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      • Abstracts of Congress Papers
        • Abstracts of Papers Listed by Author
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  • About
    • Mission
    • Who We Are
      • Officers, Associates & Volunteers
      • RGME Committees
      • Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
    • Policies & Statements
      • RGME Privacy Policy Statement
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    • People
      • Mildred Budny — Her Page
      • Adelaide Bennett Hagens
    • Activities
      • Events
      • Congress Activities
        • Sponsored Conference Sessions (1993‒)
          • Panels at the M-MLA Convention (from 2016)
        • Co-sponsored Conference Sessions (2006‒)
    • History
      • Seals, Matrices & Documents
      • Genealogies & Archives
    • Contact Us
  • Bembino
    • Multi-Lingual Bembino
  • Congress
    • Sponsored Conference Sessions (1993‒)
    • Co-sponsored Conference Sessions (2006‒)
    • Abstracts of Congress Papers
      • Abstracts Listed by Author
      • Abstracts Listed by Year
    • Kalamazoo Archive
    • Panels at the M-MLA Convention (2016-2019)
      • Abstracts of Papers for the M-MLA Convention
      • Panels at the M-MLA Convention (from 2016)
  • Events
    • RGME Activities for 2024 and 2025
      • 2023 Activities and 2024 Planned Activities
    • Seminars, Workshops, Colloquia & Symposia (1989–)
      • Seminars on ‘The Evidence of Manuscripts’
      • Symposia on ‘The Transmission of the Bible’
      • The New Series (2001-)
        • 2019 Anniversary Symposium Program: The Roads Taken
        • 2019 Anniversary Symposium Registration
        • 2019 Anniversary Symposium Registration Open
      • RGME Symposia: The Various Series
      • The Research Group Speaks: The Series
      • Meetings of the Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
      • RGME Online Events
    • Abstracts of Papers for Events
      • Abstracts of Papers for Seminars on ‘The Evidence of Manuscripts’
      • Abstracts of Papers for Symposia, Workshops & Colloquia
    • Receptions & Parties
    • Business Meetings
    • Photographic Exhibitions & Master Classes
    • Events Archive
  • ShelfLife
    • Journal Description
    • ShelfMarks: The RGME-Newsletter
    • Publications
      • “Insular, Anglo-Saxon, and Early Anglo-Norman Manuscript Art at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge” (1997)
        • Mildred Budny, ‘Catalogue’
        • The Illustrated Catalogue (1997)
      • The Illustrated Handlist
      • Semi-Official Counterfeiting in France 1380-1422
      • No Snap Decisions: Challenges of Manuscript Photography
    • History and Design of Our Website
  • Galleries
    • Watermarks & the History of Paper
    • Galleries: Contents List
    • Scripts on Parade
    • Texts on Parade
      • Latin Documents & Cartularies
      • New Testament Leaves in Old Armenian
    • Posters on Display
    • Layout Designs
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    • 2023 End-of-Year Fundraiser for our 2024 Anniversary Year
    • 2019 Anniversary Appeal
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Episode 21. “Learning How to Look”
A “Beatus Manuscripts” Project
2025 International Congress on Medieval Studies: Program
2025 RGME Visit to Vassar College
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Two Leaves in the Book of Numbers from the Chudleigh Bible
Delibovi on Glassgold on Boethius: A Blogpost
Ronald Smeltzer on “Émilie du Châtelet, Woman of Science”
A Latin Kalendar Leaf for February from Northern France
2025 Spring Symposium: “Makers, Producers, and Collectors of Books”
Starters’ Orders
The Weber Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible
Workshop 4. “Manuscript Fragments Compared”
Episode 20. “Comic Book Theory for Medievalists”
Episode 19: “At the Gate: Starting the Year 2025 at its Threshold”
2025 Annual Appeal
Favorite Recipes for Lemonade, Etc.
RGME Visit to the Lomazow Collection: Report
2024 Autumn Symposium: “At the Helm”
Medieval Women’s Networks
A Latin Vulgate Leaf of the Book of Numbers
The RGME ‘Lending Library’
Florence, Italy, Ponte Vecchio from Ponte alle Grazie. Photo: Ingo Mehling, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
Episode 17. “RGME Retrospect and Prospects: Anniversary Reflections”
2024 Anniversary Symposium: The Booklet
2024 International Medieval Congress at Leeds: Program
Jesse Hurlbut at the Bonneville Salt Flats, Utah. Photograph Jesse Hurlbut.
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To Whom Do Manuscripts Belong?
Kalamazoo, MI Western Michigan University, Valley III from the side. Photograph: David W. Sorenson.
2024 International Congress on Medieval Studies: Report
2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar College
Puente de San Martín: Bridge with reflection over the River Targus, Toledo, Spain.
2024 Grant for “Between Past and Future” Project from The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation Research Libraries Program
2024 Anniversary Symposium in Thanks to Jesse Hurlbut: Program

