This has resulted in the library holdings on Canada rising to over 20000 books, journals, manuscripts, paintings and maps. |
|
I've always thought that some illuminated manuscripts resemble a hypertext, particularly those that acquired marginalia from later users. |
|
The manuscripts were written in iron gall ink and decorated with watercolor paints and sometimes embellished by cutwork. |
|
In Europe, the Gothic script of some manuscripts and of early printing enjoys a similar life as pattern alone. |
|
However, statistical findings are often presented in manuscripts submitted for publication in misleading or erroneous ways. |
|
In Francia legal manuscripts acquired Germanic glosses, but no full-scale translation. |
|
Surviving manuscripts have been preserved by chance, so there will always be lacunae in the documentary record. |
|
In any case, the letters he received from editors when they returned his manuscripts were invariably complimentary about his prose. |
|
To commemorate his death anniversary Salar Jung Museum has organised a special exhibition of manuscripts, dirges and elegies. |
|
Since October 2001 there have been 153 manuscripts under consideration, including carry-overs from the previous editors. |
|
The archival material includes unpublished literary manuscripts, correspondence, playbills, pamphlets, and photographs. |
|
The dark shape suddenly stood and stretched quickly, towering over the wrinkled old manuscripts and parchments. |
|
The horseshoe arch had also been illustrated by Mozarabs in their illuminated manuscripts such as the one of Beatus of Lebana. |
|
We will publish manuscripts over 30,000 words only under exceptional circumstances. |
|
These technologies also allow a wide readership of certain precious manuscripts. |
|
Each has a tiny museum displaying old icons and woodcarvings, embroidered brocade vestments and hand-written manuscripts. |
|
In 1991, the bulk of the Newton manuscripts were released on forty-three reels of microfilm. |
|
Understanding that his spiritual development was more valuable than worldly wealth, he accepted, instead, 657 religious manuscripts. |
|
Talking to publisher friends I gather that they are deluged with manuscripts more than ever before, but I think there is a quality control. |
|
Gold leaf was then used to enrich the surfaces of paintings, sculptures, buildings, pottery and manuscripts. |
|
|
Transcriptions from Newton's manuscripts represent deletions as strike-outs and insertions are enclosed within angle brackets. |
|
To judge from the surviving manuscripts, these texts found a large audience in Anglo-Saxon England during the tenth and eleventh centuries. |
|
What is not said in these notes is that this piece is a responsory, found in most manuscripts on Monday in the first week of Lent. |
|
They returned the manuscripts without any significant changes or suggestions. |
|
We welcome submissions through e-mail because that saves us the bother of retyping the selected manuscripts. |
|
Note that the letterforms are slightly more elaborate than those in the early manuscripts. |
|
Variant manuscripts should be denoted in the apparatus criticus by single, upper case, bold letters. |
|
During a severe paper shortage, Bakhtin tore up his own manuscripts to roll cigarettes. |
|
Illuminated manuscripts are handwritten books or rolls with painted decoration and illustration. |
|
His work has been identified in around fourteen other manuscripts, several of them localizable to Utrecht. |
|
Another offshoot of the Rosicrucian fraternity, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, left manuscripts describing the Ritual of Invisibility. |
|
Some manuscripts include rough and final drafts, and galley and page proofs. |
|
During her entire writing career, she submitted her manuscripts in longhand and allowed only minimal editing. |
|
They are found carved in rock, ceramics, clay tablets, mosaics, manuscripts, stone patterns, turf, hedges, and cathedral pavements. |
|
He saw old manuscripts and spoke about similarities of Urdu, Arabic and Persian. |
|
For the first time, we have detailed studies of all of Purcell's autograph manuscripts, together with surveys of the important secondary sources. |
|
She enjoyed deciphering the strange pictures, and soon avariciously poured over the manuscripts. |
|
Although Manichaeanism is said to be dead, there are many manuscripts in circulation today. |
|
These manuscripts are written by people in the past to tell us what has happened. |
|
The books and manuscripts were written on vellum, a preparation of calf, goat and sheep skins. |
|
|
