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2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium Program Detailed

November 6, 2025 in Announcements, Conference, Conference Announcement, RGME Colloquia

Detailed Program

2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium
of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

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

Friday – Sunday, 21-23 November 2025
In Person, Hybrid, or Online by Zoom

Program: 1) Overview and 2) Detailed View

I. Program Overview

Program Overview itself is available also here:

  • 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium on Fragments: Program Overview

Day 1. Friday 17 October. 9:00 am – 5:00 pm EST (GMT-5)
— NOTE TWO DIFFERENT VENUES FOR FRIDAY Morning and Afternoon —

Morning Sessions at Green Hall (accessibility information). 9:00 am – 12:00 pm
Washington Road, Princeton, New Jersey 08542

Lunch Break. 12:00–1:00 pm

Afternoon Workshops with original materials at Special Collections, Firestone Library
(accessibility information)

Choose 1 of 2 (space is limited for in-person attendance)
2 Sittings:

1) Workshop 1. 1:30–3:00 pm (arrive at Firestone Library at 1:15 pm)
2) Workshop 2. 3:30–5:00 pm (arrive at Firestone Library at 3:15 pm)

Day 2. Saturday 18 October. 9:00 am – 5:00 pm

All-day Sessions at Nassau Presbyterian Church
(see also Nassau Presbyterian Church)
61 Nassau Street, Princeton, 08542
Accessibility information.

(Note: The original portion of the present building was designed and built by Charles Steadman and dedicated in 1836.)

Day 3. Sunday 19 October at 10:30am – 12:00am

Morning Sessions online. 10:30 am – 12:00 pm

Registration

Note: If accessing the registration link by laptop or computer does not connect through to select your choice of category, please access the link through your phone. For questions, please contact:

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

Choices

1) ONLINE (Friday to Sunday)

    • 2025 Autumn Colloquium: Online Attendance Tickets

2) IN PERSON (Friday and Saturday)

    • 2025 RGME Colloquium IN PERSON: Tickets

3) IN PERSON WORKSHOPS 1 and 2 at Special Collections (Friday afternoon)
(Space IN PERSON is limited; the Workshops are also available ONLINE)
Choose 1. Registration is required.

    • Workshop 1 (1:30 to 3:00 pm EST=GMT-5), First Sitting
      Workshop 1 IN PERSON: Tickets
    • Workshop 2 (3:30-5:00 pm EST), Second Sitting
      Workshop 2 IN PERSON: Tickets

4) Optional Dinner (at attendees’ expense) at a local restauraut

    • Friday 21 November (7:00–9:30 pm)
      and/or
    • Saturday 22 November (7:00–9:30 pm)
    • https://www.eventbrite.com/e/2025-rgme-colloquium-optional-dinner-friday-andor-saturday-tickets-1919146451699

Colloquium Booklet

The 64-page Colloquium Booklet, with abstracts and illustrations, will be available soon. When ready, it will be downloadable as a pdf in two formats:

  • Colloquium Booklet as consecutive pages (quarto-size 8 1/2″ × 11″ sheets)
  • Colloquium Booklet as foldable booklet (11″ × 17″ sheets)

For information and updates see the Colloquium HomePage

  • 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium on Fragments

Read the rest of this entry →

Tags: Biblioclasts, history of printing, Manuscript studies, Medieval manuscripts, Otto F. Ege
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2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium on Fragments

June 27, 2025 in Announcements, Koller-Collins Center for English Studies, Manuscript Studies, Princeton Bibliophiles & Collectors, Rossell Hope Robbins Library at the University of Rochester, Visits to Collections

2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium
on Fragments

“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
Hybrid and partly Online
Hybrid: In Person at Princeton and Online (Friday and Saturday)
Online: Zoom (Sunday)

*****

Colloquium Sponsors, Co-Sponsors, and Affiliates

Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

Princeton University Special Collections
The Friends of the Princeton University Library
Student Friends of the Princeton University Library
Princeton Bibliophiles & Collectors
Department of Art & Archaeology, Princeton University

Rossell Hope Robbins Library
and Koller-Collins Center for English Studies
at the University of Rochester

Bibliographical Society of America

Celia M. Chazelle
Barbara Hanselman
Barbara A. Shailor

[Your Name Here]

*****

[First posted on 5 January 2025, with updates. Now revised on 20 June 2025, 20 August 2025, 5 September 2025, and 29 October 2025, with changes in plan, co-sponsorship, host, and venues.]

Venue: In-Person, Hybrid, and Online

After an imposed change in venue from our initial plans, the Colloquium goes forward in online format, as planned from the beginning, with an in-person/hybrid component.  Its dates remain the same, from Friday to Sunday 21–23 November. The changes allow us to turn to a new host, for which we give thanks. For the earlier version, see

  • https://manuscriptevidence.org/wpme/2025-rgme-autumn-colloquium-at-the-university-of-waterloo/.

Online sessions will take place on Friday to Sunday. Sessions and Workshops will be hybrid on Friday and Saturday, with venues in different locations at Princeton University and nearby.

On Friday afternoon, our Associate Eric White, Curator of Rare Books, will hold a special set of Workshops on Fragments at Princeton in Special Collections at Firestone Library of the Princeton University Library. These workshops and reports on original materials return to a tradition of the RGME with Symposia and other events at Princeton University, before the Covid Pandemic. For example:

  • 2014 Seminar on Manuscripts and Their Photographs
  • 2019 Anniversary Symposium Program
  • 2020 Spring Symposium: Save the Date

For the 2025 Colloquium, searching for an appropriate location for other parts of the Colloquium beside the Workshops at Special Collections on the Friday afternoon, we explored collaboration with colleagues and organizations for other venues in Princeton to enable a Friday morning session and the Saturday sessions, all in hybrid format. Step by step, with assistance from the Friends of the Princeton University Library and the Department of Art & Archaeology, which had co-sponsored many of our Symposia before the Covid Pandemic. We give thanks for the generous responses to foster the plan for a ‘home’ for this Colloquium.

In such a way, people who travel to Princeton for the Friday workshops and related celebrations might also participate in other in-person sessions on both Friday and Saturday, leaving one session on Sunday to take place in online format only. With this news, some participants and attendees prepared to come to Princeton for the event IN PERSON.

With help of many kinds, we are able to report a collaborative event worthy of the initial plan to which many participants responded so enthusiastically (albeit for a different host which changed its mind). Reviving and transforming the plan has, we hope, been worthy of the complex, multi-faceted subject of fragments which reaches widely into very many aspects of manuscript and related studies, the history of collecting, and the recovery and transmission of written sources from the past. For this collaboration, we give thanks.

Read the rest of this entry →

Tags: Biblioclasts, Biblioclasts' Portfolios, Early modern printing, Fragmentology, History of Music, history of printing, manuscript fragments, Manuscript Fragments Reused in Bindings, Manuscript studies, Medieval manuscripts, Medieval Music Manuscripts, Otto F. Ege, Scrapbooks and Albums
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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.

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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.

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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
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Among them are the

  • 2025 Spring and Autumn Symposia (online or hybrid)
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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
  • 2025 Anniversary Appeal

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

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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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