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      • Mildred Budny — Her Page
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    • Activities
      • Events
      • Congress Activities
        • Sponsored Conference Sessions (1993‒)
          • Panels at the M-MLA Convention (from 2016)
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      • Seals, Matrices & Documents
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    • Sponsored Conference Sessions (1993‒)
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      • Abstracts Listed by Author
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    • Panels at the M-MLA Convention (2016-2019)
      • Abstracts of Papers for the M-MLA Convention
      • Panels at the M-MLA Convention (from 2016)
  • Events
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      • 2023 Activities and 2024 Planned Activities
    • Seminars, Workshops, Colloquia & Symposia (1989–)
      • Seminars on ‘The Evidence of Manuscripts’
      • Symposia on ‘The Transmission of the Bible’
      • The New Series (2001-)
        • 2019 Anniversary Symposium Program: The Roads Taken
        • 2019 Anniversary Symposium Registration
        • 2019 Anniversary Symposium Registration Open
      • RGME Symposia: The Various Series
      • The Research Group Speaks: The Series
      • Meetings of the Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
      • RGME Online Events
    • Abstracts of Papers for Events
      • Abstracts of Papers for Seminars on ‘The Evidence of Manuscripts’
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    • Photographic Exhibitions & Master Classes
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        • Mildred Budny, ‘Catalogue’
        • The Illustrated Catalogue (1997)
      • The Illustrated Handlist
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      • No Snap Decisions: Challenges of Manuscript Photography
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The RGME ‘Lending Library’

September 5, 2024 in Manuscript Studies, RGME Library & Archives

The RGME ‘Lending Library’

Books, Manuscripts, Fragments,
Documents, Seals and Seal Matrices,
Photographs, Prints and Drawings, and other Original Materials

Sometimes the Sources come to visit
the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

Sometimes our Materials go to visit
for workshops, exhibitions, and study

[Posted on 4 September 2024, with updates]

Dialogues of Gregory the Great, Book III, chapter XIII initial, reproduced by permission

Manuscript Leaf with Dialogues of Gregory the Great, Book III, chapter 13 initial, while on loan. Photography by Mildred Budny.

Over the years, private collectors, scholars, students, and others continue to seek advice and expertise from the Research Group about manuscript, printed, documentary, and other materials in their possession. Indeed, our mission seeks to examine original sources of written works and their relatives by a dedicated process of “Going to the Sources”. (On this mission, see, for example, our 2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar College.)

Often the sources, or their surrogates in photographic and other means, come to us. Sometimes they come to stay, as gifts. Sometimes they come on loan.

How do they find us? They do so as their owners or researchers approach us from learning about the RGME and our wide range of interests and network of contacts, whether through our scholarly events (in person or online) or by word of mouth, posts on social media, or our blog on Manuscript Studies. Then they make contact to ask if we might be interested in looking at the item(s) in question. They send photographs to show the characteristics of the materials, and generously allow us to work with the evidence in their care, whether as gifts or through photographs or loans of the items.

Sometimes the owners generously loan original materials to the RGME for research, conservation, photography, and publication. This process can yield remarkable results.

Preparing now for our 2024 Autumn Symposium showcasing the work and potential of Special Collections of many kinds for teaching, it seems time to describe the years’-long tradition of sharing materials and expertise through the RGME Lending Library. (You are Here.)

Multi-Directional

Sometimes, in turn, we bring original materials — in our own collection, our Director’s, and other collections — to the attention of audiences in various locations, as we might take them for exhibitions, workshops, seminars, tutorials, research consultations, and teaching/learning opportunities. Sometimes this comprises displays at Receptions for our Symposia, and informal, sometimes ad-hoc, gatherings, such as at Sessions or Receptions at the International Congress on Medieval Studies.

David Sorenson and Donncha MacGabhann examine manuscript materials

David Sorenson and Donnach MacGabhann examine manuscript materials after the RGME Writing Materials Session at the 2014 Congress. Photography by Mildred Budny

One of the most memorable on our roster of events over the years was the 2014 Seminar on site at the Index of Christian Art to consider selected examples (manuscripts, fragments, and documents) from a Private Collection on loan to the RGME for some years.

  • 2014 Seminar on Manuscripts and Their Photographs at the Index of Christian Art
    (now the Index of Medieval Art)
Inspecting the despoiled Book of Hours at our 'Show & Tell' Seminar on Manuscripts & Their Photographs on 9 December 2014

Observing the Book of Hours at the 2014 Seminar

Images

Private Collection, Back Endpaper for Printed Postilla.