The looters retuned the next day, stealing the library's most valuable manuscripts and books. |
|
The treasury has been converted into a bright little museum of censers, illuminated manuscripts and paintings. |
|
In antiquity Greek manuscripts were written in what we call capital letters, without any gaps between letters. |
|
His extensive collection of books and manuscripts later formed the basis of the British Museum library. |
|
The illuminated manuscripts are so fragile the lighting is very low in the gallery. |
|
The Burns Museum is a treasure-trove of manuscripts, books, paintings and artefacts. |
|
Its Romany collection of rare books and manuscripts celebrates the culture and history of travellers. |
|
At the same time, there are less than a dozen extant early medieval Welsh manuscripts, and only three are illuminated. |
|
Priceless books and manuscripts will receive special protection as the restoration of a library gets underway. |
|
The author relies primarily on a variety of written sources, both manuscripts and printed. |
|
The completed manuscripts will be displayed month by month in a special cabinet in the north aisle of the Priory. |
|
Of the three publishers she sent manuscripts to, only one asked for the rest of the novel. |
|
Those with ready works will be guided towards shopping their manuscripts to established publishers. |
|
We are attracting more manuscripts and publishing more articles than ever before. |
|
We thank the authors of the original manuscripts for allowing us to use them and the readers for taking part in our study. |
|
One of these unsolicited manuscripts might be published every couple of years or so. |
|
It was never his intention to publish the manuscripts, but a friend who was a teacher read them and sent them to a publisher. |
|
How then do publishers respond to proposals or manuscripts from authors of How To Write books? |
|
Which is why there are a lot more manuscripts available for publication than there are publishers willing to pay for them. |
|
This new emphasis on figuration also led to a flowering in the production of illustrated manuscripts from the thirteenth century onward. |
|
|
We did have several electric typewriters, and we used the better of the two computers to keyboard accepted manuscripts. |
|
Across the world, temples, pagodas, sacred land and water formations, manuscripts and sculptures are under threat from a variety of sources. |
|
He has looked at archival manuscripts from some 300 communities, and further research on beguinages will have to begin with his findings. |
|
In a year spent reading manuscripts, it was always good to get stuck into something that was bound, between covers, and somebody else's baby. |
|
Another value added to the cows was the fact that while the rest of Europe used manuscripts made from sheepskin, in Ireland it was calfskin. |
|
His penmanship was very neat, and his letters and manuscripts, as completed by him, are without blots or erasures. |
|
In addition to the 80 early poems printed by Thwaite, it adds more than 170 others, culled from manuscripts, typescripts and notebooks. |
|
It runs the gamut of art riches over the centuries, stretching to murals, miniatures and manuscripts. |
|
It reminded me of how the ancient scribes lovingly embellished letters in bibles and illuminated manuscripts with human and animal forms. |
|
Goldsmiths' works, jewellery, manuscripts were all displayed in showcases resembling shop windows. |
|
Computer technology has reduced these fears by allowing manuscripts to be inexpensively stored in multiple formats. |
|
As a cross-check and source of additional information, many manuscripts give the year according to the year of the indiction. |
|
Further, scholars since the Renaissance have searched for and printed many texts from manuscripts they discovered. |
|
The scripts are accessed through forms which allow you to specify the manuscripts, feasts or incipits which interest you. |
|
Whereas manuscripts were copied in very small quantities, early books were printed in editions that averaged 250 to 1,250 copies. |
|
One of the greatest accomplishments of the monasteries of the Carolingian era was the preservation of manuscripts. |
|
They also gave renewed impetus to the production of deluxe illustrated manuscripts of secular texts. |
|
Large illuminated letters became popular with the advent of hand-written manuscripts and official documents. |
|
Two different worlds present themselves to the scholar of Hebrew illuminated manuscripts from Spain. |
|
This collection consists of two short story manuscripts, a carbon copy of a thesis, and records of thesis-related expenditures. |
