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2025 Annual Appeal

November 26, 2024 in Announcements, Manuscript Studies, RGME Annual Appeal

2025 Annual Appeal
for Donations
to Support
our Mission and Activities

We invite you to join our 2025 Annual Appeal, as the Research Group rounds out the extraordinarily successful 2024 Anniversary Year with its theme of Bridges (see below), and prepares for the future.

In 2025 the Research Group will mark:

  • 26 years as a nonprofit 501(c)(3) nonprofit educational corporation based in Princeton, New Jersey
  • 36 years as an international scholarly organization founded in Cambridge, England, as part of a major research project at the Parker Library of Corpus Christi College.

Cahors (Lot), France, Pont Valentré. View of the western part of the bridge from southeast. Photograph (24 September 2024) by Benjamin Smith, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Now, moving into a new quarter-century as a nonprofit educational corporation, we seek your help to continue with our work, maintain our organizational operations, and advance with our activities and their planning.  As a nonprofit educational organization “Without Members”, we must turn to donations from individuals and institutions, supplemented by grants, where available, and by the pro-bono contributions which power most of what we can do.

As an organization with no employees, and no paid fund-raisers, we must depend upon our own time and efforts, with advisers, to identify the needs of the organization as we prepare its activities, which are accomplished on our own or in association with other organizations, institutions, and initiatives. Likewise, we prepare and circulate the appeals for specific purposes and goals which funding and other contributions could make possible.

Without the polish, performance, and expense of professional fund-raising functions, we speak from the heart as we encourage you to accompany us on the quest for aid for our 2025 Annual Appeal. Because our endowment is slender, we have to turn instead to donations for the annual expenses of the corporation and for aspects of the various activities and publications. In this way, you can have the confidence of knowing that your donations can have a direct impact in sustaining and fostering the RGME from day to day and year to year.

The 2025 Appeal Letter

The signed 2025 Appeal Letter gives a collective statement of our needs and goals. It concisely lists our achievements, progress, aims, wishes, and gaps-to-fill in going forward.

The 2025 Appeal Letter is signed by supporters who ask for your help.

Dear Friend of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (RGME),

We write to you to ask for your support for our nonprofit educational corporation for the future.

In 2024, for our Anniversary Year, we undertook a variety of activities in support of our mission.  They included:

  • Holding our Spring & Autumn Symposia “Between Past and Future”, including the invited Spring Symposium at Vassar College (hybrid), plus an Anniversary Symposium “Manuscript (HE)ART”, with published booklets
  • Hosting Episodes 15-18 of our online presentation series, “The Research Group Speaks”
  • Sponsoring and co-sponsoring three sessions at the 59th International Congress on Medieval Studies (ICMS)
  • Sponsoring an Inaugural RGME Session at the 31st International Medieval Congress at Leeds (IMC)
  • Co-sponsoring a pair of webinars for “Medieval Women’s Networks”
  • Launching the series of RGME Workshops on “The Evidence of Manuscripts”
  • Conducting our 2024 “Between Past and Future” project, funded by The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation

Your generous donations for our 2024 Annual Appeal, Anniversary Endowment Appeal, and events (totalling $22,000) helped greatly to support our work and on-going projects and to grow our endowment.

In anticipating 2025, in addition to funding such ongoing programs as “The Research Group Speaks”, symposia, conference sessions, workshops, research projects, publications, and invited visits to public and private collections, we have five main goals:

  • Expanding our very modest endowment (now up to $4,750) to stabilize our ability to cover ongoing costs
  • Building “The Constable Fund” (so far $3,850) for work by the RGME on manuscript and related studies, to honor Giles Constable (†2021), medieval historian, Honorary Trustee, and long-time mentor for our organization
  • Augmenting donations (normally about $5,000 in a good year) so as to meet annual operating expenses, which have risen to about $17,000, including urgent needs now for our website hosting and management
  • Supporting our overworked, unpaid Director with funded administrative assistance, needed now more than ever

For details, please see https://manuscriptevidence.org/wpme/2025-annual-appeal.

Signed
Adelaide Bennett Hagens, Trustee
Celia Chazelle, Department of History, The College of New Jersey
Jennifer Larson, Advisory Board
David Porreca, Trustee and Department of Classics, University of Waterloo
Anna Siebach–Larsen, Director, Rossell Hope Robbins Library
and Koller–Collins Center  for English Studies, University of Rochester

Mildred Budny, Director and Founder Trustee

For Download Here

We offer the 2025 Annual Appeal Letter for download here:

  • 2025 Annual Appeal Letter
    or https://manuscriptevidence.org/wpme/download/19571/

For background and further information from last year’s ground-breaking work toward 2025 and beyond, please see:

  • 2024 Anniversary Appeal Letter + Appendix

Accomplishments and innovations of our 2024 Anniversary Year are cited below.

Also, for your convenience, here is our Donation Form if you wish a printout:

  • Donation Form

You might use the form to send checks to the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence.  Online methods are listed below.

Would you please help with these aims?

In sum, we seek funding and other forms of assistance (pro bono expertise, goods, etc.) for our work and the pursuit of our mission.

We invite you to join the team!

Ways to Donate Online and Other Ways

Ways to contribute?

There are many ways to help: Funds, Goods, Expertise, Time. All can help our work and mission.

For suggestions, see:

  • Contributions & Donations
  • Donations

1) Via Mightycause:

  • Donate
  • Mightycause for RGME 2025 Annual Appeal

2) Via Paypal, Venmo, ApplePay, Pay Later, or Debit or Credit Card:


A Community of Scholars, Teachers, Students, Friends, and Admirers of Books

We thank you for your support.

Please  join our community and join our cause.

Floral border on the detached leaf from a 15th-century Book of Hours

Photography © Mildred Budny

Please leave your Comments or questions below, Contact Us, or visit

  • our FaceBook Page
  • our Facebook Group
  • our Twitter Feed (@rgme_mss)
  • our Bluesky nest @rgmesocial.bluesky.social)
  • our LinkedIn Group
  • our Blog on Manuscript Studies and its Contents List

Donations and Contributions

Donations and contributions, in funds or in kind, are welcome and easy to give.  See:

  • Contributions and Donations.

We look forward to hearing from you.

*****

Tags: 2024 Anniversary Appeal, 2025 Annual Appeal, Bridges, Bridges of Paris, Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
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Favorite Recipes for Lemonade, Etc.

November 7, 2024 in Manuscript Studies, RGME Recipes

Favorite Recipes for Lemonade
and Other Treats

First Gatherings
for an RGME Book of Favorite Recipes

Prizes Included

[Posted on 7 November 2024 with two entries; updates on 18 November with two more; update on 30 November with one more]

The First Recipe Competition for the Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence was announced in Summer 2024 with its own blogpost and at various RGME online events. See:

  • Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
  • Three-Step Program, Lemonade Included

Conversations since then about the competition and favorite recipes have expanded the scope of the competition, just as they have gathered prizes through donations to award the winning entries. Besides entries of recipes, which might be as easy or complicated as you like, we welcome your stories about the recipes, their creators, and the occasions and intentions which they represent. What makes them favorites? We would love to know.

Paris, Musée d’Orsay, Edouard Manet, “Le Citron” (1832). Image Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

Lemons and More

Initially, the competition focused upon lemonade, so as to acknowledge and respond to the maxim that “Life Gives You Lemons”, by coming up with a resourceful recipe, resulting in, say, Lemonade. However, it has been easily agreed that a winning recipe might not have mainly to have lemons, or might even not have lemons at all. Some other citrus fruit(s), for example, might stand in for Lemonade. Also, a favorite recipe might not have to produce a drink, as with one suggestion offering a favorite recipe for a lemon cake. Rumor has it that a proposed entry for a family-favorite recipe might feature green beans.

We admire the variety and ingenuity.

What we welcome are recipes that are your favorites. Plus stories. We love stories about recipes. For the competition, we started with the idea of gathering recipes for lemonade, as a starting place for more competitions about other sorts of dishes and ingredients. The responses already show that the quest includes others as well as those which showcase lemons.

Four-Step Competiton

Thus we slightly rephrase the Three Steps of the Competition (see Three-Step Program, Lemonade Included), and also add a Step Four.

Step 1. “Life Gives You Lemons” (or something which can taste like Lemons)

Step 2. “Make Lemonade” (or something which can taste good or anyway better)

Step 3. Enter your Favorite Recipe for the RGME ‘Lemonade’ Competition. Ideally with a Story.

Step 4. Win a Prize.

Prizes

Responding to the enjoyment and enthusiasm for the spirit of the competition, more prizes have been donated, so that there might be more to go around. Naturally, the prizes have a lemon or lemon-patterned theme.

They include, for example,

  • bib-style kitchen apron with lemon-patterned fabric and lemon-shaped pockets
  • set of 12 linen lemon-patterned cocktail napkins
  • set of 8 lemon-patterned paper dinner plates
  • large lemon-patterned pot-holder
  • yellow lemon press
  • lemon–basil travel candle in metal tin
  • mini pop-up paper plant in the form of a lemon-blossom tree, plus matching card

The prizes will be wrapped in lemon-patterned gift-wrapping paper, of course.

Entries so Far

Entry 1

The first entry by one RGME Associate, our Research Consultant, was brief and to the point.

“Give or Take” — with a dash of Throw-Back

1. Life gives you Lemons
2. Give them Back

*****

Entry 2

Another entry emphasizes the element of hospitality, friendship, and conviviality. It features lemonade, added to, or mixed with, those ingredients.

The ‘creation’ and testing of this recipe occurred when all the ingredients could be assembled, on a visit arranged by one Associate with our Director on 1 November 2024 in New York City.

“Mint Lemonade by the Park” — perfect for a Reunion Luncheon

  1. Arrange a time and place to meet for a reunion of two friends, such as at a favorite restaurant (in this case, Le Pain Cotidien in New York City, Bryant Park)
  2. Turn up
  3. Order the specialty Mint Lemonade, long a favorite, plus other nourishment (in this case, salads and then dessert of berry tarts)
  4. Season to taste with conversation and friendship
  5. Enjoy
  6. Send in your recipe
  7. Bonus points for bookish interests: the chosen restaurant was located on the opposite side of Bryant Park to the New York Public Library

Perhaps needless to say, the impromptu recipe was written down on a paper napkin.