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Episode 19: “At the Gate: Starting the Year 2025 at its Threshold”

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

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

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

[Posted on 28 December 2025, with updates]

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

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

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

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

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

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

Our Theme for 2025:
“Thresholds and Communities”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Panelists and Subjects

Panelists for our Roundtable include:

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

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

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

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

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

Reflections on the Theme

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

1) Liminal Deities

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

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

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

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

2) Thresholds as Emblems

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

  • Gathering At the Threshold: A Celebratory Symposium

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

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

— Propyläen

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

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

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

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

In German:

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

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

—— Preface to Propyläen

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

Registration

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

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

Eventbrite Registration

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

Thank you for joining us!

*****

Questions? Suggestions?

  • Leave your comments or questions below
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Join the Friends of the RGME.

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

  • Donations and Contributions
  • 2025 Annual Appeal

*****

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

*****

Tags: "Thresholds and Communities", Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, Gates and Gateways, Janus, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Liminal Deities, Manuscript studies, Propylaen, RGME Roundtable, RGME Theme for the Year, The Research Group Speaks
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2025 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 [email protected].

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!

*****

 

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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Three-Step Program, Lemonade Included

June 25, 2024 in Announcements, Design, Manuscript Studies, RGME Competition, RGME Recipes

Favorite Recipes for Lemonade

Entries Invited

A Recipe Competition
for the Friends
of the
Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

[Posted on 25 June 2024, with updates]

Los Angeles, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Jacob van Hulsdonck (1582-1647), Still Life with Lemons, Oranges, and a Pomegranate. Image Public Domain.

As we launch the new community of Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, we consider activities which might be both welcoming and easy to organize, as well as fun.

In considering what sorts of activities the Friends might like, we thought about gatherings for conversations with refreshments.

We began to dream about coffee mornings, tea parties, cocktail parties, receptions, and the like. While our gatherings would be mostly online, some would be in-person or hybrid.  The online format would require that, in such cases, the refreshments would take the form of Bring Your Own (BYO), but we could easily share recipe tips.

Contents of the Goody Bags, with Stories and Baked Goodies created by Linda Civitello. Photograph by Hannah Goeselt.

Already some of our online events have featured recipes, including a demonstration.

  • South Italian Cuisine Before Columbus (Linda Civitello)
  • Episode 15. Women Writers from the Medieval to Postmodern Periods, including cookery books and historic recipes (Linda Civitello and Hannah Goeselt)

Our 2024 Spring Symposium in hybrid format featured a generous Goody Bag created and home-made by our Associate Linda Civitello (see also Linda Civitello), culinary historian and exclusive caterer.

  • 2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar College: Report

This experience, together with our natural interest in food and sharing refreshments with friends in good company, led to the subject of recipes, shared recipes, and refreshments. Plus competitions, with prizes.  And so, we offer a Competition.

A Three-Step Program

We call this Competition a Three-Step Program.  In three steps, it sets out a plan to feature lemons, although other citrus fruits and other comestibles might pertain, to taste.