|
|
More than 100 works feature including paintings, photographs, letters, literary manuscripts, memorabilia and examples of Byronic dress. |
|
By 1999, the Library had collected over 92,000 volumes of rare books as well as 125,000 manuscripts along with periodicals and newspapers. |
|
It was not until 1773 that two Ethiopic manuscripts were discovered in Abyssinia. |
|
The current cottage museum is rapidly deteriorating and is no longer fit to house priceless Burns manuscripts and artefacts. |
|
Unsolicited manuscripts or photographs should be accompanied by return postage. |
|
A vitrine contains parts of the original manuscripts for his 15,000 page novel and his 5,000-page autobiography. |
|
What is to be regretted, however, is the demise of all those conscientious spinsters and widows who used to type authors' manuscripts. |
|
Those who wrote the corrupt manuscripts had no trouble with the other commandments shown here. |
|
In 1979, after rumours that manuscripts were buried in his family vault, his coffin was opened. |
|
And we may find a clue in several survived manuscripts of solfeggio and esercizi. |
|
Yet a current show there, on one of the grandest of all illuminated manuscripts, does both. |
|
Manuscripts in Greek and manuscripts of translations from the Greek into Latin, Syriac, and Coptic are extant. |
|
Hundreds of ancient artifacts were stolen, including manuscripts, gold crowns, crosses and chaises. |
|
These studies and sketches were collected into various codices and manuscripts, which are now collected by museums and individuals. |
|
The support and services of erudite scholars must be mobilised so that the manuscripts could be brought out in the form of books. |
|
In the Grub Street of the twenty-first century, books are traded on less and less material, and almost never on complete manuscripts. |
|
In the spring of 1927 he headed off to Germany along with crates of paintings, pedagogic materials, and numerous unpublished manuscripts. |
|
Arabic cookery manuscripts from Spain show several variations on the theme of fried eggplant with stewed meat. |
|
Old or damaged manuscripts or just worn manuscripts were stored in Genizahs, and were forgotten for many years. |
|
Even those monks who spent their days copying manuscripts could barely read or understand them. |
|
|
The office has established a clearinghouse of mentors who volunteer to help authors prepare their manuscripts for publication. |
|
Talented scientists translated and preserved ancient Greek, Persian and Indian manuscripts. |
|
It is a fantastic example of a neo-Gothic building and we have some of the greatest collections of books and manuscripts anywhere in the world. |
|
The work survives as a pastiche taken from various manuscripts in Arabic, Coptic, Latin, Syriac, Sahidic, Bohairic, Ethiopian, and Greek. |
|
Perhaps special calls for manuscripts, papers, or organized symposia might be one avenue. |
|
I work with tiny publishing houses, rejecting dozens of manuscripts every week on the basis of sheer unreadability. |
|
Among the several unpublished pieces that are found among Baraka's manuscripts there is much of interest. |
|
The citole is the medieval guitar, known only from pictures in manuscripts and statues on churches. |
|
Declined manuscripts will be returned if stamped, self-addressed envelopes are enclosed with submissions. |
|
It is widely agreed in publishing circles that many of these manuscripts will be unreadable, unpublishable junk. |
|
Scientific writers are teaching them how to turn their research into publishable manuscripts. |
|
When Bitton is not thinking about politics or plugging his documentary, he's poring over ancient manuscripts, books and articles. |
|
Medhurst, who edited The Prophetic Messenger from 1828 to 1847, was also known as a dealer in occult manuscripts. |
|
Their haul included golden crowns, precious chalices, tabots, altar slabs, beautiful processional crosses, dozens of fine manuscripts and his hair. |
|
In the case of manuscripts, the compiler will note the current location of the manuscript in question, often using a standardized system of abbreviations. |
|
If we could, the manuscripts would become unnecessary, dispensable. |
|
This treasury which is located inside a safe locked basement beneath the shrine contains historical artifacts, priceless manuscripts and a significant amount of gold and gems. |
|
Being a skilled typist, she helped in the preparation of several of Russell's manuscripts, which provided further occasions for them to be alone together. |