Mint Lemonade in New York City at a Friends’ Reunion. Photography by Mildred Budny.

Mint Lemonade plus Berry Tarts, in New York City at a Friends’ Reunion. Photography by Mildred Budny.

*****

Entry 3

This entry comes from our multi-faceted First WebMaster Emeritus, Jesse D. Hurlbut. His dedication to manuscript studies and the enjoyment of their images is manifest and generously shared on his own website, Manuscript Art: Taking a Closer Look.

He sets the stage for his entry for our competition thus:

Here is a lemon-based recipe that I haven’t made since my single days as an undergraduate. My roommates and I called this treat “Rocket Fuel” because of the powerfully sweet and tangibly tangy taste. The simplicity makes it a bachelor’s dream dessert. I’m not sure I could eat more than a bite or two these days – it’s a younger man’s adventure!!

National Biscuit Company, Graham Crackers box design, circa 1915. Image via Internet Archive Book Images, No restrictions, via Wikimedia Commons

“Rocket Fuel”

1. Prepare a graham cracker crust in a pie tin (crushed graham crackers or biscoff cookies with melted butter, mixed and pressed into the tin).
2. Squeeze the juice of 5 fresh lemons into a mixing bowl.
3. Mix in two cans of sweetened condensed milk. Stir to a smooth and uniform texture.
4. Pour and spread into the pie crust and refrigerate.

That’s it!
In a couple of hours, the pie will set and be firm enough to slice.
Rocket Fuel!!
—— humbly submitted by Jesse Hurlbut

P.S. [WebEditor’s note]. Some manuscripts show vials or backpacks of rocket fuel in action.

Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania, UPenn Ms. Codex 109, fol. 137r. For context: https://uniqueatpenn.wordpress.com/2013/02/05/a-rocket-cat-early-modern-explosives-treatises-at-penn/.

*****

Entry 4

“Lemon Bread”

In mixing bowl combine and blend:

One cup lemon juice and some grated lemon peel
One teaspoon each of baking soda and baking powder
Two tablespoons of shortening
One teaspoon almond extract
1 and 1/4 cup sugar
Two eggs
Two cups flour
1/2 cup chopped almonds

Pour mixture into greased or nonstick loaf pan and bake at 350 degrees Fahrenheit for 50 to 60 minutes
(Test with toothpick in center to make sure it is done.)

—— Annabelle House Fox

P.S. [WebEditor’s Note]
Annabelle’s many skills include baking cookies generously for friends (including packages sent to the RGME for delicious sampling!) and photography.

For the RGME’s Theme of Bridges for this 2024 Anniversary Year, we enjoy examples of her photography such as this view of Deception Pass Bridge on a clear day.

We thank Annabelle for sharing her photographs and allowing us to share them with you.

Anacortes, Skagit County, WA. Deception Pass Bridge on a clear day, seen as the boat departs toward the west (out toward greater Puget Sound/the Salish Sea and the Strait of Juan de Fuca), with a view toward the east, showing Whidbey Island on the left, Deception Island (and parts of Fidalgo Island) on the right, and the mainland near Snee Oosh (the Swinomish Reservation) and La Conner, WA, in the far distance. Photograph by Annabelle House Fox. Reproduced by permission.

*****

Entry 5

“Hannah’s Wicked Awesome Cranberry Lemonade”

Our Associate and Intern Executive Assistant/Associate, Hannah Goeselt, shares this recipe.

Instructions

Mix:

1/2 lemonade to 1/2 cranberry juice (preferably Ocean Spray)

Variant:

2/3 lemonade to 1/2 cranberry juice.

NB: for fancy flavor, use Sparkling lemonade.

Story

Hannah describes her affinity to the concoction with reference not only to its downright deliciousness, but also to growing up by a cranberry bog. This she did by virtue of the location and logistics of her remarkable maternal great-grandmother’s cranberry farm.

As a characteristic image for her recipe, Hannah refers us to a photograph preserved at the University of Amherst Libraries, among the Kenneth G. Garside Papers, 1841-1876.  See

  • Duxbury Cranberry Company truck and float for Fourth of July parade, Garside, Kenneth G. (photographer).

In the photograph, we see the “Company name painted on the door of the truck, which is loaded with cranberry juice bottles, ca. 1938”.  The Duxbury Bogs in Duxbury, Massachusetts, are located “in the upper portion of the South River watershed”.

While we check conditions for permission to reproduce that photograph here, we offer an image of cranberries in a bog on the opposite side of the continent in Washington State.

View of a coastal Washington cranberry bog. Photo by Keith Weller, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

*****

Entry 6

“The Joyeux Noël“

Our Trustee Justin Hastings sent this recipe on 6 January 2025, the Feast of the Epiphany or Twelfth Night after Christmas (Noël).

Story

Justin writes:

When Milly first asked me to contribute a recipe featuring lemons, I found myself thinking of my maternal grandfather, who would absolutely have said the solution to having been handed lemons by life was to squeeze them into the eyes of his enemies. However, I decided to contribute something more . . . polite.

What follows is a holiday-themed version of the French 75 that tempers the brightness of the lemon juice with the herbaceousness of thyme and the warmth of ginger.

Recipe

Simple syrup:

1 cup of sugar
1.5 cups water
Ginger root, about a 2-inch piece peeled and cut into coins
8 sprigs of thyme

Combine all ingredients in a saucepan and simmer gently for ten minutes. Strain into a
container.

For the Joyeux Noël cocktail:

1 ounce gin
.75 ounce freshly squeezed lemon juice
.5 ounce simple syrup (recipe above)
Ice
3 ounces sparkling wine
Thyme sprigs for garnish (optional)

In a cocktail shaker, combine the gin, lemon juice, simple syrup, and ice; shake for 45 seconds.
Strain into the glass, and then top up with the chilled sparkling wine of your choice, and garnish with a thyme sprig if desired.

—— Justin

 

*****

Entries and Prizes
for the Company of Friends

Send in your recipes to friends.of.rgme@gmail.com.

Soon we begin to award the prizes!

Please join the selection and celebration of the awards, as well as the creativity of these recipes, at the Meetings of the

  • Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence.

Joining the Friends is free. All are welcome.

The online Meetings of the Friends are listed in our RGME Eventbrite Collection, where you can register for each event, to taste.

  • Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence: Register for Meetings

Meeting 3 of the Friends is scheduled for Monday 18 December 2024 at 5:30-7:00 pm EST (GMT-5) by Zoom. It will be our Holiday Party.

Meeting 4 is scheduled for Monday 27 January 2025. You can register for it here:

  • Meeting 4 of the Friends: Tickets

See you there and help us to pick the prizes!

*****

[Update:
Round 2. “Starters’ Orders”]

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

*****

 

Tags: "Rocket Fuel" Recipe, Bridges, Bryant Park, Competition Prizes, Cranberry, Duxbury Bogs, Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, Joyeux Noël, Kenneth G. Garside Papers, Lemon Bread, Lemonade, Mint Lemonade, Recipe Competition, RGME Friends' Recipes, UPenn MS Codex 109
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The Bridge of Signs

November 5, 2024 in Manuscript Studies, Research Group Workshops

The Bridge of Signs

Bridging the Gap
between Original Source
and its Interpretation

Signposts
by the RGME Research Consultant,
Leslie J. French

with a Foreword by the RGME Director and WebEditor,
Mildred Budny

[Posted on 5 November 2024, with updates]

Foreword

by Mildred Budny

As the RGME plans a new series of Workshops to examine manuscripts and other original sources, we reflect on the plan. In our early years based at the University of Cambridge as an outside-funded research project on selected Anglo-Saxon and Related Manuscripts at the Parker Library of Corpus Christi College (1989–1994), we held a series of RGME Seminars on the Evidence of Manuscripts.

From the start, as manifested in our choice of name, Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, and the integrated scope and functions of our very first project, we have taken care to distinguish between the evidence and interpretations made from it, as well as to attend to the stages or steps between them. Such steps extend from examination of the object, through photography, decipherment (if need be), transcription (diplomatic or normalized), edition (semi-diplomatic or normalized), translation, and placement in context, to reach increased, informed, and it may be collaborative, understanding — in steps which involve interpretation of various kinds.

Collection of Jennah Farrell, Manuscript Leaf in Frame. Photograph by Jennah Farrrell.

Now, in our 2024 Anniversary Year with its theme of Bridges, we prepare to launch a series of RGME Workshops on Manuscripts and Other Sources.  They start with a new Loan of a detached leaf on vellum from a medieval Latin Vulgate Bible in the Collection of Jennah Farrell.

  • A Latin Vulgate Leaf from the Book of Numbers (Part 1)

With permission, our Director Mildred Budny removed the leaf from its modern frame, to reveal its full extent and its back or verso which the frame had hidden, in time for our 2024 Autumn Symposium: Spotlight on Special Collections as Teaching Events (25–26 October). The Symposium Booklet illustrates both sides of the leaf. You may find the booklet for download as:

  • consecutive pages, quarto size (8 1/2″ × 11″ sheets)
    2024 Autumn Symposium Booklet: Consecutive Pages
  • foldable booklet (11″ × 17″ sheets)
    2024 Autumn Symposium Program: Foldable Booklet

Next, we will hold a pair of online Workshops to study the leaf collectively. For example, can we identify what this leaf contains, which manuscript originally contained this detached leaf, where and when it was made, how did it find its way from the manuscript in steps to the Farrell Collection, and what can it tell us about itself and its history?

These Workshops can show and share the detective work. Beginners and advanced scholars alike are welcome, as we compare notes and ‘adopt’ the leaf as a subject of discovery and wonder, while it visits the RGME on generous loan for research, study, and teaching, before it returns to its collection.

  • Workshop 1. Introduction to the Farrell Leaf: What do we See?
    (Sunday 17 November 2024 by Zoom)
    Registration: Workshop 1: Introduction to the Farrell Leaf
  • Workshop 2. Follow-up for the Farrell Leaf: What have we Learned?
    (Sunday 15 December 2024 by Zoom)
    Registration: Workshop 2: Follow Up for the Farrell Leaf

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

Plan

First, we offer observations about the process, and its strategy, as we prepare this series of collective approaches to teach and learn the methods of examining and studying the sources — in such forms as they and their evidence become accessible, directly and/or through surrogates such as photographs, digital facsimiles, reports, and other means.