Private Collection, Back Endpaper for Printed Postilla: Watermark of Pilgrim with staff.

Sending photographs to us gives information about the item(s). Having a look, we might propose to help and also, if permission is granted, to ask others within our circles about further information in the areas, regions, subjects, languages, genres of objects, and contexts to which the materials pertain. For example, over the years, sharing photographs from a single private collection has, with permission, generated reports on a wide variety of items on paper and vellum or parchment, manuscript or printed, from many places of origin and in diverse languages.

Sometimes the approach concerns an object which relates to materials which we have already researched and published. Among them are fragments from specific medieval manuscripts or printed materials dispersed by Otto F. Ege (1888–1951) which our research has explored; and fragments from other manuscripts or printed materials also dispersed by Ege alone or in  compilations of Portfolios of fragments reused as specimens intended for teaching and display.  Sometimes (as with some of those cases), as time goes on and opportunity arises, travel permitting, we have the chance to see the originals which have become familiar through our research work from photographs.

'New Leaves' from Ege Manuscript 41, Verso, and from Ege Manuscript 51, Recto, viewed in November 2016. Photograph by Mildred Budny

‘New Leaves’ from Ege Manuscript 41, Verso, and from Ege Manuscript 51, Recto, viewed in November 2016. Photograph by Mildred Budny

Sometimes the collector’s initial approach to us about a specimen broaches a book or fragment of some other kind, in case our sphere of interests and contacts might bring enlightenment.

An example is the query several years ago from a collector abroad about a South Asian manuscript newly acquired from a friend; the language was unfamiliar; might we know what the book is?  The process of constructive, and amiable, collaborative inquiry led, with generous permission, to two blogposts which offer instruction about the book and its place within widespread practices in the book-trading world for tourists who may have little knowledge about the genre of book and its integrity as an object.

Often, as in that case, our research work progresses with the photographic representatives of the materials generously supplied by the owners.  Sometimes, as we explore together, the others take more photographs to illustrate specific features or produce diagrams for ruling patterns, folds, and alignment of the insides and outsides of bifolia within the original book.

On Site

Sometimes the owners generously send the materials themselves on loan to the Research Group, for detailed study in person, over a period of time. This loan enables detailed examination, photography, research, consultation, and refinement of results, whereupon the materials return to their owners or transfer to new ownership according to the owners’ directions.

Sometimes, if wished and permitted by the owner, the period of loan includes the conservation work, such as removal from non-archival frames or boxes, rematting, reframing, and/or placement in archival housing for storage, handling, or display.

Full-page, framed illustration of the Mass of Saint Gregory on a detached leaf from a prayerbook. Photography © Mildred Budny

Private Collection, Vellum leaf with illustration of “Gregory Mass”, verso. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

With these opportunities, close inspection is possible under various lights and angles of vision. These multiple approaches can be done in the presence of the object. Such variety can reveal features not necessarily clear or apparent in digital reproductions of single views, however high-quality they might be and capable of showing details under high magnification.

Gold Leaf partly lifted. Photography © Mildred Budny

Private Collection, Vellum leaf with illustration of “Gregory Mass”, verso: detail of lower border. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

Results

Front Cover for Report by Leslie J. French for Wagner Leaf from Ege MS 22 (2021)

Front Cover for Report by Leslie J. French for Wagner Leaf from Ege MS 22 (2021)

The quests can result — depending upon the materials and their context, the time available or required for research and write-up, and the choices for presentation of the results — variously in RGME blogposts, presentations for symposia, conference sessions, or other scholarly events, exhibition displays, RGME Research Booklets, and a combination of these.

With these presentations and publications, knowledge about the original materials can reach a wide audience, and add to knowledge about their contexts, including relatives among surviving witnesses to their periods and places of production, makers, owners, readers, collectors, collections, and other features.

Examples

So far, the range of materials is exemplified by a range of publications of materials from private collections, named or anonymous. Sometimes the publications include or represent materials in institutions, such as university or public libraries.  Named private collections represented include:

Collection of Birgitt G. Lopez, Framed Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 14’. Leaf in Frame. Reproduced by permission.

