with Books” (Interview with John Windle)
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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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Kalamazoo, MI Western Michigan University, Valley III from the side. Photograph: David W. Sorenson.
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“Consuming Cultures & Manuscript Evidence” – 2018

August 30, 2018 in Conference, Conference Announcement, M-MLA, Midwest Modern Language Association, Uncategorized

“Consuming Cultures and Manuscript Evidence”

2018 Permanent Panel
sponsored by the
Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
at the
Midwest Modern Language Association (M-MLA)

2018 Convention
Kansas City, Missouri
November 15–18, 2018

[Posted on 30 August 2018, with updates, now with a change to the Program.  Now see a newer version of this post: 2018 M-MLA Panel.]

The Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, in keeping with the M-MLA’s theme of “Consuming Cultures” for its 2018 Convention, sponsors a panel on the “Consumption of Manuscripts”.  After the completion of the Call for Papers, we now announce the Program for the Panel, which will take place on 15 November. The Program for the Convention in full is now available in preview through the M-MLA website: 2018 Program Booklet.

Food for Thought

In our design for the Panel, both in its proposal (as circulated in the Call for Papers) and in the selected design for its Program, we recognize that consideration of “consumption” can be literal, metaphorical, or both.  For example, the process and product could mean the destruction wrought by bookworms, fires, and biblioclasts, and/or the consumption effected by textual transmission and reception more broadly.

Accordingly, we have invited all approaches, including textual, art historical, codicological, and paleographical.  Also invite subjects from all periods.  Nice.

© The British Library Board. Harley MS 628, folio 160 verso. Psalms 101 begin.

© The British Library Board. Harley MS 628, folio 160 verso. Psalms 101 begin.

Year 3 of Our Panels at the M-MLA

Thanks to the expert initiatives by our Associate Justin Hastings, this will be the 3rd year that the Research Group sponsors Permanent Panels at the Annual Convention of the Midwest Modern Language Association.

The plan to sponsor the 2018 Panels draws inspiration from the success of our Panels at the M-MLA in the past 2 years. Details here:

2017

2017 M-MLA Panel on “Artists, Activists, and Manuscript Evidence”
2017 M-MLA Panel Report

2016

“Marginalia in Manuscripts and Books” for the 2016 M-MLA
2016 M-MLA Report

Chandelier and Ceiling Murals at the Netherland Plaza Hotel. Photography by Mildred Budny.

“Seeing the Light”. Chandelier and Ceiling Murals at the Netherland Plaza Hotel.

As customary for our Sessions at the International Congress on Medieval Studies, we publish the Abstracts of the Papers for our Panels at the M-MLA Convention in our Panel Announcements and Reports.

*****

The continuation of the tradition of Permanent Panels at the M-MLA Convention is most welcome, and we thank our organizer, Justin Hastings, and the Midwest Modern Language Association. We congratulate Justin for his expert organizational skills and outstanding collegiality, and we applaud his willingness to continue to organize the panels for the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence.

*****

© The British Library Board. Harley MS 628, folio 160 verso. the initial 'd' for 'Domini'.

© The British Library Board. Harley MS 628, folio 160 verso, detail. Psalm 101 begins with the initial ‘d’ for ‘Domini’.

*****

Program

Session 21. Friday 8:30–9:45 a.m.

“Consuming Cultures and Manuscript Evidence”

Panel Sponsored by the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
at the Midwest Modern Language Association Convention
15 November 2018

Panel Chair:  Justin Hastings, Loyola University Chicago

[Note the recent change in Program, as the paper by Jessie McDowell will be replaced by Justin’s]

Chikako D. Kumamoto, College of DuPage, Addison, Illinois
“ ‘The Press and the Fire’ and ‘Discretion’:
Distributing Cognition and Its Reception through Paratextual Apparatus in Print and Manuscript Culture”

Abstract of Paper

[Jessie McDowell, Loyola University Chicago
“Medieval Manuscripts and Interoperability:
Scholarly Editing, Collaboration, and the Digital Artisan”]

Justin Hastings, Loyola University Chicago
“Hic Littera Patet:  Medieval Commentaries on Horace’s Satires and Patterns of Textual Consumption”

*****

Further information about the Convention can be found on its website. See also M-MLA Convention Permanent Section Call for Papers .

Please Contact Us with your questions and suggestions. See you there!