As a lead-in to our Workshops, we turn to our Research Consultant, Leslie J. French, for a description of the principles and practices which underpin their approaches and methodology, based on the experiences which the RGME has gathered in its years of work, photography, research, teaching, and publication on original materials. His approach provides both foundation and signposts for the work of the Workshops and the preparation of resources for them. Among such resources are photography, bibliographical references, and our growing

  • Handlist of Resources for Manuscript Studies and Fragmentology
    — for which we invite suggestions and additions.

Stepping Stones
Observations by our Research Consultant

Poster announcing Bembino Version 1.6 (January 2019)Leslie J. French, our Research Consultant and Font & Layout Designer, has contributed to many RGME activities and publications from our very beginnings in 1989 as part of a major, outside-funded, research project on Anglo-Saxon and Related Manuscripts at the Parker Library of Corpus Christi College in the University of Cambridge. His contributions include

  • the design of our logo,
  • the design and layout of most of our publications,
  • the creation of our multi-lingual digital font Bembino (displayed on our website and elsewhere), and
  • the research and preparations for numerous RGME Research Reports and presentations at our scholarly events.

See also:

  • Interview with Our Font & Layout Designer
  • The Design and Layout of the Illustrated Catalogue

In his own words:

Bridge of Signs

by Leslie J. French

View of the Pont Neuf, Paris. Photograph by Claudio Mota via https://www.pexels.com/photo/pont-neuf-bridge-in-paris-9999874/.

Increased digitization of manuscript and printed resources has dramatically improved scholars’ ability to view content.  However, increased accessibility does not imply increased comprehension.  There still remains a gap between what might be observed on a page, and its interpretation.
We seek to bridge that gap between the artefact on one bank and the reader on the other.  This may be a very large gap, particularly for newcomers to the field who are unfamiliar with the script, abbreviations, text and structure of the documents they are viewing.
Our aim is to create a series of pillars, or supports, across the gap, and to build the bridge, section by section, between.

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Tags: Bridges, Collection of Jennah Farrell, Editions, Le Pont Neuf, Manuscript Photography, Manuscript studies, RGME Lending Library, RGME Seminars on the Evidence of Manuscripts, RGME Workshops on Looking at Manuscripts, Transcriptions
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2024 Anniversary Survey

August 14, 2024 in Announcements, Manuscript Studies, Surveys

RGME
2024 Anniversary Survey

[Posted on 14 August 2024]

In our 2024 Anniversary Year, we invite you to fill out a short Survey, to gather feedback and help us guide future activities of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence. In tune with the year’s Theme of Bridges, the Survey builds a bridge between the organizational groundwork of the RGME and our audience near and far, as we move toward the future. The Survey is open to all.

New York, Morgan Library & Museum, MS M.769, fol. 305v, detail. (Weltchronik or World Chronicle, Regensburg, Germany, 1360). Image © Morgan Library, New York, via https://ica.themorgan.org/manuscript/page/215/143938

The Goals

The results would aid us to learn about your interests and wishes as we:

  1.  launch the Friends of the RGME with meetings, competitions, and prizes to welcome our wider community;
  2.  prepare for our Anniversary Episode in September to celebrate “RGME Retrospect and Prospects” (Episode 17 of our online series “The Research Group Speaks”); and
  3.  assemble an Anniversary Anthology to celebrate our our 2024 Anniversary Year as part of our program of RGME Publications.

Lisbon, Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga: The mid 15th-century Saint Vincent Panels, attributed to Nuno Gonçalves. Image (https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3a/Nuno_Gon%C3%A7alves._Paineis_de_S%C3%A3o_Vicente_de_Fora.jpg) via Creative Commons.

We welcome your suggestions and feedback.

Please note that this Survey is designed to gather feedback for our in-house use, to guide our planning better attuned to our community.

Respecting privacy and confidentiality, we might at some time report aggregate views from the Survey, but without giving names. Please feel free to give your responses in confidence.

Please join our explorations of RGME identity, purpose, impact, and futures as we reflect on past accomplishments and explore new content ideas for the direction of future symposia, meetings, and publications.

2024 Survey

The short survey should take less than ten minutes to complete.

Methods

We offer the 2024 Anniversary Survey in two forms, for respondents with or without access to Google Workspace.

  • as an interactive Google Form
  • as a downloadable Word Document
    Please send this completed form in Word as an email attachment 1) to rgme.surveys@gmail.com or 2) by mail to the RGME at 46 Snowden Lane, Princeton, New Jersey, 08540, U.S.A.

Questions or difficulties with the form(s)? 

Ask us!  Let us know via rgme.surveys@gmail.com.

Due Date

A choice of two dates gives the chance first to gather feedback before Episode 17 on 21 September 2024, and then to allow responses from that Episode.

First and Second Rounds

  1. Florence, Italy, Ponte Vecchio from Ponte alle Grazie. Photo: Ingo Mehling, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

    Florence, Italy, Ponte Vecchio from Ponte alle Grazie. Photo: Ingo Mehling, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

    Please aim to complete the Survey by Wednesday, 18 September 2024 at midnight EDT (GMT-4), when its First Round will close.

  2. A chance to complete the Survey in a Second Round will remain open until Sunday, 23 September 2024 at midnight EDT, to give scope to offer feedback after our reflective and celebratory Episode 17.

Thanks

We are grateful for your time and input, and we thank you for your suggestions.

Our Survey Series

New York, Morgan Library & Museum, MS M.769, fol. 305v (Weltchronik or World Chronicle, Regensburg, Germany, 1360). Image © Morgan Library, New York, via https://ica.themorgan.org/manuscript/page/215/143938

This Survey compliments, and advances from, the Surveys respectively for our Editorial Committee and Participants designed by our Associate Jessica L. Savage in 2022.

A report by our Editorial Team about the 2022 RGME Surveys appears in Issue 2 of our eNewsletter ShelfMarks.

  • ShelfMarks, Issue 2 (Volume 2 Number 1 for Winter 2022-2023)

We warmly thank Jessica for her generous contributions to our mission and planning for activities. They are manifested, for example, in those Surveys, which inspired our 2024 Anniversary Survey designed by our Editorial Team this year, including both our

  • Intern Executive Assistant/Associate Hannah Goeselt
    and
  • Intern Executive Assistant Zoey Kambour.

Hannah and Zoey joined these positions in 2024, as part of:

  • our 2024 Project “Between Past and Future” and
  • our co-sponsored Workshop on “Medieval Women’s Networks”.

We give thanks for the advice for the 2024 Survey from the RGME Editorial Committee and other Advisors.

We look forward to learning your responses to our 2024 Anniversary Survey.

Questions? Suggestions?

  • Please leave your comments or questions below
  • Contact Us
  • Send a note to director@manuscriptevidence.org or RGMEevents@gmail.com

Visit our Social Media:

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

Join the Friends of the RGME. Send your favorite recipe for Lemonade (and perhaps its Story) for our Competition.

Register for our Events by the RGME Eventbrite Collection.

Iron bridge over the Sava river at Radeče (IG. GRIDL fabrik, 1894). Photograph Petar Milošević (29 September 2020), CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

*****

Tags: 2024 Anniversary Survey, Bridges, Friends of the Reaearch Group on Manuscript Evidence, RGME Anniversary, Survey, The Research Group Speaks
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2024 International Congress on Medieval Studies: Report

May 15, 2024 in Abstracts of Conference Papers, Anniversary, Announcements, Conference, Conference Announcement, Events, ICMS, Illustrated Handlist, International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, POMONA, Postal History at Kalamazoo, Societas Magica

2024 International Congress on Medieval Studies: Report

59th ICMS (9–11 May 2024)

Held in a transitional ‘hybrid’ form
with RGME Co-Sponsored Sessions,
an Open Business Meeting,
and Co-Sponsored Reception

In a Nutshell:
Mission Accomplished!

With Thanks to our Participants,
Co-Sponsors, Audience, and Friends

[Posted on 14 May 2024]

Western Michigan University, Valley III from the side. Photograph: David W. Sorenson.

Western Michigan University, Valley III from the side. Photograph: David W. Sorenson.

After the successful completion of all our activities at the 59th Annual 2024 International Congress on Medieval Studies International Congress on Medieval Studies (ICMS), we report our accomplishments and give updates about changes to the Program which we announced (with updates as appropriate) for its items. See the full ICMS Program issued by its organizing Committee:

  • 2024 Congress Program, with Corrigenda.

The Journey

Already from our first preparations toward the 2024 Congress,

  • starting with the 2023 Congress and our Open Business Meeting there to invite proposals,
  • moving on to our proposals for Sessions for 2024 submitted to the Congress Committee by 1 June 2023,
  • progressing with the approved Call for Papers for the 2024 ICMS,
  • reaching the firm conclusion of that Call on 15 September 2024, and
  • selecting the Program for our Sessions according to responses to that Call and related developments,

we have made revisions and provided updates for our plan.

They gave rise to our announcement for our own (and co-sponsored) Program (including the details of Sessions, their speakers, titles of papers, order of presentation, and so on; as well as ancillary events such as the Anniversary Reception), its updates throughout the months from October to May and the start of the Congress.  Now we follow up with the Report.

The proposals received not only yielded Programs for which the order of Papers and the follow-up invitation to Presiders and Panelists, but also encouraged us to combine resources within the Research Group, with our frequent co-sponsor, the Societas Magica, and with others.  Thus we collaboratively created a strong program of activities for the 2024 Congress.

Along the way, between

  • the submission of our selected Program to the Congress Committee by 15 October 2023,
  • its acceptance,
  • the assignment of dates, times, and venues for the individual activities for the 2024 Congress Program as officially published (with a series of Corrigenda, not affecting us, as the date of the Congress approached), and
  • the start of the Congress itself on Thursday 9 May 2024, with events variously in online and/or in-person formats,

our own 2024 Congress Program has had a few minor revisions, as people and technological arrangements permitted.

