ScriptoriaSlavica

Medieval Slavic Manuscripts and Culture

Tag: Western Medieval Studies

39th St. Louis Conference on Manuscript Studies

 

The Manuscript Studies Conference at St. Louis University, which was held on October 12 and 13, 2012,  has been organized by the Vatican Film Library and its journal, Manuscripta, since 1974, and is the only conference in North America dedicated strictly to manuscript topics. The two-day program offers sessions on a variety of themes relating to paleography, codicology, illumination, book production, library history, manuscript cataloging, and much more. Suggestions for papers and sessions are always welcome, and specific submissions can be made through the annual call for papers.

This year’s “Lowrie J. Daly, S.J., Memorial Lecture on Manuscript Studies” by David Ganz was on “The Importance of Half Uncial Script.” Topics of the conference’s eight sessions included paleography, new discoveries in Armenian manuscripts, fragments and the fragmenting of manuscripts, “writing the scribe.” Two presentations in the session “Work in Progress” assessed “Manuscript Access in a Digital Age” and the “Digital Scriptorium Today and Tomorrow.”

Source: Website of the St. Louis Conference on Manuscript Studies

 

Lecture: Erik Kwakkel on Parchment Offcuts

History of the Book Lecture

Wednesday, October 10, 2012 – 1:00pm
Thompson Library 150

Erik Kwakkel is Associate Professor in medieval paleography at Leiden University, The Netherlands. He held appointments at the Universities of Amsterdam, Vancouver (UBC) and Victoria (UVic) before coming to Leiden as principal investigator of the research project ‘Turning Over a New Leaf: Manuscript Innovation in the Twelfth-Century Renaissance’. Among his publications are articles and book chapters on a variety of manuscript-related topics, as well as monographs and edited volumes on Carthusian book production (2002), medieval Bible culture (2007), change and development in the medieval book (2012), and medieval authorship (2012). Erik Kwakkel will be the holder of the 2014 E.A. Lowe Lectureship in Paleography at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. In 2012 he was appointed to The Young Academy of The Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW).

LECTURE

“From Scrap to Book: The Use of Parchment Offcuts in Manuscript Culture”
Technological changes in the later Middle Ages provided scribes and patrons with increased opportunities to reduce the cost of the manuscript they made or acquired. This lecture draws attention to a cheap kind of writing support, not discussed as such in present scholarship of the medieval book. It shows how small strips of discarded parchment from the edge of the skin became used as writing material, not only for short notes and letters, but also for full manuscripts. To make this case, the lecture will discuss references to such scraps in primary sources and introduce the tell-tale deficiencies on the medieval page that reveal that off-cuts were used. Ultimately it is shown that the tendency for books to become cheaper near the later Middle Ages predates the age of print.

Kwakkel’s visit is co-sponsored by History of the Book, the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, the Center for Epigraphical and Palaeographical Studies, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Library.

Source: Website of the Working Group Literary Studies @ OSU, Institute of Humanities

Follow Erik Kwakkel on Twitter @erik_kwakkel

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