Birgitt G. Lopez Collection

  • Two Ege Leaves and Two Ege Labels in the Collection of Brigitt G. Lopez
  • Another Leaf from a Portable Manuscript Bible in the Collection of Birgitt G. Lopez

Brent Rosenbrook Collection

  • A Leaf of Deuteronomy from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 14’ in the Rosenbrook Collection

Ronald K. Smeltzer Collection

  • Vellum Binding Fragments in a Parisian Printed Book of 1538

Stephen Soderlind Collection

  • A Detached Folio 108 with Part of Vulgate Psalm 118 (117)
Camelite Booklet Cover Page with New Front Cover with border

Camelite Booklet Cover Page with New Front Cover with border

J.S. Wagner Collection

  • The Penitent King David from a Book of Hours
  • A Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 19’ and Ege’s Workshop Practices
  • Another Leaf from the Warburg Missal
  • Carmelite Missal Leaf of 1509

Robert Weber Collection

  • A Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 214’ in the Collection of Robert Weber
  • Portfolio 93 of Ege’s “Famous Books in Eight Centuries (FBEC)” in the Collection of Richard Weber

Two cases from the J.S. Wagner Collection represent:

1) The opening of one of the Penitential Psalms (with the Penitent King David) from the Psalter

  • The Penitent King David from a Book of Hours
J. S. Wagner Collection. Detached Manuscript Detached Leaf with the Opening in Latin of the Penitent Psalm 37 (38) and its Illustration of King David.

J. S. Wagner Collection. Detached Manuscript Leaf with the Opening in Latin of the Penitent Psalm 37 (38) and its Illustration of King David.

2) The opening of the Old Testament Book of Macabees in a Bible manuscript disbound and distributed by Otto F. Ege

  • A Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 19’ and Ege’s Workshop Practices
Opening of the Book of Macabees in Otto Ege MS 19. Private Collection.

Wagner Collection. Opening of the Book of Macabees in Otto Ege MS 19.

Books and Fragments

Examples include

1) books and fragments from a single private assembly in the Illustrated Handlist, including specimens which we were asked to remove from their damaging modern frames for conservation and archival mounting.

Book of Hours with floral border. Photography by Mildred Budny.

2) manuscripts, fragments, documents, printed materials, and other media in various private collections as represented in our blog on Manuscript Studies; and

Preston Charters Dorses. Photograph Mildred Budny. Numbers added to the photograph report the present owner's numbering for the set, from 5 to 7 and 9 to 13.

Private Collection. “Preston Charters” Faces. Photograph Mildred Budny.

3) books or part-books, such as a disordered and reassembled Sinalese palm-leaf manuscript (with its reworked cover), which our study could reconstruct in part:

  • A Sinhalese Palm-Leaf Manuscript in Deconstructed and Reconstructed Order:
    Part 1 of 2.
  • More Leaves from a Deconstructed Sinhalese Palm-Leaf Manuscript: Part 2 of 2.
Private Collection, Sinhalese Palm-Leaf Manuscript, Reconstructed View of Former Leaf ('30A' + 26A').

Private Collection, Sinhalese Palm-Leaf Manuscript, Reconstructed View of Former Leaf (’30A’ + 26A’).

Books and Fragments On Loan

In some cases, the current owner’s curiosity about materials in his or her collection leads to the loan to the Research Group or its Director to enable direct examination, which can be an optimal circumstance for research.

1. The Illustrated Handlist

For example, the extended loans over several years (in stages) to the Director for conservation, photography, and research of materials in a private collection — comprising an assembly of manuscript, documentary, and early printed materials — provided the impetus for interim and cumulative reports in scholarly events of several kinds, such as conference or symposium sessions, and an RGME seminar at Princeton University.

Justinian Wrapper folded from back with flap.

Budny Handlist 7: Folder from Back with Flap.

  • 2014 Seminar on Manuscripts and Their Photographs at the Index of Christian Art of Princeton University
    (now the Index of Medieval Art)

For the range of that assembly, now dispersed in different directions, see

  • the Illustrated Handlist.

For example: It’s a Wrap.

Exterior of Justinian Wrapper Unfolded. Photography © Mildred Budny

Outside of Wrapper = Recto of Leaf

2. A Hybrid Book with Two Layers of Manuscripts

Another extended loan from another private collector in 2022–2023 generously brought a remarkable hybrid book, comprising a sandwiched set of vellum leaves within a limp-vellum binding, to the RGME for close inspection over months. The experience, with different forms of lighting (natural, artificial, enhanced), including back-lighting and side-lighting, made it possible to examine multiple aspects of the book which combines two layers produced in the scholastic period of the High Middle Ages and in the Counter Reformation respectively.  In time, when appropriate, we hope to describe the characteristics of this book and the results of our research.