These changes did not interfere with the overall success of our activities.  Our 2024 Congress Program reported various changes up to the Congress; this Report describes those effected at or around the Congress.

Access Included

As in 2023, the RGME responded to the partly ‘hybrid’ conditions of the Congress by providing its Zoom Meetings for two scheduled solely ‘In Person’ Sessions, as well as for our In-Person catered lunchtime Open Business Meeting, and by reserving an onsite Remote Participation Room on campus for those participants for a scheduled ‘Virtual’ Session who were present at the Congress to be able to gather to sign on to the online Session hosted by the Congress Confex Portal. The RGME managed all these extra Zoom provisions and reservations, as part of its contribution to sponsoring or co-sponsoring Sessions at the ICMS over the years.

It can be worth noting that those donations — at the cost of the RGME, are made possible by donations to enable its Zoom Subscription, by our own provisions for technical backup, and principally by the many pro-bono donations by its Director as overall organizer and co-ordinator of the RGME activities at the Congress and elsewhere — are not covered within the costs to produce the Congress, which registration fees by attendees online and in-person work to subsidize. The extra efforts by the RGME to provide features or facilities for the contributors, participants, and attendees of its activities at the Congress, whether online or onsite, correspond with our approach to our activities of many kinds.

In this spirit, the RGME has consistently stepped up to the plate in response to changes in the facilities for the ICMS before and after the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, when the Congress was successively

  • 1) cancelled outright (2020),
  • 2) rescheduled in online format only (2021), and
  • 3) re-introduced in a partly in-person, partly virtual, ‘hybrid’ format (2022, 2o23, 2024, and more).

Throughout these developments, responding to their changing requirements, the RGME has continued to seek, insofar as possible with our own limited resources, to provide access to our sponsored and co-sponsored Congress activities to as wide an audience as possible, including those with disablilities, health issues, and difficulties in finding resources to travel and cover expenses to attend the Congress in person.

These ‘extras’ which we provide stand alongside the RGME tradition for many years of promoting our authors and the contributions of their work to our Congress Programs (see our Congress Activities) by the series of RGME promotional notices for the year’s Congress (with updates):

  • on our official Website (You are Here),
  • on our Social Media (listed Below),
  • in the Posters for each of our Congress activities, and
  • in the Congress Abstracts which we publish for the Authors’ presentations.

The Posters normally are displayed in printed form at the Congress — where permitted, such as on cork boards in the different buildings and in the rooms where our events take place — and on the RGME website, with printed copies also sent to presenters as souvenirs to display in their offices or studies and to give to their mothers.  For example for the 2015 Congress:

Derek Shank stands beside the RGME Poster Display for the 2025 ICMS. Photography by Mildred Budny.

The Abstracts appear in their own individual webpages — which can 1) extend for a longer span than the assigned limit (100 words) for the submission of a proposal for a Congress Paper; 2) add notes, links, and bibliography; and 3) include images — as publications in their own right.

Moreover, we take care to index all the Authors’ Abstracts for a given Congress to grant wider access both:

  • Alphabetically by Author’s Surname and
  • Chronologically by Year of Author’s Presentation.

The Arrival

After the Journey to arrive, there remained some bumps in the road at the destination.  The RGME Director was unable to travel for health reasons, and so had to attend online.

Program

One person on the Program for one Session decided not to attend.  Technical issues with one Speaker’s PowerPoint Presentation and its Zoom projection interrupted a short span of the flow of slides in an expertly crafted presentation in another Session, but this interruption could smoothly be kept to a brief minimum through co-ordination prepared ahead of time between the Speaker and the RGME Zoom Host, together with the Session Organizer.  The prepared co-ordination ahead of time for hybrid access dropped the ball between one scheduled in-person Session and the RGME-hosted Zoom online facility, required, it turned out, not as an extra, but as an essential, so as to enable the Presider and two of the Speakers unable to travel to the Congress to participate in the Session.

Audience Participation

At the last minute, an audience member generously offered to lend his computer so that the Organizer / Second Speaker could connect the Zoom Meeting for the Session and the In-Person Room.  We give thanks to collegiality and generous resourcefulness.

Posters

Another surprise came for the RGME Posters for our Congress Activities when the eve of the Congress arrived and participants came on site.  We suddenly discovered that the 2024 Congress prohibited the display of posters anywhere in a printed form, apart from selected tables requiring horizontal piles, rather than enabling vertical display for which our Posters are designed.

This change meant that the extra efforts by our Trustee and Co-Organizer David Porreca in the days before the Congress to produced printed Posters for display and distribution there — while our Director could not travel to the Congress to bring them as usual — were thwarted.  Henceforth, we will plan accordingly and distribute our Posters outside the Congress walls, both in digital and printed formats.

By fortunate choice, without knowing about the Congress’s redirections, the Director had posted the newly-designed Posters in a Web Gallery of their own on our website just a couple of days before the Congress, in a new departure for our tradition of sponsorship and co-sponsorship. Customarily, she would post them in the RGME webpost for the year’s Congress shortly after it had been accomplished, as part of its Report. (See 2023 International Congress on Medieval Studies: Report.)

Now, see the special Pop-Up Exhibition!

  • RGME Pop-Up Poster Exhibition for the 2024 ICMS
2024 ICMS Alchemical Session Poster 2

2024 ICMS Alchemical Session Poster 2

The Program as Accomplished

Our Program comprised:

  • three Co-sponsored Sessions 
  • our Open Business Meeting and
  • a co-sponsored Anniversary Reception.

In stages, first (in November 2023) we announced the Sessions, and reported the sequence of papers for them.  Next (January 2024), with information from the ICMS, we could report their assigned times, days, and locations on campus in cases of the in-person events, along with our other activities at the Congress.  Then we began to publish the abstracts for them; that process is now completed. Soon we will complete the Indexes for them.

For the In-Person Sessions and the Open Business Meeting, the RGME provided an online option for Congress Registrants through our Zoom Subscription and our Eventbrite Registration Portal:

  • Eventbrite: Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

‘Hybrid’ Facilities

Like last year (see 2023 International Congress on Medieval Studies: Report), the RGME offered Registration (without charge) for Online access through our Zoom Subscription to some of our In-Person events this year.  Likewise we offered registration for our two In-Person events to help us to learn how many to expect to attend for our planning and the catering for our Open Business Meeting and Co-Sponsored Reception.

For one Online Session, a remote-participation conference room was reserved so that participants and attendees on campus for the Congress might gather to join the online format while in company.

At ICMS for the RGME Anniversary Year

In 2024, the RGME celebrates its Anniversary Year to mark 25 years as a nonprofit educational corporation based in Princeton, New Jersey, and 25 years as an international scholarly society founded out of a major research project at Corpus Christi College in the University of Cambridge.

For our Anniversary Year, the theme is “Bridges”.

  • “Bridges” for our 2024 Anniversary Year
Ada Bridge pylon, Belgrade, Serbia

Ada Bridge pylon, Belgrade, Serbia. Photograph Petar Milošević (1 August 2021). Image via Wikimedia Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.

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Tags: Abstracts of Congress Papers, Bridges, Early Printed Books, History of Alchemy, ICMS, International Congress on Medieval Studies, Manuscript studies, P.-O.M.o.N.A., Postal History at Kalamazoo, RGME Anniversary, RGME Anniversary Reception, RGME Business Meeting, RGME Posters, Societas Magica
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2024 Grant for “Between Past and Future” Project from The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation Research Libraries Program

April 5, 2024 in 2024 Grant, Announcements, RGME Symposia

Announcement

2024 Grant to the RGME from
The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation
Research Libraries Program
for

A Year-Long Project with Paired Symposia

“Between Past and Future”
(Parts I–II)

[Posted on 5 April 2024]

Logo of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (colour version)

RGME Logo in Color (2014).

Gratefully we announce that The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, through its Research Libraries Program, has awarded the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (RGME) a grant for 2024 to carry out a one-year Project centered upon our Spring and Autumn Symposia in this Anniversary Year as a co-ordinated set of events.  Drawing upon fruits of the 2023 Project for our Library & Archives funded by the Foundation, this year’s grant in our Anniversary Year creates a new Project focused upon links between Special Collections and Teaching for the Liberal Arts.

“Between Past and Future:
RGME Spring & Autumn Symposia in 2024
for Teaching in the Liberal Arts with Original Sources,
at Vassar College and Beyond”

Last year, we focused upon the task of “Building the Plan for Recording, Structuring, and Accessing the RGME Library & Archives”. Now, we launch the work of crafting a set of events centered upon a return to our in-person Symposia and their follow-up in the plan for our 2024 Spring and Autumn Symposia.

  • 2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar College “Between Past and Future”
  • 2024 Autumn Symposium “At the Helm”

Building upon RGME integrated approaches across the years, these events are expressly dedicated to building bridges to aid passage across obstacles and standing watch on the bridge of a vessel poised to steer an enlightened course. Our voyage contemplates connections “Between Past and Future” , specifically for encountering myriad original sources, as found notably in Special Collections, and considering them as opportunities for “Teaching Events”.

This year’s Project embarks on a fresh campaign, as it builds upon last year’s funded Project to begin the process of structuring our Library & Archives as a collection.

  • Grant from The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation for the RGME Library & Archives in 2023.

Both grants have been awarded through the Research Libraries Program, for which “the overall objective . . .  is to improve the ability of research libraries to serve the needs of scholarship in the humanities and the performing arts, and to help make their resources more widely accessible to scholars and the general public.”

“Between Past and Future”:  The Way Forward

The project funded by The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation Grant will span the entirety of the 2024 calendar year, concluding with an end-of-the-year report.

Building upon the 2023 Pilot Project for the RGME Library & Archives, the 2024 year-long Project centers upon our Spring Symposium taking place at Vassar College in April in hybrid format, at the invitation of Head of Special Collections, Ronald D. Patkus, familiar as participant (2019–2023) with our Symposium Series both in-person and online.  Enthusiasm among speakers, respondents, presiders, consultants, and others joining the 2024 Spring Symposium Program informs the plan to create a curated set of RGME Symposia which not only co-produce this exceptional event, but also follow from it. (The Spring Symposium Program is available in pdf as consecutive pages or foldable booklet.)