|
He uses his virtuoso calligraphic skills to create works that call up everything from illuminated manuscripts to German Fraktur wedding certificates. |
|
He collected humanistic manuscripts and Roman and Italian art. |
|
|
Unpublished manuscripts, theses, and dissertations were also excluded. |
|
Biblical manuscripts, Gospels and psalters, were the most elaborately illuminated products of insular, Carolingian, Ottonian, and Anglo-Saxon art. |
|
The manuscripts can be taken as beautiful pieces of calligraphy, often illustrated and bordered with decorative motifs, so much so that each folio became a fine piece of art. |
|
A few late 16th and early 17th-century instruction manuscripts have survived with military calls, short fanfares, and longer flourishes written out. |
|
Read all bound manuscripts and rare books on the foam bookrests provided. |
|
Gold and silver were sometimes used in the production of manuscripts. |
|
Thus, the museum began to acquire European sculpture and old master drawings and purchased an important collection of medieval and renaissance illuminated manuscripts. |
|
I have, over the years, become horrified at the overwhelming number of uncatalogued Old and Middle Irish manuscripts contained in repositories throughout Europe. |
|
Whether they were to serve the purposes of missionaries, monks, or emperors these manuscripts were mostly produced in the scriptoria or cloisters of abbeys and monasteries. |
|
Primary and secondary sources are footnoted through the text and the bibliography lists books, unpublished manuscripts and papers, and newspapers. |
|
Shakespearian textual critics are primarily interested in the nature of the lost manuscripts that served as printers' copy for the early quartos and folios. |
|
There was a glazed look in our eyes as we imagined our new love nest brimming with books, half finished manuscripts and acceptance letters from publishers. |
|
From about 1564 he began to collect and transcribe manuscripts and to compose historical works, the first to be based on systematic study of public records. |
|
The discovery of two inkwells and a plastered table and bench strongly suggested that one of the rooms was a scriptorium, a room set apart for writing or copying manuscripts. |
|
The manuscripts are the source for all the major texts of Old and Middle Irish literature, such as sagas, dinnshenchas, genealogies, law tracts, and much other lore. |
|
The classic written by Haworth's Charlotte Bronte was sold to a bidder in the saleroom at Sotheby's during a sale of signed books and manuscripts. |
|
Later, I again heard him speak at the Huntington Library at a special showing of Huntington holdings of books and manuscripts related to the California gold rush. |
|
Many examples of the vexillum are represented in illuminated manuscripts. |
|
We acknowledge the very important role of the many men and women who agree to serve as academic referees for the manuscripts submitted to Sociology of Religion. |
|
Thomas went to his grave regarding Eleanour as nothing more than a dear friend, useful as an unpaid secretary, the willing amanuensis who typed his manuscripts for him. |
|
|
The monasteries became repositories of treasures which included paintings, sculptures, manuscripts, ivories, bronzes, reliquaries, precious stones, and textiles. |
|
Peter was a voracious reader, a tireless networker, intrepid and fearless at approaching the biggest names, and dogged in working with authors to finish their manuscripts. |
|
Surviving manuscripts show that the standard Gregorian chant was not used, and Ambrosian forms persisted in Italian-speaking regions until recent times. |
|
The use of repetition, compound words, and anastrophe are key stylistic traits of Circle and are found throughout the collection of historic manuscripts that inspired it. |
|
His handwriting was so small that his copyreaders had to leave pins in his manuscripts when they stopped reading in order to find their place later. |
|
Greater emphasis will be given to secular manuscript illustration and to the important role of English patronage of Flemish illuminated manuscripts. |
|
His placing of the location of numerous Gothic, Celtic, and other early manuscripts is a virtual travel guide to Old and Middle English biblical manuscripts. |
|
He is a fine late Romanesque painter open to more modern influences, particularly those emanating from Byzantium, perhaps via Franciscan illuminated manuscripts. |
|
Reviewers of manuscripts sometimes reject research because it is anecdotal, based on a case study, or founded on too small a sample and therefore not generalizable. |