*****

Tags: M-MLA, Manuscript studies
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Latin Document of 1437 on Vellum from Barcelona

August 13, 2018 in Manuscript Studies, Uncategorized

Large-Format Single-Sheet Document in Latin on Vellum
Circa 58.4 cm × 34.1 cm|
With a Matching, and Still Conjoint, Pair of Records
for a Sale in 1437 (Perhaps Effected?)
between 2 Named ‘Transporters of Animals’
in the ‘City of Barcelona’

Large Single-Sheet Latin Document on Vellum recording a sale of land of 1437. Private Collection. Reproduced by Permission.[Published on 20 August 2018.  Our blog continues to report discoveries among dispersed manuscript fragments and documents of varying dates and provenance. See the Contents List, arranged principally by genres.

Update on 15 July 2020:  Now see Fragments of a Castle Capbreu from Catalonia, examining parts of the volume for which this pair of documents apparently formerly served as the cover or wrapper.]

Recycling in Action

As a reused older document, the large vellum sheet served for a time as the parchment cover from some later register (now lost, or lost track of).  With an undulating and irregular upper edge, the sheet now measures circa 584 mm × 341 cm.

Bipartite 1437 Document in Latin from Barcelona. Docketing Inscription on verso or dorse of the vellum sheet, with information about the former volume which the vellum sheet formerly covered. Private Collection, reproduced by permission.Placed on one side of the sheet, the original text comprises two documents, one after the other, or rather two copies of a single document, regarding the same sale, dated 1437 and supplied with the same notarial signature.  The other side of the sheet carries a set of inscriptions which provide information concerning the contents of the former register, rather than docketing information for the document itself. 

Such docketing inscriptions appear, for example, on some other subjects of our blog, as with some other documents not pressed into service as reused covers: here and here. These differ from the titles or identifying inscriptions for the volumes which the reused sheets formerly covered. Such cases appear, for example, on large vellum sheets, from documents or manuscripts, pressed into service as covers, as here.

The document now resides in a Private Collection, obtained through an online transaction.  We thank the owner for bringing this item to our attention and supplying information as well as images.

Size Matters

The size of the object required a piece-meal set of scans for its reproduction.  Preparing the image shown here, the owner reports that, given the size of the available scanner,

I had to fit four scans together, and it [that is, the image] isn’t quite complete, although it is missing at most three or four letters from [the end of] each line.  One of the parties is a certain Johannem Sabaterii curritorem animalium civem Barchine who sells the property to one Berengario Doluge curritorem animalium civem Barchine.

And so, with that resourceful tesselation, the face of the document appears here more-or-less in full:Large Single-Sheet Latin Document on Vellum recording a sale of land of 1437. Private Collection. Reproduced by Permission.

From One “Animal Transporter” To Another

The transaction(s) on the document concern(s) the sale of property from one “transporter of animals” to another.

Various documentary records which survive and have online access for research cite this occupation for individuals engaging in transactions of some kind or other, as here: curritorem animalium.

Both Agents Based in, or From, the ‘City of Barcelona’

On this document, both individuals which engage in the transaction are identified moreover as coming from, or belonging to, the civ[itat]em Barchine.  That is, presumably, the city of Barcelona: civitatem barcinoniae, or Barcelona.

Astronaut photo of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain (3 June 2004). Via Earth Observations Laboratory, Johnson Space Center. NASA, public domain.

Astronaut photo of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain (3 June 2004). Via Earth Observations Laboratory, Johnson Space Center. NASA, public domain.

Docketing for the Former Contents:  Cabreo de Castelloni for 1488

On the verso (or dorse) of the document there stands a set of inscriptions written in two stages in two different inks and by two or more different hands identifying the contents.  In three lines, the inscriptions state:

Añ[n]o 14.88.
Cabreo de Castello[n]i.
32 . . . . 3 . . . . 2

“Year 1488.
Cabreo of the Castle
32 . . . . 3 . . . . 2″

The first two lines state their case in a tall, imposing script written in dark brown ink.  The third line rests its case in a series of numerals and dots written in mostly darker ink with a thinner pen (or pens) and partly retraced and add components, perhaps entered by two different hands or one hand on a revisit.