3. The New Loan of a Manuscript Fragment (2024)

A new loan in 2024 brings a medieval manuscript leaf, in its frame, for study and publication, with permission, before its return.  See below for a first glimpse as our study begins.

 

 

Opening between the Front Flyleaf, Verso, and Folio 1 recto, opening Part A.

Opening between the Front Flyleaf, Verso, and Folio 1 recto, opening Part A (“Albertus Magnus”). Photography Mildred Budny.

Up Close

Le Parc Abbey, Theological Volume, Part A, gutter. Photography Mildred Budny.

The opportunity to study these varied materials at close hand and over extended periods of time, as the research advanced and there emerged new discoveries, including by other scholars on related subjects and materials (such as the manuscripts dispersed by Otto F. Ege), spurred the creation of the RGME blog on Manuscript Studies and provided case-studies for multiple  blogposts.

Often these reports have newly discovered results augmenting knowledge about the object, its original state, and its context. They appear on our website as blogposts about individual items or groups of items; a webpage for the The Illustrated Handlist of a single assembly of items; and reports in other forms, including presentations as scholarly events, their publications, and exhibitions both in person and online.  Cases include:

  • Manuscript Studies: Contents List
  • The Illustrated Handlist
  • 2014 Seminar on Manuscripts and Their Photographs at the Index of Christian Art
    (now the Index of Medieval Art)

We give thanks to the collectors who send photographs of their materials and those who lend materials to the RGME for study, learning, and teaching for audiences near and far.

Private Collection, Book of Hours, Decorated Initial and Stub from Despoiled Leaf. Photography Mildred Budny.

Our Records of Earlier States, now Lost

In some cases, as the lent items after their return have transferred to new ownership from the private collections through which we met them, they have undergone transformations in themselves.  In such cases, it can be fortunate that our research has reported their previous stages, as some evidence has been destroyed in new ownership. See, for example, the separation in 2023 of a composite medieval manuscript from Le Parc Abbey, Belgium, into two parts with the removal and loss of the binding given by its original institution.

As a result, our blogposts preserve records of lost evidence.  Perforce, because of our care to record and report the evidence of the original item, in so far as time and resources allow, elements in our photographs, notes, descriptions, and reports reach the level of ‘primary evidence’ or surrogates for evidence in the originals which has been lost.

Opening between the Front Flyleaf, Verso, and Folio 1 recto, opening Part A.

Opening between the Front Flyleaf, Verso, and Folio 1 recto, opening Part A (“Albertus Magnus”). Photography Mildred Budny.

A New Loan

A new loan to the RGME for examination brings a single vellum leaf from a medieval manuscript, which the present owner recently acquired from a former owner’s belongings in its frame with mat.  The new owner approached the RGME Director on the strength of one of our blogposts.  With permission, the leaf has been sent on loan to the RGME in June 2024.

Private Collection. Framed Bible Leaf in its Wrapping for Transit to the RGME in July 2024: View upon arrival in unpacking the leaf. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

Work on the leaf after it had safely arrived, in secure packing, had to wait while disruptions to the RGME website and a cluster of other unexpected issues intervened, requiring attention. Resuming work (as you can see, our website is back in accessible working order), we begin our report on the leaf with this blogpost. It sets the scene and shows first photographs of the leaf still in its frame, to introduce the leaf to you.

At present, the leaf remains in its frame, while we study its visible features and explore its context. Then we will, with permission, remove the leaf from the frame, to photograph and study its other side and outer edges now hidden below the windowed opening of the mat and by the back of the frame.

The Visible Text: Recto or Verso?

The leaf stands in the windowed glass frame in which it reached its current owner.

Collection of Jennah Farrell, Manuscript Leaf in Frame: Front, emerging from packaging upon arrival for study. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

The back of the frame has few identifying features.  Its black paper covering has the traces of a removed label formerly centered at the bottom and a companion picture nail taped off-center at the top.

Collection of Jennah Farrell, Manuscript Leaf: Back of Frame. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

The visible extent of the leaf within the mat measures a maximum of circa 24.1 cm. tall × 16.3 cm. wide (circa 9 7/8 in. tall × 6 7/8 in. wide).  The ruled writing area measures circa 18.7 × 12.5 cm. (7 3/4 × 4 7/8 in.).

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

Before the leaf is removed from its frame, the visible features of the leaf within the windowed mat must speak for themselves.
We might use this condition as a teaching exercise or opportunity, to see how much we might learn about the leaf from this perspective, before approaching its other side and the edges of the sheet which lie behind the mat and which remain hidden beneath the back covering of the frame. How much can it tell us in this state, before we move to the next?