Poster 1: Save-the-Date for 2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar.

Poster 1: Save-the-Date for 2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar.

The 2024 Autumn Symposium makes it possible to undertake an integrated follow-up for the Spring event without burdening Vassar with organizational work, by using RGME structures of paired Spring & Summer Symposia and our various other online events. They all function mainly through pro-bono donations, from pre-production through post-production and follow-up, to involve minimal expenses, for which regularly we must seek support above our organization’s expenses.

As a one-day online event, the Autumn Symposium has its program partly in place, with some participants from the Spring Symposium and openings to be filled through it, notably by meetings for planning at and around the Spring Symposium. In this flexible way, the ‘casting’ of the Autumn Symposium as a set of “Teaching Events” can assemble its program with relative ease of preparation to ‘enact’ the processes of teaching through encounters with Special Collections, for in-person and online audiences alike.

The 2024 Project is grounded upon our practice to interlink events (notably Symposia) and to employ a flexible, structured, approach to programming. Here we integrate the work for the Spring Symposium at Vassar College with some “first fruits” soon in a shorter event online, much like the paired events of earlier Spring & Autumn Symposia which grew from our occasional Symposia over the years. Examples include our

  • 2023 Spring and Autumn Symposia on “Materials and Access”
  • 2022 Spring and Autumn Symposia on “Structured Knowledge”
  • 2020 Spring Symposium at Princeton University:  “From Cover to Cover”

Both 2024 events have companion RGME publications, both digital and printed. They comprise webposts, blogposts, paired posters (preview, program), recordings, and more, notably the illustrated Symposium Booklets. We publish them mostly by pro-bono work from start to final proof, for issue in print and pdf. Costs for their printing and distribution (at in-person events and by mail as required) call for support.

The perspectives on the theme of the Spring Symposium present a coherent, multi-disciplinary, and multi-generational scholarly program in a sequence of teaching events with expertise and materials in multiple centers. They stand poised, as proclaimed by the Symposium title

  • “Between Past and Future: Building Bridges between Special Collections and Teaching for the Liberal Arts”.

London, The British Library, Yates Thompson MS 36, fol. 65r, top left. Historiated initial enclosing a ship under sail with the poets Dante and his guide Vergil. Dante Alighieri, Divina Comedia, Canto 1, Purgatorio. Northern Italy, 15th century.

The Autumn Symposium carries it forward with a selection of virtual visits placed

  • “At the Helm: Spotlight on Special Collections as Teaching Events”.

This follow-up event allows presenters the opportunity, with minimal preparation, to showcase collections (public and private) in virtual visits guided by curators, in the company of teachers and students both on-site and online. The informal style accords with our proven approach for online events as roundtables, interviews, conversations, master classes, and workshops.

  • For example: “The Research Group Speaks”: The Series.

Thus, we might channel the purposeful momentum for the Spring Symposium in its central event and a simpler follow-up with participants including Vassar representatives: faculty, staff, students, and alums.

© The British Library, London, Harley MS 4425, fol. 133r, detail. Jean de Meun (c. 1240 – c. 1305), Roman de la Rose. Portrait of the author at his writing desk.

Center Stage

The Vassar Symposium in the Spring occupies center stage for the Project. Taking place in hybrid format from Friday to Sunday 19–21 April 2024, this event gathers participants at Vassar by invitation, with attendees both in person and online.

  • 2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar College

Its production rests upon organizational work and resources from both Vassar College and the RGME, guided by a Spring Symposium Advisory Planning Committee comprising Ronald Patkus, Elizabeth Lastra, Mildred Budny, and Barbara Williams Ellertson. The event expressly showcases

  • The Catherine Pelton Durrell ’25 Archives and Special Collections Library,
  • the companion exhibition at The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, and
  • the publication of the new commissioned catalogue on Medieval & Renaissance Books held by both Special Collections and the Art Center.

It also celebrates

  • the significant donation of the acquisition of the Nicholas B. Scheetz Collection of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts.

Vassar College’s resources, people, and representatives stand as focus, as the scope attends also to a wider context of accomplishments. Thus will gather experts and practitioners in the fields of Special Collections, teaching, learning, and the Liberal Arts, with speakers from different centers (also abroad) and stages or directions of engagement. They include librarians, archivists, curators, collectors, manuscript and rare-book vendors, faculty, students, and former students working in the field. Featured contributions include reports by recent Vassar College alumnae working with Special Collections, current Vassar students engaging with materials in the Vassar collections, and Vassar alums of longer duration revisiting and reviving such engagement.

The Autumn Symposium in online format on Saturday 26 October 2024, also with ancillary events, continues the engagement between original sources — medieval and more, across centuries, genres, styles, and languages — and the people who study and care for them, teach from them, and learn from them. Among them on the Programs for both Symposia are representatives from Vassar, both present and past.

  • 2024 Autumn Symposium “At the Helm”

As follow-up and follow-through, the Autumn Symposium offers virtual, curated visits to Special Collections of several kinds, institutional and private, with focus upon original materials, as witnesses with their own stories to tell. Its online visits (in this country and abroad) will showcase collections and programs dedicated to promoting pedagogy. One, by request, would exhibit some highlights of RGME Library & Archives, as revealed in our 2023 funded Pilot Project, along with results of our on-going research on manuscripts and related materials in our own and others’ collections.

The Plan for the Project

The grant for 2024 gives support for multiple aspects of the work to organize and accomplish both Symposia and to integrate them both with each other as a co-ordinated set and with the other RGME activities throughout the year. Among the funded elements are provisions for organizational logistics including online and in-person technical and logistical back-up for the paired Symposia, the preparations of their publications (traditional and digital) from conception through distribution, and the part-time services of an Intern Executive Assistant/Associate to aid the RGME Director to plan, refine, and complete events and integrate them as a cohesive pair dedicated to teaching original sources from the Medieval/Renaissance and other realms.

This latter position, unprecedented in the history of the RGME, offers invaluable support for the Director’s work to plan, co-ordinate, undertake, and follow through the work of RGME activities both in person and online as the year unfolds. In announcing the 2024 Project and its Grant, we also announce the appointment of its new Intern Executive Assistant/Associate, our RGME Associate Hannah Goeselt. Her work is familiar to the RGME already through her guest blogpost in August 2023 for our blog on Manuscript Studies as well as her contributions to our 2023 Spring and Autumn Symposia and Episode 15 in our online series “The Research Group Speaks”. We celebrate her contributions, look forward to further contributions, and thank her for her help in joining the ground-breaking 2024 Project.

The Project’s results aim for the two Symposia plus publications and ancillary activities, with the Vassar Symposium as the star. They incorporate knowledge gained from the 2023 Pilot Project , as does the plan of the Spring Symposium at Vassar itself. Mentorship for the Intern Executive Associate would provide professional experience at close hand with a master to teach, by doing, the steps to produce an educational series in its many manifestations, in person, online, and published.

Puente de San Martín: Bridge with reflection over the River Targus, Toledo, Spain.

Toledo, Castilla la Mancha, Spain, Puente de San Martín. Photograph by Ввласенко/Volodymyr Vlasenko via CC BY-SA 3.0 Deed license.

The Project will span the full 2024 calendar year, with pre-production/production/post-production in continuous, interlinked cycles. It is designed to express, enhance, and interlink with the celebrations of our 2024 RGME Anniversary Year, for which the chosen Theme is Bridges.

The Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (see our Mission Statement) exists to promote research on written sources across the ages, with our own nonprofit educational publishing house. Powered principally by volunteers, with some outside support, the RGME prepares this Project for its 2024 Anniversary Year, which celebrates 25 years as a Section 501(c)(3) nonprofit educational organization (incorporated at Princeton, New Jersey, in November 1999); and 35 years as an international scholarly organization (founded at the Parker Library of Corpus Christi College at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom in 1989). Its seeds, by its Founder Director Mildred Budny’s training, are grounded in a Vassar College Liberal Arts Education, with its emphasis on “going to the sources”.

Our Project brings fruits home.

The 2024 Project serves as the centerpiece and major focus for our activities in our 2024 Anniversary Year. With this year’s Theme of Bridges, we attend to our mission, guided by our experience, advisors, co-organizers, collaborators, contributors, friends, resources, and generous support, to travel “Between Past and Future” in an enlightened, integrated program of activities with companion publications of a variety of kinds, both traditional and digital. We give thanks for the support which sustains the plan in its journeys to accomplishments, both online and in person, for this year and beyond.

The Way Forward

The Research Group on Manuscript Evidence is most grateful for the generosity of spirit, the model, and the financial support of The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation for this next significant step in the continuing history of our organization, as we now turn to an integrated year-long Project poised “Between Past and Future” in constructing and strengthening bridges of multiple kinds between fields of study, original materials, institutions, individuals, generations, and forms of engagement with the legacy of the past, in its written and other traces, as it works its way in transmission towards the future.

Contact Us

For information, please contact director@manuscriptevidence.org or Contact Us.

For updates, please visit

  • our FaceBook Page
  • our Facebook Group
  • our Twitter Feed (@rgme_mss)
  • our Bluesky nest @rgmesocial.bluesky.social)
  • our LinkedIn Group
  • our Blog on Manuscript Studies and its Contents List
  • Friends of the RGME.

We look forward to hearing from you.

Puente de San Martín: Bridge with reflection over the River Targus, Toledo, Spain.

Toledo, Castilla la Mancha, Spain, Puente de San Martín, view from the north-west. Constructed in the late 14th century over the River Tagus. Photograph (24 May 2017) by Ввласенко/Volodymyr Vlasenko via Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

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Tags: 2024 Autumn Symposium, 2024 Project "Between Past and Future", 2024 RGME Anniversary, 2024 Spring Symposium, Archives and Special Collections Library of Vassar College, Bridges, Building Bridges, Medieval & Renaissance Books at Vassar College, Nicholas B. Scheetz Collection of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation
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2024 International Medieval Congress at Leeds: Program

November 24, 2023 in Conference, Conference Announcement, International Medieval Congress, Uncategorized

“Building Bridges
‘Over Troubled Waters’
For 25 Years and More”

An Inaugural RGME-Sponsored Session at Leeds

Thirty-First International Medieval Congress
University of Leeds
(1–4 July 2024 in hybrid format)

[Posted on 23 November 2023, with updates]

Paris, Musée Carnavalet, Projet pour le Pont Neuf, circa 1577. Image via Wikimedia via Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported.