568 1437 Document Docketing

The language is Castellan, as signalled by the word cabreo: “In Catalonia and probably also in other areas of Spain, documents called Capbreus (in Castilian Spanish: Cabreo) are known from the Middle Ages.”

The inscription indicates that the vellum document served for a time as the cover, or part of the cover, of the cartulary of the castle, presumably Montjuïc Castle.  The building still stands, although its former moat has been overplanted. The identification of which castle derives from other evidence pertaining to materials purchased from the same online source.

Entrance to Montjuïc castle across the former moat. Photograph 2007 by Puigalder, via Wikipedia Commons.

Entrance to Montjuïc castle across the former moat. Photograph 2007 by Puigalder, via Wikipedia Commons.

*****

289 1437 Document Top Right cropped

Top Left: Document Version 1

Latin document of 1437 detail of Top Left. Private collection, reproduced by permission.

Bottom Left: Document Version 2

1437 upright Mid Left

The Notary Petrus Pons of Barcelona and His Sign

So far, as we begin to examine the document, so good.  More research may yield further information about the named individuals, including the notary, whose professional script and distinctive notary sign imply extensive practice at the skill.

290 1437 Top Left rotated Notarial Signature

Signum Petri Pons . . . legia not[aria] publi[c]a barch[i]ue

Notarial Sign Version 1

Notarial Sign Version 1

Notarial Sign Version 2

Notarial Sign Version 2

Also, given the still-conjoined duplicate copies of the transaction, we might wonder if the transaction somehow was incomplete, or aborted, so that one, another, or neither party received his or their copies of the deed.

Perhaps therein lies a tale.

Any Suggestions?

More to Learn

Do you have any suggestions or observations? Might you join the quest to discover more about this large-format single-sheet document on vellum in Latin apparently from Barcelona?

Do you recognize this scribe, his notarial sign, those parties to the transaction, or similar circumstances?  Do you know of other records naming these parties:   Johannem Sabaterii curritorem animalium civem Barchine who sells the property to one Berengario Doluge curritorem animalium civem Barchine?

Please let us know.  Please add your contents here or Contact Us.

*****

Tags: Barcelona, curritorem animalium, Medieval Documents Reused as Binding Covers, Notarial Sign, Petrus Pons Notary of Barcelona
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2019 International Congress on Medieval Studies Call for Papers

July 5, 2018 in Announcements, Call for Papers, Conference, Conference Announcement, Events, ICMS, Index of Medieval Art, International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, Manuscript Studies, Societas Magica

Sessions
Sponsored and Co-Sponsored
by the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
at the 54th International Congress on Medieval Studies
9–12 May 2019

Call for Papers
Deadline for Proposals = 15 September 2018

[Published on 5 July 2018, with updates]

With the achievement of our Activities at the 2018 International Congress on Medieval Studies, as announced in our 2018 Congress Program, we both give a 2018 Congress Report and prepare a Behind the Scenes Report.

For updates, please watch this space and our Facebook Page.  [And now, with the completion of the span for the CFP in mid-September 2018, we prepare the Programs for our Sessions at the 2019 Congress, for which see, in time, our 2019 Congress Program announcement.]

*****

Now we proceed to preparations for the 2019 Congress. This next year, the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence celebrates its 20th year as a nonprofit educational corporation and its 30th year as an international scholarly organization.

We have a tradition of celebrating landmark Anniversaries, both for our organization, with organizations which which we share anniversaries, and for other events. As described, for example, in our 2014 Anniversary Reflections.

This coming year, 2019, we prepare events at the Congress and elsewhere, so as to represent, to explore, to promote, to celebrate, and to advance aspects of our shared range of interests, fields of study, subject matter, and collaboration between younger and established scholars, teachers, and others, in multiple centers.

In June 2018, we learned that most — not all — of our Session Proposals (due on 1 June) for the 2019 Congress have been accepted by the Congress Committee, so that we progress to their Call for Papers.  We regret the rejections for proposed Sessions which, for example, promoted initiatives by Graduate Students and by Independent Scholars, and which we wished to support.

Logo of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (colour version)The Congress Committee will publish the full 2019 Call for Papers for the 54th ICMS, with the list of Session Titles and Sponsors. Here we announce our 5 sponsored and co-sponsored Sessions and describe their aims.

As in recent years, we co-sponsor Sessions with the Societas Magica (2 Sessions). It will be the 14th year of this co-sponsorship.  It will be the first year of co-sponsorship with the newly-founded organization Polytheism-Oriented Medievalists of North America (POMONA).