|
The Cainan difference is not an error in the original autographs of Scripture, but one of the extremely few copyist's errors in the manuscripts available today. |
|
Five other manuscripts were hoovered up by a different determined telephone bidder who is thought to be an American collector of scientific books. |
|
Ancient manuscripts depicting the history of Armenia are housed in the national library, Madenataran, and are valued national and historical treasures. |
|
This is the oldest collection at the University, and houses over 100,000 manuscripts and autographies spanning time from the 8th century to the present. |
|
The previously illegible texts are among a hoard of papyrus manuscripts. |
|
Implementing course assignments that result in publishable manuscripts may be one way of motivating students to examine empirically supported and theory-driven treatments. |
|
This is a treasure trove of Avesta, Pahlavi and Pazend manuscripts. |
|
Most of the material is newly sourced from books and manuscripts lent to Bell by the Dalai and Tashi Lamas and conversations with many leading Tibetans. |
|
The manuscripts provide a written testimony to the skill of African scientists, in astronomy, mathematics, chemistry, medicine and climatology in the Middle Ages. |
|
The exhibit showcases decorated manuscripts and features 13 new acquisitions in addition to selected pieces from the Getty collection of illuminated manuscripts. |
|
Voice, shawms, and dulcians will bring to life the rarely heard music of early Guatemalan manuscripts, found in Bloomington's own famed Lilly Library. |
|
|
Attempts to microfilm the manuscripts were aborted for this reason. |
|
Among the 150 objects included are sculpture, panel paintings, illuminated manuscripts, textiles, gold and silver works, jewelry, enamels and ivories. |
|
The Medieval section includes the famous Aby crucifix, golden altars, bejewelled illustrated manuscripts, triptychs, granite fonts, chalices, ivory and aquamaniles. |
|
Is this swapping manuscripts a substitute for the editor of past days? |
|
Their gifts include paper currency, pamphlets, manuscripts, snuffboxes, portrait busts, cartoons, medals, and coverlets, but most notable in terms of volume, prints. |
|
Painting was done on manuscripts, walls, wood panels, glass, and tiles. |
|
It facilitated the collation and comparison of different manuscripts of a particular scientific text, which led to the correction of mistakes and the pooling of new ideas. |
|
What is more, the greatest loss has been inflicted on them by looting their libraries, which contained the treasures of Sanskrit, Pali and Farsi manuscripts. |
|
Her scholarship discovers new and interesting connections, and raises scribal and authorial issues which are of pertinence to any student of the period's manuscripts. |
|
After all, it was assumed that all monks could read and write. Monasteries also contained libraries and scriptoria, or writing rooms, in which manuscripts were copied. |
|
Not all the manuscripts on show are spectacularly illuminated. |
|
It has always been irksome to publishers that they actually have to pay money to those weirdo deadbeats who wander in with manuscripts under their arms. |
|
Painted on unprimed European paper and bound in true codex form, manuscripts such as the Codex Mendoza sever the image as such from its earlier function as written language. |
|
And few were more excited about the annual goat brush cut at the Getty Center than Elizabeth Morrison, its curator of medieval manuscripts. |
|
In chapter five she focuses on the Middle English corpus of Marian miracle manuscripts. |
|
The illustrated manuscripts of the seventeenth century yield a number of vital colophons and marginal notes. |
|
The images discussed include memorial steles, ceramics, metalwork, stone carving, textiles, and manuscripts. |
|
The musical notation that records melodies of Gregorian chant in neumes first appears in manuscripts dating from ca. |
|
The manuscripts feature blots, crossing outs and a powerful counter-grammatical way of writing. |
|
Petrina has carefully transcribed both manuscripts and reproduced them, including marginalia and cross outs. |
|
|
Many illustrated manuscripts are no longer in bound form because Western sellers sold them page-by-page, presumably to maximize their profits. |
|
A number of illuminated manuscripts from Wales survive, of which the 8th century Hereford Gospels and Lichfield Gospels are the most notable. |
|
The Historia Ecclesiastica was copied often in the Middle Ages, and about 160 manuscripts containing it survive. |
