romandelarose.blogspot.com
Roman de la Rose: September 2014
http://romandelarose.blogspot.com/2014_09_01_archive.html
Tweeting the Rose: Poetic Constraints. Wednesday, September 24, 2014. Site users, we are delighted to announce that we have added another manuscript to our repository, Bibliothèque municipale de Grenoble 608, aka Grenoble 608. Manuscripts, which makes it perhaps all the more alluring as an object of study. Was it copied hurriedly for a middle-class, middle-income household? Did the first owner pen the drawings themselves? Image: Grenoble 608 ff. 13v-14r (orig. 11v-12r). Links to this post. Subscribe to: ...
romandelarose.blogspot.com
Roman de la Rose: September 2014 Updates
http://romandelarose.blogspot.com/2014/09/september-2014-updates.html
Tweeting the Rose: Poetic Constraints. Wednesday, September 24, 2014. Site users, we are delighted to announce that we have added another manuscript to our repository, Bibliothèque municipale de Grenoble 608, aka Grenoble 608. Manuscripts, which makes it perhaps all the more alluring as an object of study. Was it copied hurriedly for a middle-class, middle-income household? Did the first owner pen the drawings themselves? Image: Grenoble 608 ff. 13v-14r (orig. 11v-12r). Roman de la Rose. The official blo...
provenanceonlineproject.wordpress.com
POP Partners | Provenance Online Project
https://provenanceonlineproject.wordpress.com/pop-collaborators
POP has a core group of institutional collaborators who contribute provenance marks from their collections to the project and lend various forms of valuable support and advice to the project’s development. Collections represented, or soon to be represented, with provenance marks on POP include:. The Beinecke Library, Yale University. The Clark Library, UCLA. The Folger Shakespeare Library. The Getty Research Institute Special Collections Library. The Historical Society of Pennsylvania. POP Pics on Flickr.
provenanceonlineproject.wordpress.com
Mystery Monday: Unicorn “Friend of the Sea” | Provenance Online Project
https://provenanceonlineproject.wordpress.com/2015/08/03/mystery-monday-unicorn-friend-of-the-sea
The Folger Shakespeare Library Joins POP: Royal Provenance and Women Making Their Mark →. Mystery Monday: Unicorn “Friend of the Sea”. August 3, 2015. Update: Thanks to Anita Weaver, who tweeted a link to the Ritman library, which had identified the owner associated with this bookplate. It is the bookplate of René Philipon (1870-1936), and the greek “Philos Pontou” is a pun on Philipon’s name. Penn Libraries call number: BV4011.J63 1599. All images from this book. Penn Libraries catalog record. However, ...
provenanceonlineproject.wordpress.com
Provenance Online Project | Page 2
https://provenanceonlineproject.wordpress.com/page/2
Newer posts →. April 23, 2015. This isn’t, in fact, an autograph by the original William Shakespeare. A note on one of the front flyleaves of the Hamlet quarto verifies that it is, in fact, the work of one of literary history’s most famous forgers, William Henry Ireland (1775-1835). Continue reading →. Mystery Monday: A question from Newfoundland. April 13, 2015. And contribute your own comments if you can contribute more information. And a cross bar. Mystery Monday: Marriage and Mythology. March 30, 2015.
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Mystery Monday: OFF Stamp from the Folger | Provenance Online Project
https://provenanceonlineproject.wordpress.com/2015/05/11/mystery-monday-off-stamp-from-the-folger
Ben Franklin’s Books: The Library Company of Philadelphia Joins POP. Custom-made Provenance →. Mystery Monday: OFF Stamp from the Folger. May 11, 2015. Today’s Mystery Monday post is a pair of images contributed by researcher Claire M. L. Bourne, who came across two very similar stamps in two 17th century plays she was looking at in the collections at the Folger Shakespeare Library. The first stamp appears in a play by Aphra Behn called. Abdelazer, or The Moor’s revenge. From 1677 (Folger, B1715):. Myste...
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Ben Franklin’s Books: The Library Company of Philadelphia Joins POP | Provenance Online Project
https://provenanceonlineproject.wordpress.com/2015/04/29/ben-franklins-books-the-library-company-of-philadelphia-joins-pop
Mystery Monday: OFF Stamp from the Folger →. Ben Franklin’s Books: The Library Company of Philadelphia Joins POP. April 29, 2015. Yesterday the Provenance Online Project (POP) added the first provenance images to the POP Flickr feed. From The Library Company of Philadelphia. Logic, or the Art of Thinking. LCP Ia Nico 352.D):. View image on POP. Was an important part, paired with Locke, of Franklin’s early intellectual explorations. (He also notes that his reading at this age included books on n...Frankli...
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Laura Aydelotte | Provenance Online Project
https://provenanceonlineproject.wordpress.com/author/lauraaydelotte
Author Archives: Laura Aydelotte. September 26, 2016. Today’s mystery provenance mark comes from a book called “Il Pastor Fido” the “Faithful Shephard”, a tragicomedy from the late 16th century (Penn Libraries: IC55 G9315 590p 1591). The monogram bookplate shown above appears in the upper left corner of … Continue reading →. Isaac Newton’s Books. September 20, 2016. Mystery Monday: A Manuscript Mona Lisa From the Huntington Library. February 15, 2016. December 14, 2015. A few weeks ago I posted about a m...
provenanceonlineproject.wordpress.com
The POP Team | Provenance Online Project
https://provenanceonlineproject.wordpress.com/the-pop-team
Is the Curator of Special Collections at the Kislak Center. Both a scholar of 17th and 18th century legal history and an expert in digital humanities, Mitch applies digital research approaches to traditional historic and bibliographic topics. His blog,. To digitize the lost texts of the Greek mathematician and built the Digital Walters. The Archimedes Codex: How a Medieval Prayer Book is Revealing the True Genius of Antiquity’s Greatest Scientist. On the role that museums, libraries, and other cultural h...
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