Paris, Musée Carnavalet, Projet pour le Pont Neuf, circa 1577. Image via Wikimedia via Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported.

The Research Group on Manuscript Evidence prepares an Inaugural Sponsored Session at the International Medieval Congress (IMC), University of Leeds, United Kingdom, to be held in hybrid format from 1st – 4th July, 2024. This Session would comprise our first Sponsored Session at the Congress.

In December, we learned that the proposed Session has been accepted. Here we describe the plan.

Also, now that the Congress schedule has been posted — see IMC 2024 Programme — we announce details of our Inaugural Session, scheduled for the first day of the Congress (1 July).

The Plan

The Congress subject for 2024 is “Crisis”.

The RGME Theme for its Anniversary Year of 2024 is “Bridges”.

For the 2024 ICMS at Leeds we examine subjects pertaining to the challenges and opportunities of “Building Bridges ‘Over Troubled Waters’ ”.  Responses to our Call for Proposals for this Session yielded a strong program with varied subjects from multiple perspectives far and near across time and place.

This Session joins our events celebrating the Anniversary Year for the RGME.

  • 2023 and 2024 Activities
  • 2024 Anniversary Appeal

Our 2024 Anniversary Year: “Bridges”

In 2024 the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (RGME) celebrates its 25th Anniversary as a Nonprofit Educational Corporation based in the United States and its 35th Anniversary as an International Scholarly Organization founded in England.

To mark our anniversary year, we prepare sponsored Sessions, as usual, for the International Congress on Medieval Studies (ICMS) at Kalamazoo in May.  See our Call for Papers for the 2024 ICMS and now the 2024 International Congress on Medieval Studies: Program.

Also, for the first time, we prepare an Inaugural RGME-sponsored Session for the International Medieval Congress (IMC) at Leeds in July 2024. Our dedicated Co-Organizers for this new ‘venture’ as an Inaugural Session on our Anniversary bring a rich range of perspectives and interests sprouting from distant lands, different subjects, multiple waterways or paths of communication, and varied cultural endeavours, from poetry to correspondence, and voyagers’ routes using and forming bridges both tangibly and intangibly.

Our Co-Organizers hail from different traditions and upbringings, varied geographical locations (more than one, different continents included), and multi-lingual perspectives.  Meet the Co-Organizers, whom we earnestly thank for skillfully shaping this event:

  • Ann Pascoe van Zyl
  • Dr. Michael Allman Conrad and Curriculum Vitae.

With awareness of distances which may be involved, we contemplate a view toward the waters, with thanks to our Co-Organizer for the photograph and permission to include it here as an evocative emblem from sometimes-distant shores.

Cape Point, Cape of Good Hope. Photograph © 12.2022 Ann Pascoe van Zyl.

The 2024 Leeds Congress:  “Crises”

The chosen “Thematic Focus” for the Leeds Congress in 2024 is “Crisis”.  It stands the tradition of varied Themes for the Leeds Congress since its foundation.  The Congress website describes many ways in which this theme might be viewed and explored.

Bridges and “Troubled Waters”

Given the Theme for the 2024 Congress at Leeds and our Theme for our 2024 Anniversary Year, it seemed natural to contemplate processes which, when called for, might create a Bridge Over Troubled Water in some form or other.  Repeating the results — in one or other form, as required or possible — might amount to a habit.

That thought reminded us of some practices and habits of the RGME over the years.  And so, the title for the session came into existence, and could form a rallying call or sorts for the plan of its approach.

Call it a ‘bridge’ in response to the call for the 2024 Congress to consider the natures of ‘crisis’ of various kinds, medieval and more, as a focus subject for discussion.

With bridges both literal and metaphorical in mind, we thought of the Ark as a response or safe haven.  Some medieval images of Noah’s Ark, its inhabitants, and its provident storage of provisions, come to mind.  For example, in an illustration enclosed within an ornamental architectural frame, itself set ‘at sea’ or afloat within a broad outer frame of the expansive margins of the manuscript leaf:

Illustration of Noah's Ark within a rectangular frame. The house-shaped ark has window-like openings for animals and birds. At the center, Noah as an aged and bearded man reaches up to receive a flying bird.

Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des Manuscrits, Latin MS 10525, folio 3v. Image Public Domain via https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148./btv1b8447877n.r=psautier+dit+de+saint+louis.langFR.

Note on the Image

Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des Manuscrits, Latin MS 10525, folio 3v.

“Psalter of Saint Louis”, formerly owned by Louis IX (1214-1270), King of France.
Image Public Domain via gallica.bnf.fr (Scan View 20).

Building Bridges: The Plan for the Session

The Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (RGME) came into existence in 1989 from a major Research Project at the Parker Library of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.  It moved to the USA in 1994 and became a nonprofit educational corporation based in Princeton in 1999.

Under our guiding concept of Bridges for our 2024 Anniversary Year, the RGME offers a Session on bridges and bridge-related topics, specifically as relating to crises. We consider ‘bridges’ both literally, as physical architectures and landmarks (such as historically significant specimens), and abstractly, as architectural devices of the mind that enable us to make unexpected, unpredicted, and sometimes serendipitous connections between marginal, off-field, divergent media, methods, and subjects sometimes ignored in such contexts.

Moreover, we examine how bridges answer to different forms of crises, especially, but not only, with regard to communication, travel, social, cultural or political relations, and the natural environment. In turn, we also consider how establishing and maintaining bridges may prevent crises or, contrarily, cause new unforeseen forms of crisis.

Our session welcomes all bold bridge-makers willing to traverse pathways that others might have not dared to take.  Our subjects are:

1) Old English Psalms as a metaphorical bridge between crisis in the locus horribilis to peace in the locus amoenus,

2) Mercantile Venetian responses to blockages to trade-routes,

3) Dangers of bridges, especially Devil’s Bridges and Robber’s Bridge, as pilgrims’ routes, with digital visualizations and reference to contemporary discourse on safety,

4) a Response to these cases, along with a zreflection on the RGME’s tradition of building bridges through ‘crises’ in its passage across time to its anniversary with a session at the IMC.

Thus, we respond to opportunities and challenges which the captain and officers on the bridge of a ship might observe directly, better to steer a course forward.

We invite you to join us on the voyage.

Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Departément des Manuscrits, Latin MS 10525, folio 3v. Image Public Domain via https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148.

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With the publication of the IMC 2024 Programme, we announce the Programme of our Inaugural Session.

“Building Bridges ‘Over Troubled Waters’ ”
Sponsor:
Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

Session 129 (page 71 in the IMC 2024 Programme)

Organisers:
Ann Pascoe-van Zyl, School of English, Trinity College Dublin
and
Michael Allman Conrad, Kontextstudium, Universität St Gallen

Moderator:
N. Kıvılcım Yavuz, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds

Respondent: David Porreca, Department of Classics, University of Waterloo, Ontario

Presentations:

129-a: Ann Pascoe-van Zyl, School of English, Trinity College Dublin

“The Imagery of the Old English Psalms of the Paris Psalter:  A
Metaphorical Bridge from Crisis in the locus horribilis to Peace
in the locus amoenus”
(Language: English)

Abstract

129-b: Eleanor Congdon, Department of History, Youngstown State University,
Ohio
“Resourcefulness in Action: The Use of the Port of Ibiza in Place
of Mainland Ports by Venetian Ships between 1400-1403″
(Language: English)

Abstract

129-c: Michael Allman Conrad, Kontextstudium, Universität St Gallen
“Diabolic, Dangerous, and Daring: Bridges as Ambiguous
Symbols of Medieval Risk Perception”
(Language: English)

Abstract

Update (20 August 2024): Michael has kindly provided a list of selected bibliography on the subject.  We offer it for download:

  • “Literature on “Devil’s Bridges” compiled by Michael A. Conrad.

Response:

“129-d“: David Porreca, Department of Classics, University of Waterloo, Ontario

A glimpse of the Bilingual Latin and Old English Paris Psalter:

Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des Manuscrits, MS Latin 8824, folio 1r, midsection with illustration. Image Public Domain via https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b8451636f/f11.item#.

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Posters for our Session

RGME @ 2024 IMC at Leeds: Poster 2 set in RGME Bembino, with border.

RGME @ 2024 IMC at Leeds: Poster 1, set in RGME Bembino.

The Posters (in A4 format) can be downloaded.

  • Posters 1–2
  • Poster 1
  • Poster 2 with image of Noah’s Ark Afloat

“The RGME: Who We Are”

For this Congress, we provide a brief introduction to the RGME, with some links, in thanks for our Inaugural Session.  The two-page flyer can be downloaded in two versions for our international audience. Honouring our host, the International Medieval Congress at the University of Leeds, we prepare the pdf in both quarto and A4 formats.

1. Who We Are (A4 format)

2. Who We Are (Quarto format)

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See how this Session stands among RGME activities both recent and planned:

  • 2023 and 2024 Activities
Valli_di_Lanzo, Lanzo Torinese, Ponte del Diavolo. Photograph by Emiliana Borruto (24 February 2012). Image via Wikimedia Commons via Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic.

Valli_di_Lanzo, Lanzo Torinese, Ponte del Diavolo. Photograph by Emiliana Borruto (24 February 2012). Image via Wikimedia Commons via Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic.

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Questions or Suggestions?

Please leave your comments or questions below, Contact Us, or visit

  • our FaceBook Page
  • our Facebook Group
  • our Twitter Feed (@rgme_mss)
  • our Bluesky nest @rgmesocial.bluesky.social)
  • our LinkedIn Group
  • our Blog on Manuscript Studies and its Contents List

We invite you to join:

  • Friends of the RGME.

Donations and contributions, in funds or in kind, are welcome and easy to give.  Given our low overheads, your donations have direct impact on our work and the furtherance of our mission.  For our Section 501(c)(3) nonprofit educational organization, your donations may be tax-deductible to the fullest extent permitted by law.  Thank you for your support!