|
Modern editions of Old English manuscripts generally introduce some additional conventions. |
|
This total does not include manuscripts with only a part of the work, of which another 100 or so survive. |
|
Some genealogical relationships can be discerned among the numerous manuscripts that have survived. |
|
These three are all early manuscripts, but are less useful than might be thought, since L and M are themselves so close to the original. |
|
Nine manuscripts survive in whole or in part, though not all are of equal historical value and none of them is the original version. |
|
Seven of the nine surviving manuscripts and fragments now reside in the British Library. |
|
All of the surviving manuscripts are copies, so it is not known for certain where or when the first version of the Chronicle was composed. |
|
Additional copies were made, for further distribution or to replace lost manuscripts, and some copies were updated independently of each other. |
|
The diagram at right gives an overview of the relationships between the manuscripts. |
|
There is not enough of this manuscript for reliable relationships to other manuscripts to be established. |
|
The manuscripts were produced in different places, and each manuscript reflects the biases of its scribes. |
|
As a result, he founded the Early English Text Society in 1864 and the Chaucer Society in 1868 to publish old manuscripts. |
|
The story of the original manuscripts of the esoteric treatises is described by Strabo in his Geography and Plutarch in his Parallel Lives. |
|
The manuscripts were left from Aristotle to his successor Theophrastus, who in turn willed them to Neleus of Scepsis. |
|
This is the language of nearly all surviving early manuscripts of the Mabinogion, although the tales themselves are certainly much older. |
|
The style was taken up with great skill and enthusiasm by Celtic artists in metalwork and illuminated manuscripts. |
|
In some manuscripts of Caesar's Gallic War their king is referred to as Imanuentius, although in other manuscripts no name is given. |
|
|
On the basis of the Verona List, the priest and deacon who accompanied the bishops in some manuscripts are ascribed to the fourth province. |
|
Much scholarship in the past several hundred years has gone into comparing different manuscripts in order to reconstruct the original text. |
|
Many of the surviving manuscripts of the Latin classics were copied in monasteries in the Early Middle Ages. |
|
Many of Newton's writings on alchemy are copies of other manuscripts, with his own annotations. |
|
She wrote a series of three draft manuscripts, two of which included a double helical DNA backbone. |
|
In all there are about 400 surviving manuscripts from the period, a significant corpus of both popular interest and specialist research. |
|
Then people had to decide to use this leather for manuscripts rather than for any of the other things leather can be used for. |
|
Although nothing much is left of the wall paintings, evidence of their pictorial art is found in Bibles and Psalters, in illuminated manuscripts. |
|
But sermons for the feast are attributed in manuscripts to Cosmas Vestitor, who flourished in the tenth century. |
|
It appears that the Vita Sancti Wilfrithi was not well known in the Middle Ages, as only two manuscripts of the work survive. |
|
The school also came into possession of one of England's Apocalypse manuscripts. |
|
Contemporary illustrations of both secular and religious buildings are sometimes found in Illuminated manuscripts. |
|
Two hundred and fifteen medieval manuscripts of the Historia survive, dozens of them copied before the end of the twelfth century. |
|
Surviving examples of Insular art are mainly illuminated manuscripts, metalwork and carvings in stone, especially stone crosses. |
|
Many elements of the designs can be directly related to elements used in manuscripts. |
|
The red dots appear in early Irish manuscripts, revealing their influence in the design of the Lindisfarne Gospels. |
|
Primary media in the Gothic period included sculpture, panel painting, stained glass, fresco and illuminated manuscripts. |
|
The earliest full manuscripts with French Gothic illustrations date to the middle of the 13th century. |
|
Unlike earlier illuminated manuscripts, the first letter of the first word on the line, for every two lines then other lines, are capitalized. |
|
He had many manuscripts copied using outstandingly beautiful calligraphy, the Carolingian minuscule based on round and legible uncial letters. |
|
|
