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154 results from Collation on

Manuscripts

Manuscripts in the Folger collections
Looking through the hole in a torn-open letter
Collation

Looking through the hole in a torn-open letter

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

Well, I thought the January 2017 Crocodile Mystery was going to be a tricky one, but Misha Teramura not only identified the phenomenon correctly (an endorsement written across the hole created when an early modern letter was torn open at the wax seal),…

A Preview of What the New EMMO Website Will Offer
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A Preview of What the New EMMO Website Will Offer

Posted
Author
Paul Dingman

Manuscripts from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries are going digital with added features for users! The launch of a beta website for Early Modern Manuscripts Online next month will provide encoded transcriptions to accompany manuscript images and metadata. The number of transcriptions…

I have sent you a Privy Seal...
Collation

I have sent you a Privy Seal...

Posted
Author
Heather Wolfe Sarah Powell

The answer to last week’s crocodile mystery? As Jan Kellett correctly pointed out in her comment to the October Crocodile Mystery, the red-orange concentric circles in this image are an “offset mark made by a seal.” The mark was made…

A Recipe’s Place is in the Classroom
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A Recipe’s Place is in the Classroom

Posted
Author
Amanda Herbert

The Folger Shakespeare Library is many things: an internationally-renowned research library, a museum, a performance space, a center for innovative digital initiatives, and home to some of the best air conditioning on Capitol Hill (not something to be overlooked during…

Honing transcriptions with algorithms and acumen
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Honing transcriptions with algorithms and acumen

Posted
Author
Paul Dingman

A question I often hear from paleographers who contribute transcriptions to Early Modern Manuscripts Online (or EMMO) is: What are you going to do with all these transcriptions? It’s a good question—central to the whole project, actually—but it’s also a complicated one. The…

Don Quixote on an Early Paper Cover
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Don Quixote on an Early Paper Cover

Posted
Author
Caroline Duroselle-Melish

The Folger Shakespeare Library recently acquired a copybook with an intriguing pictorial paper cover, and it is, of course, the subject of the crocodile mystery we posted last week. This cover is made of thick paper (thicker than regular paper…

Shakespeare the player: a new discovery sheds light on two Folger manuscripts
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Shakespeare the player: a new discovery sheds light on two Folger manuscripts

Posted
Author
Heather Wolfe

The reference to a coat of arms belonging to “Shakespeare the Player by Garter” in a manuscript at the Folger, V.a.350, has garnered much attention over the years. Folger MS V.a.350 is currently on loan to the British Library for their exhibition Shakespeare…

Music Manuscripts
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Music Manuscripts

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Author
Abbie Weinberg

Recently, I have found myself answering a number of reference questions concerning our musical holdings (a reference librarian manifestation of the frequency illusion perhaps?). Whatever the reason, it has been a nice reminder that some of our manuscript holdings contain…

A Pictorial Table of Contents
Collation

A Pictorial Table of Contents

Posted
Author
Heather Wolfe

Last week’s Crocodile was a jumble of household instruments with numbers next to them. As our first commenter, Katie Will, correctly guessed, the detail was from the table of contents of a type of heraldic manuscript known as an Ordinary.…

Unlocking An Early Modern Account Book
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Unlocking An Early Modern Account Book

Posted
Author
Paul Dingman

The answer to last week’s Crocodile mystery is, as some of you guessed, £135 15s 0d (or 135 pounds, 15 shillings). This amount is a snippet of one entry made on a page in Folger MS V.b.308, the account book of…

Musae Faciles; or, an Oxford Study Guide
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Musae Faciles; or, an Oxford Study Guide

Posted
Author
Nicholas Tyacke

A guest post by Nicholas Tyacke Back in 2008, on the eve of directing a Faculty Weekend Seminar at the Folger, on “The University Cultures of Early-Modern Oxford and Cambridge,” I took the opportunity to consult the card catalog of…

A monument more lasting than bronze
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A monument more lasting than bronze

Posted
Author
Sarah Powell

exegi monumentum aere perennius regalique situ pyramidum altius, quod non imber edax, non Aquilo inpotens possit diruere… (Odes III: XXX, lines 1-4, published 23BC)  I have built a monument more lasting than bronze, higher than the Pyramids’ regal structures, that…

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