On the Subject of Lemons

“Native to South Asia, South Asia, East Asia, Southeast Asia, Melanesia, and Australia,” the genus Citrus comprises oranges, mandarins, lemons, grapefruits, pomelos, and limes. Used, cultivated, and domesticated by indigenous cultures since ancient times in these tropical and sub-tropical regions, the cultivation spread from there “into Micronesia and Polynesia by the Austronesian expansion (c. 3000–1500 BCE); and to the Middle East and the Mediterranean (c. 1200 BCE) via the incense trade route, and onwards to Europe and the Americas.”

— See Citrus (Wikipedia)

History as Background

The RGME has had some Competitions with Prizes before.  For example, in 2015, with a book as prize, we asked for entries giving the transcription and translation into modern English for two medieval charters.  One award per charter.

Preston Charters, Faces.

Private Collection. “Preston Charters” Faces. Numbers added to the photograph report the present owner’s numbering for the set, from 5 to 7 and 9 to 13. Photograph Mildred Budny.

I was researching a group of medieval charters from a Private Collection, with discoveries about the people, places, place-names, and landscapes which they evoke at specific moments in history regarding particular locations of land in the possession of various individuals and carrying signatures (or marks) of named individuals involved in transactions regarding those lands; some of these documents retain their seals (or remnants of them) or seal-bags.  A series of blogposts ensued.

  • Full Court Preston
  • Preston Charters: The Chierographs
  • Charter the Course: More on Preston Charters

Also:

  • “Seals, Matrices, and Signatories

There came a point when I thought it might be worthwhile to open the field, and I wished for help with transcribing and translating the documents. For prizes, I chose books on medieval land-related subjects, among which the winners could choose.

I opened the competition widely as a blogpost on the RGME website, with images of the charters and instructions.  Submissions were received, an expert committee reviewed them, winners were selected, and awards were given.  The book-awards were selected and sent.  The winning translations+translations were published as a follow-up blogpost:

  • Preston Take 2

The Winner, in this case, Takes All, because one person won both competitions:  William H. Campbell.  Later he expertly organized a pair of Sessions about medieval book-bindings which the RGME co-sponsored with the Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies (SIMS) at the University of Pennsylvania for the 2023 International Congress on Medieval Studies. Now he is one of our Honorary Invited Associates. (See our Officers, Associates, and Volunteers.)

Three Steps

1. Maxim: Life Gives You Lemons

2. Action: Make Lemonade (or similar)

3. Result: Send Your Favorite Recipe for our Competition

Extra Bonus: Prize Award

Our competition takes its inspiration from a predicament and its resourceful resolution.  A brief history of the proverbial phrase in English, in several manifestations, covers the ground:

  • When Life Gives You Lemons, Make Lemonade.

The general idea appears to consider lemons, whether metaphorical or tangible, as being sour, therefore difficult, adverse, unfortunate, and so on. The advised response would work to make them palatable or better, by means of some additions and operations.

We could think of it, for our present purposes, as:

  • Challenge, Response, Prize.

Step 1. Find your Lemons

Note that the Competition does not require that the recipe for “Lemonade” have Lemon fruit itself.  Substitutions are allowed, such as other Citrus fruits.  Combinations of fruits (or flowers) are also allowed.

Customarily Lemonade, by virtue of its name, depends upon or implies Lemons as the main ingredient, with sweeteners of various kinds introduced to taste (and according to waistlines). Over the centuries, across cultures, and subject to availability or preference, sweeteners might range from dates or honey to sugar, maple syrup, stevia or other sugar substitutes / artificial sweeteners, and strawberries. These components are prepared in a variety of proportions, according to varieties, such as the sweeter hybrid Meyer Lemon, strictly #notalemon, which comprises a cross between a citrus and a mandarin orange / pomelo hybrid.

Some varieties are carbonated; some are alcoholic. The latter might, say, have bourbon, whiskey, tequila, gin, vodka, or sparkling wine. Straws might make an appearance, as might ice.  Garnishes appear in many variations, such as mint or lemon slices. Presentation, vessels, and accessories for the beverage can range from rough-and-ready, at-hand, or improvised, to elaborate and/or exquisite. It can be served on its own or in the company of foodstuffs, such as cookies or other baked goods.