  • Contributions and Donations

We invite you to consider favorably

  • our 2024 Anniversary Appeal.

We look forward to hearing from you and seeing you at our events.

*****

Paris, Musée Carnavalet, Projet pour le Pont Neuf, circa 1577. Image via Wikimedia via Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported.

*****

Tags: "Bridge Over Troubled Water", Anglo-Saxon Paris Psalter, Bibliothèque nationale de France Ms Latin 8834, Bridges, Building Bridges, Crisis, Devil's Bridges, History of Bridges, International Medieval Congress, locus amoenus, Medieval Studies, Mercantile Venetian Trade Routes, Noah's Ark, Port of Ibiza, RGME Anniversary, Robber's Bridge
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“Bridges” for our 2024 Anniversary Year

August 9, 2023 in Conference, International Congress on Medieval Studies, International Medieval Congress, Uncategorized

“Building Bridges ‘Over Troubled Waters’
For 25 Years and More”

Our Theme of “Bridges” for our 2024 Anniversary Year

with the

Call for Papers for
an Inaugural RGME-Sponsored Session
at the 2024 International Medieval Congress at Leeds
(1–4 July 2024 in hybrid format)

Blogpost composed by Michael Allman Conrad, with Mildred Budny and Ann Pascoe–van Zyl

[Posted on 9 August 2023]

In 2024 the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (RGME) will celebrate its 25th Anniversary as a Nonprofit Educational Corporation based in the United States and its 35th Anniversary as an International Scholarly Organization founded in England.  Among its 2024 Anniversary Celebrations (Events such as Symposia, Episodes of our online series “The Research Group Speaks”, and more), the RGME prepares a set of Conference Sessions by “Setting Sails for A Double Gig in the USA and the United Kingdom”.

A Tale of Two Congresses

First, we revisit the annual International Congress on Medieval Studies (ICMS) at Kalamazoo in May.  As customary for many years, we plan for RGME-sponsored and co-sponsored Sessions there. For these plans, see our 2024 Call for Papers for these Sessions.  Also, for the first time, we prepare to sponsor a Session at the International Medieval Congress (IMS) at Leeds in July.

For 2024, the former conference will be held, somewhat confusingly, partly online and partly in-person (with individual Sessions either the one of the other). In contrast, the latter is fully hybrid, with in-person and online participation together. For the thematic subject of “Crisis” chosen for the 2024 Leeds Congress, we bring our own 2024 Anniversary Theme of “Bridges”.

Paris , Musée Carnavalet, Projet pour le Pont Neuf, by an anonymous artist, circa 1577. Image via Wikimedia via Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported.

Note on the image:  The Pont Neuf (“New Bridge”) was the first Parisian bridge to have no houses; it is the oldest standing bridge to survive in Paris.  The painting in the Musée Carnavalet shown above depicts the design approved in 1578 by King Henry III (1551–1589), who laid the first stone on 31 May 1578. The bridge as completed in 1606 had a simpler design, partly in response to constraints and challenges — crises amidst the French Wars of Religion — during this time in the king’s reign leading, for example, to his assassination. The bridge provided both a thoroughfare for horses and conveyances, and pavements for pedestrians.  See Le Pont_Neuf.  See also below.

For information on how to submit your Proposal for a Paper for our Inaugural Session, see below.

Building (and Rebuilding) Bridges

Whenever we speak of bridges as structures or constructions over physical objects by land or sea — rather than, say, a card game, a trick-taking game, some prosthesis for teeth, or the pilothouse of a ship — we speak of connections and obstacles. Can we even think of bridges without also thinking of dangers, of collapse, of falling down, of burning?

No bridge is needed where connection is simple and guaranteed, where creeks can be passed easily, where communication flows unhindered. It is only when underlying currents become perilous, when we are to transverse to unknown shores that may challenge our bare existence that we yearn for a bridge to provide us safe passage. In such cases, we might even wonder on occasion if the passage and its direction (let alone its progress) constitutes ‘coming’ or ‘going’. With such potential, depending upon how and from whence the traveller approaches a passageway not necessarily unidirectional, the viewpoints for a given bridge might resemble the dual perspectives of the antique Roman god Janus , presider over doorways, gates, thresholds, passages, beginnings and endings, war and peace.

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.

And so, a bridge turns out to be a very ambivalent endeavor (as indeed all crossings and bifurcations are), living in the fuzzy realm between stability and destabilization, between safety and risk. With bridges, we might enter dangerous worlds otherwise inaccessible to us (sometimes for the better), so that the mere existence of bridges as gateways to these spaces can appear dangerous in itself, whilst they create an opening, and thus, opportunities in its original Latin sense as opportunus.

Knowing this far too well, we are required to cultivate trust in a bridge’s supports to safely guide us to the other side, but also to return if things turn out harmful. In such conditions we might, if circumstances and structures warrant, call upon the facilities and resourcefulness of a draw-bridge or pontoon bridge, and be prepared for the potential (and sometimes uneasily apparent) insecurity of suspension bridges.

Bear in mind the double-meaning of support here: bridges stand on supports and lend us support. They stabilize passages to cross what otherwise would be uncrossable – and thereby “ease your mind”, as Simon & Garfunkel sang in Bridge Over Troubled Water (1970); see the lyrics. Nor need we overlook the implication of the symbol of the Cross as the signature of Christ.

That said, shouldn’t all researchers thus be bridge-makers? Since what else is the prototype of a researcher than a person who, driven by endless curiosity, feels a strong inner desire of wanting to pass over to those unexplored realms on the other side?

It is this ambiguous nature of an in-between, of an entity standing in two worlds at once while creating an own space that belongs to none of them fully that make bridges such interesting transitional spaces. Yes, more than that: the bridge is the Urbild, the archetype of what transition and transitional spaces mean avant la lettre. This condition, by the way, is no less true for the double-identity of the messenger, a figure that embodies both bridge and bridge-maker to create meaningful connections between senders and receivers, between material and immaterial worlds, between heaven and the earth. And how could we forget that the Roman chief High Priest was known as the pontifex maximus, the great bridge-builder, a title later related to the Pope in Rome?[1]

Already in antiquity, the ambivalent figure of Hermes[2] as Olympic Messenger encapsulated the ambiguity of all bridges, as he is the protector not only of human heralds, travelers, merchants, and orators, but also of thieves, pointing out how much all hermeneutics convey risky endeavors, since all acts of interpretations may fail, or even be the cause of dangers of their own.

As a model of transition par excellence, bridges also remind us negatively of its connective nature, especially whenever we cross the Rubicon or burn down bridges, and thereby pass the point of no return — a very current fear in respect to Climate Change and Anthropocene. Either way, Hermes makes us aware of the close proximity of commuting and communicating.

“Study on a Medieval Bridge” at Amares, Braga District, Portugal. Image by Pedro Nuno Caetano (2019) via Wikimedia Commons via Creative Commons 2.0 Generic.

Bridges Then and Now

For its next Anniversary Year, the Research Group for Manuscript Evidence has chosen the Theme of Bridges as its guiding symbol. In fact, it has been the mission of the RGME to build bridges since its first beginning — between disciplines, methods and media, and scholars from different countries, even continents, all driven by their passion for manuscripts and their historical significance, as well as their context among written texts as such and within the course (or coursing) of history.

For its anniversary, the RGME takes this mission one step further, by crossing the great sea in an attempt to bridge the academic cultures of the New World and Old World — in what could be described as a reversal of the Mayflower’s itinerary, from the Americas back to the British Isles, and back again. Let’s hope for calm waters and steady weather! (And is it too far-fetched to remind us that both Cambridge and Oxford are names that allude to bridge-like passages? Isn’t education always a bridge, a rite of passage?)

CFP for a RGME Session at the 2024 ICMS
(1–4 July 2024 in hybrid format)

In this spirit, we prepare sponsored Sessions, as usual, for the International Congress on Medieval Studies (ICMS) at Kalamazoo in May.  See our Call for Papers for the 2024 ICMS.

Also, for the first time, we prepare an Inaugural Sponsored Session for the International Medieval Congress (IMC) at Leeds in July 2024. The chosen Thematic Focus for the Leeds Congress is  “Crisis”.

The Co-Organisers for our Leeds Session are

Ann Pascoe–van Zyl (Trinity College Dublin)
and
Michael Allman Conrad
(Research Group on Manuscript Evidence and Universität St. Gallen)

Bridges and “Troubled Waters”

Under our guiding concept of “bridges,” the RGME invites papers for a Session at Leeds on all kinds of bridges and bridge-related topics. Be it more literally, as physical architectures and landmarks, such as historically significant specimens, or be it more abstractly, as architectural devices of the mind that enable us to make unexpected and unpredicted connections between marginal, off-field, divergent media, methods, and subjects that are usually not made or ignored.

In addition, we ask how bridges answer to different forms of crises, especially, but not only, with regard to communication, travel, social, cultural or political relations, or of the natural environment. In turn, we are also interested in papers that discuss how the establishment and maintenance of bridges may prevent crises or, contrarily, cause new unforeseen forms of crisis.

In summary, we welcome all bold bridge-makers willing to traverse pathways that others have not dared to take. In such ways, we might also respond to the opportunities and challenges which the captain and officers on the bridge of a ship can observe directly, better to steer a course in the passage.

Paris , Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des manuscrits, MS Lat 10525, fol. 3v, detail. Noah’s Ark. Image Public Domain via https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b8447877n.

Note on the image:  Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des manuscrits, MS Lat 10525, folio 3v. Psalter of Saint Louis, Paris circa 1270. See Psautier de Saint Louis: Latin 10525. On the genre, see, for example, Noah’s Ark; and Noah’s Arkhive.

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Proposals Invited for Papers
for our 2024 Session at Leeds
— Due by 31 August 2023

We invite abstracts of 200–300 words.  Your proposals should be made to the Session Co-Organisers to the address below by 31 August 2023.  Following this Call for Papers, the RGME Session will be selected and submitted to the Congress by 30 September 2023.  We will inform you of the selection by this time.