There were considerable losses of manuscripts as a result of the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 16th century. |
|
There are six major manuscripts of the Wessex Gospels, dating from the 11th and 12th centuries. |
|
During the Reformation, when monastic libraries were dispersed, the manuscripts were collected by antiquarians and scholars. |
|
Scribes other than those responsible for the main text often copy the vernacular text of the Hymn in manuscripts of the Latin Historia. |
|
Given the ravages of time, it is likely that these surviving manuscripts represent hundreds since lost. |
|
Fragments I and II almost always follow each other, just as VI and VII, IX and X do in the oldest manuscripts. |
|
Scholars speculate that manuscripts were circulated among his friends, but likely remained unknown to most people until after his death. |
|
The Hengwrt and Ellesmere manuscripts are examples of the care taken to distribute the work. |
|
John Lydgate's tale was popular early on and exists in old manuscripts both on its own and as part of the Tales. |
|
Sobecki has also claimed to have identified Gower's autograph hand in two manuscripts. |
|
The surviving manuscripts of the whole Long Text fall into two groups, with slightly different readings. |
|
The other set of readings may be found in two manuscripts, now in the British Library's Sloane Collection. |
|
The largest collection of the letters, manuscripts, and other papers of Keats is in the Houghton Library at Harvard University. |
|
Illustrations could appear alongside words in the manner of earlier illuminated manuscripts. |
|
On her death, Blake's manuscripts were inherited by Frederick Tatham, who burned some he deemed heretical or politically radical. |
|
Among these is an unpublished material and the manuscripts of such works as The War of the Worlds and The Time Machine. |
|
Tensions developed and Potts departed after one of his manuscripts was used to light the fire. |
|
Sloane's collection included some 40,000 printed books and 7,000 manuscripts, as well as prints and drawings. |
|
However, they keep many valuable manuscripts of Greek, Latin, and Biblical works. |
|
More than one hundred chansons de geste have survived in around three hundred manuscripts. |
|
|
Artwork from Ireland's Gaelic period is found on pottery, jewellery, weapons, drinkware, tableware, stone carvings and illuminated manuscripts. |
|
Alfred's own literary output was mainly of translations, though he wrote introductions and amended manuscripts as well. |
|
In the Ottoman Empire, illuminated and illustrated manuscripts were commissioned by the Sultan or the administrators of the court. |
|
In Topkapi Palace, these manuscripts were created by the artists working in Nakkashane, the atelier of the miniature and illumination artists. |
|
A great part of this desire for local and foreign manuscripts arose in the 15th Century. |
|
Old Irish, dating from the 6th century, used the Latin alphabet and is attested primarily in marginalia to Latin manuscripts. |
|
Authors had offered their manuscripts and received all the payment to be expected for the manuscript. |
|
Half of Stevenson's original manuscripts are lost, including those of Treasure Island, The Black Arrow, and The Master of Ballantrae. |
|
However, it survives entirely in later manuscripts created in Wales, and it is unknown how faithful they are to the originals. |
|
Morris also continued writing poetry and began designing illuminated manuscripts and embroidered hangings. |
|
A complex writing system was developed, and Maya illuminated manuscripts were produced in large numbers on paper made from tree bark. |
|
Works on paper includes printmaking, photography, and the book arts such as illuminated manuscripts. |
|
Wollstonecraft died at the age of 38, eleven days after giving birth to her second daughter, leaving behind several unfinished manuscripts. |
|
These manuscripts covered numerous topics, detailing Marx's concept of alienated labour. |
|
Volumes II and III of Capital remained mere manuscripts upon which Marx continued to work for the rest of his life. |
|
A collection of Ludwig Wittgenstein's manuscripts is held by Trinity College, Cambridge. |
|
Aachen has proved an important site for the production of historical manuscripts. |
|
In medieval manuscripts, it is often unmarked but sometimes marked with an accent or through gemination. |
|
Five original manuscripts of her condemnation trial surfaced in old archives during the 19th century. |
|
In reply, it was proved that the Advocates' library at Edinburgh contained Gaelic manuscripts 500 years old, and one of even greater antiquity. |