Collection of Jennah Farrell, Manuscript Leaf in Mat: top left. Photograph by Jennah Farrrell.

More to Come

Watch this space, as a next blogpost will examine the leaf in its own right.  Join the quest!

Update (11 September 2024):  Now see:

  • A Latin Vulgate Leaf from the Book of Numbers in the Collection of Jennah Farrell (Part 1)
  • Latin Vulgate Bible Leaf in the Collection of Jennah Farrell: Part 2
  • The Latin Vulgate Bible Leaf in the Farrell Collection, Part 3: The Full Leaf

P.S. Do you recognize this manuscript? Are you familiar with other leaves from it? Please let us know.

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We look forward to hearing from you.

Update: Our work with these lent or donated materials has developed into a series of online collaborative workshops. See:

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

*****

Tags: Manuscript studies, Otto F. Ege, RGME Lending Library, RGME Library & Archives, The Illustated Handlist
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2024 Autumn Symposium: “At the Helm”

February 19, 2024 in Anniversary, Conference, Conference Announcement, RGME Symposia

2024 Autumn Symposium
“At the Helm:
Spotlight on Special Collections
as Teaching Events”

Friday and Saturday, 25–26 October 2024 by Zoom

[Posted on 19 February 2024, with updates first including the Symposium Program, Posters, and Symposium Booklet with Program, Abstracts, and Images, and then reporting the issue of the corrected Symposium Booklet after the event, in more than one stage, as refinements came forward]

London, The British Library , Yates Thompson MS 36, fol. 65r, detail. Dante Alighieri, Divina Comedia, Canto 1, Purgatorio. Northern Italy, 15th century.

Part 2 (of 2) in the series of

2024 Spring and Autumn Symposia
on “Bridges”

To follow up from

Part 1 (of 2)
2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar College

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

“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.

[Posted on 18 February 2024, with updates]

This event forms a pair with the Spring Symposium (Part 1) in the 2024 RGME Anniversary Year, for which our Theme is “Bridges”.

  • “Bridges” for our 2024 Anniversary Year

By request, as its momentum and enthusiasm develops, this Symposium has extended its span, from one day to two full days.

Part 1 in April

Part 1 is planned in hybrid format, with access in person and online.  It was held over three days in April, from 18 Friday to 22 Sunday 2024.  Its Title tells its purpose, focus, and mission:

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

  • Spring Symposium ‘Home Page’
    2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar College
  • Report
    2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar College: Report

Part 2 in October

Part 2, to be held online for two full days in October, provides an integrated follow-up for the Spring Symposium centered upon Vassar.

This time, taking charge on the Bridge of a nautical vessel of passage (Bridge, Wheelhouse, or Pilothouse; Bridge or Pilothouse), we focus on selected cases to examine such teaching practices and resources at work.

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

Friday and Saturday 24–25 October 2024
by Zoom

Friday 9:45 am – 5:00 pm EDT (GMT-4)
Saturday 9:00 am – 5:15 pm EDT

In keeping with our tradition – informal, but structured – for our RGME Symposia (as with our 2023 Spring and Autumn Symposia), we offer presenters the opportunity, with minimal preparation, to showcase collections (private and public) in virtual visits guided by curators or collectors, in the company of teachers and students on-site and online.

Our goal here is to channel the purposeful momentum for the 2024 Spring Symposium at Vassar College in a simpler follow-up demonstrating the mission in action of teaching with the material evidence in Special Collections.  Whilst the Spring Symposium focuses (but not exclusively) on the Medieval and Renaissance periods, the Autumn Symposium welcomes a wide variety of periods, cultures, and genres of material.

Poster 2 for RGME 2024 Autumn Symposium. Set in RGME Bembino. Image: Coventry Patmore, Amelia: an idyll (1878), title page, illuminated by Bertha Patmore. Mark Samuels Lasner Collection, University of Delaware Library, Museums and Press.

The poster is available to download. Please circulate and display it, if you wish.

  • Poster 2 for RGME 2024 Autumn Symposium

For more information and to register, see below.

Read the rest of this entry →

Tags: Archives and Special Collections Library of Vassar College, Edgar William Pyke Collection of Coins, History of Bridges, Mark Samuels Lasner Collection, RGME Anniversary Year, RGME Library & Archives, RGME Symposia, Special Collections, Special Collections of Ellis Library University of Missouri, Teaching Events, Virtual Visits to Collections
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Grant from The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation for the RGME Library & Archives in 2023

October 16, 2023 in Announcements, Manuscript Studies, Uncategorized

Announcement

2023 Grant from
The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation
Research Libraries Program
for Phase 1 for the RGME Library & Archives

“Building the Plan for ‘The Plan’ “

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

RGME Logo in Color (2014).