Also, like the 2015–2018 Congresses, we plan for

  • an Open Business Meeting and
  • a Reception.

As usual, we aim to publish the Program for the accepted Papers, once the Call For Papers has completed its specified span.  We will publish the Abstracts for these Papers as the preparations for the Congress advance and as their Authors permit.  Abstracts for previous Congresses appear in our Congress Abstracts, conveniently Indexed both by Year and by Author.]

Read the rest of this entry →

Tags: Animals in Celtic Magical Texts, Classical Deities in Medieval Northern European Contexts, History of Magic, Index of Medieval Art at Princeton University, Manuscript studies, Medieval Manuscript Fragments, POMONA, Ritual Magic, Societas Magica
No Comments »

2018 International Congress on Medieval Studies Report

May 22, 2018 in Abstracts of Conference Papers, Announcements, Business Meeting, Conference, Conference Announcement, ICMS, Index of Christian Art, Index of Medieval Art, International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, Manuscript Studies, Princeton University, Reception, Societas Magica

Report:  Sessions & Events
Sponsored and Co-Sponsored
by the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
at the 53rd International Congress on Medieval Studies
10–13 May 2018

[Published on 23 May 2018, with updates]

20180514_131049 The Scene of the Time the Morning After cropped more

“The Scene of the Time” Photography by Mildred Budny.

With the completion of our Call for Papers for the 2018 Congress, we prepared the Programs for our Sessions and other Events — Reception and Open Business Meeting included. With the turn of the New Year, as customary, we began to add the Abstracts of Papers and Response, as their Authors permit, to our webpost announcing our activities for the 2018 Congress Program.  Next, with the publication of the full Congress Program in a “sneak preview” at the beginning of February, the allocated times and locations become known.  Also, as time progressed, more Abstracts joined our gathering Report.

Now we report the Congress activities as they occurred.  You Are Here.

A Behind The Scenes Report gathers momentum as well.  Coming Soon to a Screen Near You.  Watch This Place.

Background and Foreground

The course of announcements and reports about the 2018 Congress may follow the sequence of previous years. For example, for the 2018 Congress, we announced the Plans and the Call for Papers (which has a deadline of 15 September), the Program (once the Sessions are designed from the responses to the Call for Papers), then an updated version or versions of the Program with the addition of the Abstracts and other news (same URL), and, once the Congress is accomplished, a Report as well as, it may be, a Report Behind the Scenes.

  • 2018 Congress Call for Papers
  • 2018 Congress Program
  • 2018 Congress Report
  • 2018 Congress Behind the Scenes Report (in preparation).

*****

Logo of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (colour version)As in recent years, we co-sponsored Sessions with the Societas Magica (3 Sessions), and we co-sponsor a Reception.

Also, like the 2017 Congress, we held

  • an Open Business Meeting and
  • a Reception, co-sponsored with The Index of Medieval Art at Princeton University.

It is the 13th year of our co-sponsorship with the Societas Magica, and our 3rd year of co-sponsorship with the Index of Christian Art at Princeton University, now (since 2017) known as the Index of Medieval Art at Princeton University.

As usual, we publish the Abstracts for the accepted Papers. Both they and the Abstracts for previous Congresses appear in our Congress Abstracts, listed by Year and by Author.

Read the rest of this entry →

Tags: Business Meeting, Index of Christian Art at Princeton University, Index of Medieval Art at Princeton University, International Congress on Medieval Studies, Reception, Societas Magica
1 Comment »

Sanskrit and Prakrit Manuscripts

April 18, 2018 in Manuscript Studies, Uncategorized

Palm-Leaf and Paper Manuscripts

[Posted on 18 April 2018, with updates and corrections.  Among the updates are new images, showing more specimens in the collection.  We thank John Stavrellis, who works toward a Ph.D. in Indology at the University of Bonn, for identifications of the text on some leaves.]

Paper Leaf in Sanskrit with an Ornate Frame for the 4-Line Text. Gold-framed rectangular green border with frieze-like floral designs in dark green pigment. Private Collection. Photography by Mildred Budny.Inspired by some recent communications, as scholars, collectors, and devotees of manuscripts around the world recognize a welcome on our website, we present some fragments from palm-leaf and paper manuscripts which have joined a collection willing to welcome them.  This private collection of many varieties of scripts, texts, languages, formats across the ages and across many cultures — see our Galleries — has generously allowed us to display, study, and publish them, along with discoveries that this collaboration permits.