|
|
It is also known that he was a collector of manuscripts on various subjects, including the history and literature of Wales. |
|
He also showed him manuscripts of Gaelic poetry, supposed to have been picked up in the Scottish Highlands and the Western Isles. |
|
He obtained manuscripts which he translated with the assistance of a Captain Morrison and the Rev. |
|
Later he made an expedition to the Isle of Mull, where he obtained other manuscripts. |
|
The manuscripts of the Moravian recension are therefore the earliest dated of the OCS recensions. |
|
The core corpus of Old Church Slavonic manuscripts is usually referred to as canon. |
|
Scholars agree that the tales are older than the existing manuscripts, but disagree over just how much older. |
|
The collection represents the vast majority of prose found in medieval Welsh manuscripts which is not translated from other languages. |
|
Further, the medium of cast bronze lends the record they preserve a permanence not enjoyed by manuscripts. |
|
His sons produced a number of manuscripts and original Latin and vernacular poems. |
|
The earliest surviving manuscripts, however, are in Latin, date from the early 13th century, and show marked regional differences. |
|
Most of the surviving manuscripts of Welsh law start with a preamble explaining how the laws were codified by Hywel. |
|
That is, later manuscripts can, and occasionally do, contain older forms of text or older readings. |
|
Textual criticism deals with the identification and removal of transcription errors in the texts of manuscripts. |
|
The only way they'd agree would be where they went back genealogically in a family tree that represents the descent of the manuscripts. |
|
Many early manuscripts, however, contain individual readings from several different earlier forms of text. |
|
Many incomplete manuscripts survive from most periods, giving us a good idea of working methods. |
|
The first mention of him occurs in the Saxon genealogies appended to four manuscripts of the Historia Brittonum. |
|
Most of Watkins's manuscripts are held by the National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth. |
|
The South Reading Room is used for consulting archives, manuscripts, maps and other printed materials. |
|
|
In addition to the printed book collections, there are about 25,000 manuscripts in the holdings. |
|
Gwenogvryn Evans in the Reports on manuscripts in the Welsh language that he compiled for the Historic Manuscripts Commission. |
|
There are, however, also manuscripts in Cornish, Latin and English that are themselves noteworthy. |
|
Davies was a barrister and a keen book collector who acquired the manuscripts gradually from a number of sources. |
|
Papers and manuscripts belonging to Welsh authors who achieved their fame during the 20th century have been collected by the Library. |
|
Along with the manuscripts are numerous seal impressions which are themselves of historic importance. |
|
Some Insular manuscripts may have been produced in Wales, including the 8th century Lichfield Gospels and Hereford Gospels. |
|
Most illuminated manuscripts were created as codices, which had superseded scrolls. |
|
Beginning in the late Middle Ages manuscripts began to be produced on paper. |
|
Illuminated manuscripts continued to be produced in the early 16th century, but in much smaller numbers, mostly for the very wealthy. |
|
Larger monasteries often contained separate areas for the monks who specialized in the production of manuscripts called a scriptorium. |
|
Other Insular illuminated manuscripts of possible Welsh origin include the Ricemarch Psalter and the Hereford Gospels. |
|
The script forms strong links between the Lichfield manuscript and Northumbrian, Iona, and Irish manuscripts. |
|
The designs, while limited in variety, are highly regarded by scholars of illuminated manuscripts. |
|
Other Insular illuminated manuscripts from Wales may include the Lichfield Gospels and the Hereford Gospels. |
|
In England, Cotton's studies of the manuscripts in his collection marks the beginnings of work on Old English language. |
|
Of medieval manuscripts and Incunables are conserved at the public library. |
|
Carolingian illuminated manuscripts and ivory plaques, which have survived in reasonable numbers, approached those of Constantinople in quality. |
|
Dozens of manuscripts dating from the 6th to 8th centuries and three emendations as late as the 9th century have survived. |
|
Each of the several dozen surviving manuscripts features a unique set of errors, corrections, content and organization. |
|