Gratefully we announce that The Gladys Kreible Delmas Foundation, through its Research Libraries Program, has awarded the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence (RGME) a grant for 2023 to begin the process of structuring our Library & Archives as a collection.

The grant is 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.”

Building the Plan

With this funding, the RGME undertakes a one-year planning stage to produce an initial survey of the collection and its records and to plan for its Records-Management overall.  This project, which would comprise Phase 1 of work on the collection long-term, has the task of “Building the Plan for Recording, Structuring, and Accessing the RGME Library & Archives”.

The scope and purpose of the work as a whole will permit us to address more holistically the structure, maintenance, and longevity of our collection.  We will do so, moreover, in ways concordant with best practices for preservation, cataloguing, access, and other responsibilities.

The beginning work for Phase 1 supported by this grant belongs within the cohesion of RGME activities on multiple fronts for this year’s overarching theme of “Materials and Access”, as are addressed in our corporate activities and explored throughout our scholarly events, meetings, and publications, such as our 2023 Spring and Autumn Symposia dedicated specifically to the theme.

The RGME has formed a Task Force to guide and oversee the funded work to build the plan for the collection and its records-management, wider access, and development.  Guided by shared experiences and expert advice, we look toward creating improved, structured ways — taking into account our characteristics, abilities, and needs as an organization — for preparing our resources for the future, new records, and improved access by scholars and others.

The project funded by The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation Grant will span the entirety of the 2023 calendar year, concluding with an end-of-the-year report and a formal initial plan for the RGME’s archives and library.  This project will leave the Research Group, which in 2024 celebrates a key anniversary, in surer knowledge of its past and increased, informed, preparation for its future.

A Grant Unprecedented in our History

Logo of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence in Monochrome Version

The original RGME Logo in black-and-white (1989).

The RGME has never had a grant of this kind before.  During our history, first as an international scholarly society founded in England in 1989 (from a major research project on “Anglo-Saxon and Related Manuscripts” at the Parker Library of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge), then based at Princeton, New Jersey, since 1994, and now established there as a nonprofit educational organization (incorporated in 1999), our work has primarily focused on the activities in pursuit of our mission.

Formerly, grants from various sources have supported research projects on specific materials, or scholarly events such as our Symposia and Colloquia held in various centers, in the United States and elsewhere.  While those earlier grants have enabled activities pursuant to our mission, this grant from The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation fosters the very essence of both our pursuits and our products as an entity, which was incorporated “for the purposes of lectures, discussions, and other publications”.

The Plan for the Project

The aim is to address our existing, in-coming, and future records (physical as well as digital, born-digital, obsolete digital, and digitized) with a responsible program according to “best practices” for preserving, conserving, archiving, cataloguing, digitizing, and accessing these materials for research, teaching, publication, and related purposes.  Equally, we take into account the needs of conducting our work as a living entity, for which more records continue to emerge.

For this year’s Pilot Project, to span the full course of the year, we have appointed a Task Force to guide and oversee the process of the work, and to produce a final report at the completion of this stage, along with our report to The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation at the close of Phase 1.  The Task Force will remain in place to continue to provide guidance in a next phase as it emerges.

The grant for 2023 gives the Research Group the opportunity to purchase equipment to archive digital materials and facilitate off-site consultation, and archival supplies to stabilize physical materials.  The grant also provides financial support for conservation services, technical back-up for our online meetings, and outside expertise in audio-visual processing/editing to increase the usability and access of our collections for scholars and others.  Significantly, too, the grant enables the process of undertaking the first steps for preparing for circulation the store of recordings which have emerged from our online events (since 2021), but had to await such an opportunity.  These measured steps in the project stand alongside, and integrate carefully with, the on-going work of our corporate and program activities as a living entity building for our future work, beginning with our Anniversary Year in 2024.

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 significant step in the continuing history of our organization, as we now turn to addressing the nature, characteristics, responsibilities, and research potential of our Library & Archives as a collection.  The Pilot Project in 2023 enables us to prepare the Plan to do so.

For information, please contact director@manuscriptevidence.org.

*****

Tags: 2023 Pilot Project for RGME Library & Archives, Records Management, Research Library Program Grant, RGME Library & Archives, The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation
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