For some time, I have meant to present these images on a Gallery of one kind or another on our nonprofit website.  In the transition from our first (Drupal) website to the second (WordPress), I encountered so many difficulties regarding any advance with the Galleries and Media, ensuring an inevitably cumbersome transition from one to the other.

That was then.  This is now. Read the rest of this entry →

Tags: Astrological Manuscripts, Bhagavadgita Manuscripts, Devī Māhātmyam Manuscripts, Kalpa Sūtra Manuscripts, Mahābhārata Manuscripts, Palm-Leaf Manuscripts, Prakrit, Sanskrit, Stringing Holes, Vishnu Sahasranāma stotra Manuscripts
5 Comments »

Bembino Version 1.5 (2018)

April 18, 2018 in Announcements, Bembino, Manuscript Studies, Uncategorized

The Newest Version of Bembino (Version 1.5)

Poster Announcing Bembino Version 1.5 (April 2018) with border for Web display

Poster Announcing Bembino Version 1.5

Years in the making, through consultation with scholars, students, and readers in a wide range of fields, Bembino is designed to allow multiple languages to live in harmony on the same page.

We offer Bembino Version 1.5 (2018), together with an updated version of the companion Booklet.

Available FREELY for download here.

Enjoy!

Would you like further elements? Please Contact-Us .

****

Tags: Bembino, Bembino Digital Font
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A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 214’?

April 13, 2018 in Anniversary, Manuscript Studies

Part of a 22-Line Prayerbook in Dutch
From the Collection of Otto F. Ege?

Single leaf from a small-format Prayerbook
Circa 166 × 177 mm <written area circa 128 × 82 mm>
Single column of 22 lines in Gothic Bookhand, with embellishments in red pigment

Pencil inscription ‘X . 43  Flanders 1525’ at the bottom of the recto

Perhaps formerly part of Ege Manuscript 214 (Gwara, Handlist 214)

Flanders, circa 1330

Lower Half of the Original Verso of a Single Leaf detached from a prayerbook in Dutch made circa 1530, owned and dismembered by Otto F. Ege, with the seller's description in pencil in the lower margin. Image reproduced by permission.

Private Collection. Leaf from a prayerbook in Dutch, detail.

[Published on 13 April 2018, now with updates with thanks to Peter Kidd.]

Continuing our series on Manuscript Studies, Mildred Budny (see Her Page) adds new evidence to her earlier reports about some medieval manuscripts dispersed by Otto F. Ege (1888–1951).  See our Contents List.

This time we showcase a leaf recently acquired for a private collection.

Its online seller did not cite provenance nor identify the text and any source manuscript.  The new owner, dedicated to the acquisition of manuscript fragments (conditions permitting), having acquired several Ege manuscript fragments already, opined that this leaf would have come from “Otto Ege Manuscript 214”.  Could be.

So, what is that little-known “Ege Manuscript  214”, and what are its surviving fragments?  How might we find out enough from the scrappy sources about those scraps to figure out whether or not the “source manuscript” — AKA the former manuscript of this specific remnant — is that book from which the New Leaf came?

Wait and See.  Read On, Dear Reader, Read On.

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Tags: Dutch Prayerbook, Ege Manscript 61, Ege Manuscript 214, Ege Manuscript 41, Ege Manuscript 51, manuscript fragments, Manuscript studies, Otto Ege Portfolios, Otto Ege's Manuscripts, Papal Indulgences, Simon Bening
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Updates for Some “Otto Ege Manuscripts”

March 23, 2018 in Manuscript Studies, Photographic Exhibition, Reports

More is More

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”.

Continuing our series on Manuscript Studies, Mildred Budny (see Her Page) adds new evidence to her earlier reports of some leaves from medieval manuscripts dispersed by Otto F. Ege (1888–1951).

Revisions are now in order.  As we continue to look at, and for, evidence of the dispersed materials, the old and new evidence shows more.  While giving some answers, the observations also raise new questions. 

Time now for more Updates for Some “Otto Ege Manuscripts”.