See also, for example:

  • Limonade (French)
  • Limonata (Italian)
  • Limonade (German)
  • Limonade (drank) (Dutch)
  • Limonada (Spanish)
  • lemonêd (Welsh)
  • Лимонад (Russian)

Elena Chockova, “Lemon – fleur et fruit” (25 November 2007). Image via Wikimedia Commons via CC Elena Chochkova, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Over to You

Please Share Your Recipe

Do you have a favorite, or favorites, among the many varieties of lemonade or ‘lemonade’?

For example, do you favor your mother’s or grandmother’s recipe for Lemonade? Are there companion goodies that you think customarily should go with Lemonade?

Please let us know your favorite recipe. The instructions can be as detailed or general as you wish.

You see, we understand that some people prefer to measure ingredients precisely; others prefer the “Chuck It In” Method.

That is what I used to call my father’s approach to cooking, so it seemed to me as a young observer of his methods rarely to be seen in the kitchen.  Roughly speaking, it looked somewhat like this:

Open the Cupboard / Refrigerator; Grab whatever is there or comes to hand; Chuck It In; Stir / Cook / Bake as Indicated or as Interest / Patience Allows; Dish It Out; Eat.

Despite his devotion to fruit and vegetable juices (all freshly made) in his later years, they never seemed to include Lemonade (although he was strong on fresh orange juice, industrial-grade juicer as producer included), so I must look to other families’ or cultures’ recipes. I’d be glad to learn about yours.

When it comes to judging the entries for our Competition, we would not have a bias ahead of time for precise measurements on the one hand or variable approximations or guesswork on the other, so please describe your recipe in the style to which you (or your source for it) are accustomed.

Do you have a name or title for your recipe?

If you like, please let us know its story. For example, is it handed down the family from one generation to the next (or the one after next), from mother, aunt, or grandmother to children, grandchildren, nieces or nephews, and so on? Did you invent or perfect it? Do you keep it, or did you find it, in some handwritten, typed, printed, or digital form?

Would you like to send pictures of the preparation and/or the product?

Competition for the Best Recipe(s)

Please send your entry for this Competition for the Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence to:

  • Friends of the RGME

Depending upon responses, we might publish the winning recipe, or a selection of recipes, as a first installment of the Friends’ Favorite Recipes.

We would welcome your suggestions for other sorts of recipes for our next Competition.

Prizes

With the official launch of the Group of Friends and this competition in time for our Episode 17 on “RGME Retrospect and Prospects”, we announce the prizes. (All of them are donations for the purpose).

First Prize: Kitchen Apron with lemon pattern and lemon-shaped pockets.
Second Prize: Set of 12 linen cocktail napkins with lemon pattern and yellow border.
Third Prize: 2 packs of 8 dinner-sized paper plates with a lemon-sprig design.

Bonus prize for all: RGME Recipe booklet with our Favorite Recipes (Yours included!)

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

*****

Update (6 November 2024):

A new blogpost reports some first entries for this competition, announces an expansion of the terms of the competition (i.e. lemonade and more), and lists more prizes which have been donated to the cause.

  • Favorite Recipes for Lemonade, Etc.

*****

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

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
  • 2024 Anniversary Appeal

We look forward to hearing from you.

*****

Update (22 August 2024)

The first entry has arrived. Simple as can be.

1. Our Layout and Font Designer describes the answer to “Live Gives You Lemons” succinctly:

  • Give Them Back

*****

Do you have a preferred recipe to share with us? We’d love to hear.

Los Angeles, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Jacob van Hulsdonck (1582-1647), Still Life with Lemons, Oranges, and a Pomegranate. Oil on panel, about 1620–1630, within frame. Image Public Domain, via https://useum.org/artwork/Still-Life-with-Lemons-Oranges-and-a-Pomegranate-Jacob-van-Hulsdonck

*****

 

Tags: Favorite Recipes, Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, Lemonade, Lemons, Recipe Competition, Recipes
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