The Congress at Leeds will be held in person, with provisions for online participation. In this way, we hope that you might be able to attend onsite or at a distance, depending upon your travel arrangements.  Please indicate in your Proposal if you you would prefer to present your paper or session in-person or virtually.

  • Congress Website
    https://www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-2024/
  • Proposal Criteria
    https://www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/proposals/criteria/

Deadline for Paper Proposals:  Due by 31 August 2023

We look forward to your contributions.

For information about this RGME Session, and to make your Proposal, please contact the Co-organisers:

Ann Pascoe-van Zyl and Michael Allman Conrad
for the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

rgmesessions@gmail.com

*****

Footnotes

[1] Originally, this might have been meant literally: the position of bridge-builder was an important one in Rome, where the major bridges were over the Tiber. Considered a deity, only authorities with sacral functions could be allowed to “disturb” the river with mechanical additions. The title of “pontifex” for the Pontiff in Rome was already around for centuries, but did not become a regular title of honor for Popes before the 15th century, which is probably linked to the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 and the death of the last East Roman Emperor.

Fun fact: Pope Benedict XVI adopted @pontifex as his Twitter handle, which has been maintained by his successor Pope Francis.

Prague, National Gallery, Kinský Palace, NM-H10 4742. Marble relief of triplicate Hekate. Image via Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 3.0 Unported.

[2] There is something strange to be observed when we look at antiquity in this regard. The areas of expertise and responsibility for Greek and Roman Gods with respect to bridges is not clear-cut.

In fact, Janus seems to be the more suitable candidate if we want to know what God was actually related to bridges, as he generally was the God of motion, of pathways, doors and gates, of beginnings and endings, devoted to spatial and temporal transitions.

However, if we think about the mitigation, communication between different realms, dominions, and areas, this job would be that of Hermes as mitigator and messenger.

But, thirdly, there’s also Hecate, as the dark Goddess of crossings, of magic and witchery. Sometimes represented as triple-formed, her associations include crossroads, entrance-ways, night, light, sorcery, witchcraft, necromancy, graves, and protection from witchcraft. These powers extended her realms of transitions to stretch beyond the worlds of the living.

The lines seem to be a bit blurred here, and it seems to depend on what aspect of bridges interests us exactly to know which God to tend to: the dark aspects of all crossings (as mixing things that should be kept separate), the mitigation and moderation in communicative acts (Hermes), or transition and ambivalence in general?

We invite you to join the conversation.

*****

Munich, Staatliche Antikensammlungen, Nikoxenos Painter, Attic red-figure belly-amphora, ca. 500 BC, Side B, detail of Council of the Gods on Mount Olympus: Hermes with his mother Maia. Image via Wikimedia via Creative Commons.

Note on the image:  See Council of the Gods.

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2015 Poster for the Session on 'Ideal Kingship' co-sponsored by the Research Group on Mauscript Evidence and the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies at the University of Florida, set in RGME Bembino, with a photograph of Le Pont Neuf in Paris by Ilya V. Sverdlov, reproduced by permission.

RGME Poster for 2015 Session on “Ideal Kingship”.

Note on Le Pont Neuf
(see image above)

The ornate sculptural masks (mascarons) on the sides of Le Pont_Neuf in Paris inspired the series of posters for our Sessions at the 2015 ICMS at Kalamazoo.  See:

  • 2015 International Congress on Medieval Studies Report.

For the photographs in the posters, we thank Ilya V. Sverdlov.

The 381 original and individual Renaissance mascarons were replaced in the complete rebuilding of the bridge in 1851–1854 with copies by 19th-century sculptors. At the time, some of the 16th-century originals — attributed to the French Renaissance sculptor Germain Pilon (1525–1590) — were placed in the Musée Carnavalet (six originals and eight molds of others) and the Musée de Cluny – Musée national du Moyen Âge (eight originals); the latter were transferred later to the French National Museum of the Renaissance in the Château d’Écouen.

The masks are said to “represent the heads of forest and field divinities from ancient mythology, as well as satyrs and sylvains.” (Le Pont_Neuf.) With elaborate beards, enlarged ears, and animated and often threatening expressions, the faces of the mascarons stand constant watch both upstream and downstream on “The New Bridge”.  It is as if — from their stable supports on the stone structure — they pose both troubled and troubling outlooks for the waters below, as well as toward all passengers upon or beside them.

In two spans, that construction links opposite sides of the River Seine with the western (downstream) end “of the Île de la Cité, the island in the middle of the river that was, between 250 and 225 BC, the birthplace of Paris, then known as Lutetia and, during the medieval period, the heart of the city.”  (Le Pont_Neuf.)

Le Pont Neuf, 5 Corbel Heads All in a Row. Photography by Ilya V. Sverdlov. Reproduced by permission.

*****

We look forward to your contributions.  We invite Proposals for Papers in our Inaugural Sponsored Session on “Building Bridges ‘Over Troubled Waters’ ” at the 2024 International Medieval Congress at Leeds.

Please be sure to submit your Proposal by 31 August 2023 to the address above.

*****

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Donations and contributions, in funds or in kind, are welcome and easy to give.  See Contributions and Donations.

We look forward to hearing from you.

*****

Tags: "Bridge Over Troubled Water", Bridges, Council of the Gods, Crises, Hecate, Hermes, History of Bridges, International Congress for Medieval Studies, International Medieval Congress, Janus, Le Pont Neuf, Le Pont Neuf Paris, Medieval Studies, Noah's Ark, RGME Anniversary Year
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2024 International Medieval Congress at Leeds: Call for Papers

August 9, 2023 in Announcements, Call for Papers, Conference Announcement, International Congress on Medieval Studies, International Medieval Congress, Leeds, Uncategorized

RGME Call For Papers
for the 2024 International Medieval Congress at Leeds
(1–4 July 2024 in hybrid format)

“Building Bridges ‘Over Troubled Waters’
For 25 Years and More”

An Inaugural RGME-Sponsored Session at Leeds

[Posted on 9 August 2023]

Paris, Musée Carnavalet, Projet pour le Pont Neuf, circa 1577. Image via Wikimedia via Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported.

The Research Group on Manuscript Evidence prepares an Inaugural Sponsored Session at the International Medieval Congress (IMC), University of Leeds, United Kingdom, to be held in hybrid format from 1st – 4th July, 2024. This Session comprises our first Sponsored Session at the Congress.

The Congress subject for 2024 is “Crisis”. The RGME Theme for its Anniversary Year of 2024 is “Bridges”.

For the 2024 ICMS at Leeds we propose to examine subjects pertaining to the challenges and opportunities of “Building Bridges Over Troubled Waters”.  We invite your proposals for Papers for this Session.

Our 2024 Anniversary Year: “Bridges”

In 2024 the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (RGME) celebrates its 25th Anniversary as a Nonprofit Educational Corporation based in the United States and its 35th Anniversary as an International Scholarly Organization founded in England.

To mark our anniversary year, we prepare sponsored Sessions, as usual, for the International Congress on Medieval Studies (ICMS) at Kalamazoo in May.  See our Call for Papers for the 2024 ICMS.

Also, for the first time, we prepare an Inaugural RGME-sponsored Session for the International Medieval Congress (IMC) at Leeds in July 2024.

 

Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des manuscrits, MS Lat 10525, fol, 3v, detail. Noah’s Ark. Image Public Domain via https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b8447877n.

The 2024 Leeds Congress:  “Crises”

The chosen “Thematic Focus” for the Leeds Congress in 2024 is “Crisis”.

Bridges and “Troubled Waters”

Under our guiding concept of “Bridges” for 2024 (see Bridges for our 2024 Anniversary Year), the RGME invites papers for a Session at Leeds on all kinds of bridges and bridge-related topics. Be it more literally, as physical architectures and landmarks, such as historically significant specimens, be it more abstractly, as architectural devices of the mind that enable us to make unexpected and unpredicted connections between marginal, off-field, divergent media, methods, and subjects that are usually not made or ignored.

In addition, we ask how bridges answer to different forms of crises, especially, but not only, with regard to communication, travel, social, cultural or political relations, or of the natural environment. In turn, we are also interested in papers that discuss how the establishment and maintenance of bridges may prevent crises or, contrarily, cause new unforeseen forms of crisis.

In summary, we welcome all bold bridge-makers willing to traverse pathways that others have not dared to take. In such ways, we might also respond to the opportunities and challenges which the captain and officers on the bridge of a ship can observe directly, better to steer a course forward in the passage.

How to Submit your Proposal
for a Paper for our 2024 Session at Leeds
— Due by 31 August 2023

“Building Bridges ‘Over Troubled Waters’ ”

Session Co-Organisers:

Ann Pascoe-van Zyl (Trinity College Dublin)
and
Michael Allman Conrad (Research Group on Manuscript Evidence and Universität St. Gallen)

We invite abstracts of 200–300 words. Your proposals for papers should be made directly to the organisers by 31 August 2023.

We seek papers on a wide range of subjects pertaining to Bridges and to Crises.

Our own experience with RGME activities over the years, in promoting the possibilities of “Building Bridges” between disciplines, centres, and individuals, provides a keen interest in these issues and potential solutions.  See, for example, our

  • Events,
  • Congress Activities, and
  • Publications.

From your Proposals due by the end of August, the RGME Session will be selected and submitted to the Congress at Leeds by 30 September 2023.  We will inform you of our selection by that time.

Congress information

  • Congress Website
    https://www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-2024/
  • Proposal Criteria
    https://www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/proposals/criteria/

The Congress will be held in person, with provisions for online participation. In this way, we hope that you might be able to attend onsite or at a distance, depending upon your travel arrangements.

Deadline for Paper Proposals:  Due by 31 August 2023

Please send your Proposal of 200–300 words for your Paper to the organisers at their address below.  Might you please note your preferred mode for presenting your paper — in person or virtually.

Address to send your Proposals:  rgmesessions@gmail.com

For information about this RGME Inaugural Session at the IMC, please contact the Session Co-organisers at their address.

We look forward to your contributions.

*****

Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des manuscrits, MS Lat 10525, fol, 3v, detail. Noah’s Ark. Image Public Domain via https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b8447877n.

*****

Tags: Bridges, Crises, International Medieval Congress, Medieval Studies, Noah's Ark
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