[Published on 15 December 2017, with updates]

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Tags: Ege Memorial Microfilm, Medieval Manuscript Fragments, Otto Ege, Otto Ege Manuscript 14, Otto Ege Manuscript 41, Otto Ege Manuscript 51, Otto Ege Manuscript 61, Otto Ege Manuscript 8
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2018 M-MLA Call for Papers

February 16, 2018 in Announcements, Call for Papers, Manuscript Studies

Call for Papers

“Consuming Cultures and Manuscript Evidence”

2018 Theme for the

Permanent Panels sponsored by the
Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
at the
Midwest Modern Language Association (M-MLA)

2018 Convention
Kansas City, Missouri
November 15–18, 2018

[Posted on 16 February 2018]

The Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, in keeping with the M-MLA’s theme of “Consuming Cultures” for its 2018 Convention, is sponsoring panels on the consumption of manuscripts.

This consumption can be both literal or metaphorical — or both.  For example, it could mean the destruction wrought by bookworms, fires, and biblioclasts, and/or the consumption effected by textual transmission and reception more broadly.

We invite all approaches, including textual, art historical, codicological, and paleographical.  We also invite subjects from all periods.

Interested panelists should send brief abstracts of no more than 300 words to jhastings@luc.edu by Wednesday, 04 April 2018.

© The British Library Board. Harley MS 628, folio 160 verso. Psalms 101 begin.

© The British Library Board. Harley MS 628, folio 160 verso. Psalms 101 begin.

*****

Thanks to the expert initiatives by our Associate Justin Hastings, this will be the 3rd year that the Research Group sponsors Permanent Panels at the Annual Convention of the Midwest Modern Language Association.

The plan to sponsor the 2018 Panels draws inspiration from the success of our Panels at the M-MLA in the past 2 years. Details here:

2017 M-MLA Panel on “Artists, Activists, and Manuscript Evidence”
2017 M-MLA Panel Report

“Marginalia in Manuscripts and Books” for the 2018 M-MLA
2016 M-MLA Report

As customary for our Sessions at the International Congress on Medieval Studies, we publish the Abstracts of the Papers for our Panels at the M-MLA Convention in our Panel Announcements and Reports.

Poster for CFP RGME Sponsored Panels for 2017 M-MLA Convention*****

The continuation of the tradition of Permanent Panels at the M-MLA Convention is most welcome, and we thank our organizer, Justin Hastings, and the Midwest Modern Language Association.  We congratulate Justin for his expert organizational skills and outstanding collegiality, and we applaud his willingness to continue to organize the panels for the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence.

*****

© The British Library Board. Harley MS 628, folio 160 verso. the initial 'd' for 'Domini'.

© The British Library Board. Harley MS 628, folio 160 verso, detail. Psalm 101 begins with the initial ‘d’ for ‘Domini’.

Further information about the Convention can be found in the 2017 M-MLA Convention Permanent Section Call for Papers .

Please Contact Us with your questions and suggestions.  See you there!

*****

Tags: Midwest Modern Language Association
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Starter Kit

February 13, 2018 in Announcements, Photographic Exhibition, Uncategorized

Would You Like
Your Very Own Collection of
Medieval Seal Matrices?

Now is your chance

The Research Group on Manuscript Evidence has been offered a starter collection to examine, photograph, and offer for sale. With the donation of proceeds to support our nonprofit educational corporation’s mission.  A generous contribution!

Generosity?  You bet.  That’s how we roll: Contributions and Donations.

*****

About this new Medieval Matrix offering.

Sneak preview here.

Medieval Seal Matrices 1-14  in Tray with color guide at 72 dpiDescriptive booklet coming soon. Ooh!

To Have & To Hold, For Real

Would you want your very own collection of Medieval Seal Matrices to have and to hold? We confidently say that it is a treat to hold these specimens from medieval life.

While we prepare the Sale Catalogue, with photography by our in-house photographer, with layout by our in-house designers, and with research by our resident specialist, we can say that we’d love to sell this collection as a whole, as the complete ensemble.

That is how the collection, they tell us, came to become available.  Through a generous, well-meaning donation, it can be offered for sale with proceeds to support our nonprofit educational mission.

Wouldn’t you love to have this collection, and its specialist booklet showcasing its qualities and varieties, for your very own?

Please Contact Us.

*****

Tags: medieval seal-matrices
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