Monday, November 30, 2009

Gender and Class in Byzantine Society

Gender and Class in Byzantine Society: XVIth Biennial Conference of the
Australian Association for Byzantine Studies

16-18 April 2010, University of New England

Call for Papers and Registration Open

http://home.vicnet.net.au/~byzaus/conferences/16th2010/

The Australian Association for Byzantine Studies calls for papers for its
XVIth Biennial Conference. The conference is being held in honour of
Professor John Melville-Jones and the theme will be 'Gender and Class in
Byzantine Society'.

Plenary speakers:

Dr Tom Brown, Reader, School of History, Classics and Archaeology, The
University of Edinburgh
Professor John Melville-Jones, Classics and Ancient History, University of
Western Australia
Dr Shaun Tougher, Senior Lecturer in Ancient History, Cardiff University (to
be confirmed)

Gender and class were key social indicators in Byzantine society, as in many
others. However, masculine and feminine roles were not always clearly
defined, while eunuchs made up a 'third gender'. Social status was also in a
state of flux, as much linked to patronage networks as to wealth, as the
Empire came under a series of external and internal pressures. This fluidity
applied in ecclesiastical as much as in secular spheres. We welcome papers
on all aspects of the theme of gender and/or class from the 4th to the 15th
centuries, from the Greek East to the westernmost reaches of the Byzantine
Empire.

Contributors are invited to interpret the theme broadly and we welcome
submissions from all fields. Both scholars with academic affiliation and
working independently, as well as postgraduate students, are encouraged to
apply.

Registration is now open.

The Conference will be held 16-18 April 2010 at the University of New
England in Armidale, New South Wales, Australia.

Further details including registration, conference location and
accommodation options are available on the conference web site.

Please submit abstracts of up to 500 words in length to:
Associate Professor Lynda Garland
School of Humanities
University of New England
Armidale
New South Wales 2351
tel +61 2 6773 3236
fax +61 2 6773 3520
headshum@une.edu.au

31st Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum

2010 Call For Papers

Plymouth State University

31st Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum

Friday and Saturday 16-17 April 2010



Call for Papers, Sessions, and Undergraduate Posters
“Time, Temporality, History”



We invite abstracts in medieval and Early Modern studies that
consider questions of periodization, historicity, and temporality.
Papers may consider:

* how people conceived of, constructed, interacted with,
measured, or produced “time” in medieval and Early Modern cultures
* how we currently construct or deconstruct history
* how studying temporality illuminates other subjects.

Papers need not be confined to the theme, but may cover many aspects
of medieval and Renaissance life, literature, languages, art,
philosophy, theology, history and music. Student sessions welcome.
Undergraduate posters are encouraged.

Undergraduate session includes posters, art, interactive exhibits,
and multimedia presentations. Each display must include a brief
explanation or hand-out. These should be designed to initiate
thoughtful discussion about each student’s research and project
goals. Projects may be set up at any time; however, students must be
present during judging (TBA). Undergraduate students require a formal
sponsorship letter from a faculty member with whom they have
acquaintance. There will be a reduced entry fee for poster
presenters.

This year’s keynote speaker is Dr. Carolyn Dinshaw, Professor of
English/Social and Cultural Analysis at New York University. Dr.
Dinshaw, the author of Getting Medieval: Sexualities and
Communities, Pre- and Postmodern and Chaucer’s Sexual Poetics,
researches and publishes widely on medieval literature and culture,
feminist studies, lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender studies, history
of sexuality, theories of history and historiography, and mysticism.
Her most recent work focuses on theories and experiences of
temporality.
Students, faculty, and independent scholars are welcome. For more
information visit www.plymouth.edu/medieval.

Abstract deadline for undergraduate participants: 15 February 2010

Presenters and early registration: 15 March 2010



For undergraduate student inquiries, please submit questions and/or
abstracts with full contact information (email and post mail
addresses for student AND faculty sponsors) to Dr. Raffaele Florio at
history@regiscollege.edu. Phone: 781-768-7436



Or via US mail: Dr. Raffaele Florio, Chair

History Department

Regis College

235 Wellesley Street

Weston, MA 02493

LATIN INTO HEBREW

We have the pleasure to announce that a conference on "LATIN INTO
HEBREW: The Transfer of Philosophical, Scientific, and Medical Lore
from Christian to Jewish Cultures in Southern Europe (12th-15th
Centuries)" will be held in Paris on 7 to 9 December 2009.

Conference Organizers: Resianne Fontaine (Univ. of Amsterdam) and Gad
Freudenthal (CNRS, Paris).

Venue :
Université Paris 7
Bâtiment Condorcet
4 rue Elsa Morante
75205 Paris Cedex 13
Access via Rue Alice Domon et Léonie Duquet
http://www.univ-paris-diderot.fr/sc/site.php?
bc=implantations&np=SitePRG&g=m
Salle "Mondial" n° 646a (6th floor)

PROGRAM:

Monday 7 December 2009
09:00 Gathering with coffee
09:15 Opening
Chair: Roshdi Rashed (CNRS, Paris)
Greetings: Pascal Crozet (CNRS, Paris)
09:30-10:00 Gad Freudenthal (CNRS, Paris), Opening Remarks.
Translating from Latin, Translating from Arabic: Some Quantitative Data.
10:00-10:45 Key-Note Lecture: Maurice Kriegel (École des hautes études
en sciences sociales, Paris), Interactions between Jewish and
Christian Intellectuals in the Middle Ages: Constant Attitudes vs.
Geographical and Temporal Variations.
10:45-11:15 Coffee

Session One: Methodological Issues in the Study of Hebrew
Translations from Latin
Chair: Judith Olszowy-Schlanger (École pratique des hautes études,
Paris)
11:15-12:00 Jean-Pierre Rothschild (CNRS/École pratique des hautes
études, Paris), Traductions révisées et traductions refaites.
12:00-12:45 Cyril Aslanov (Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Latin into
Hebrew (via the Vulgar): The Latin-Vulgar Interlingua in the
Pharmaceutical Glosses of Doeg ha-Edomi's Translations (1197-1199).
12.45-13.00 Discussion
13.00-14.30 Lunch

Session Two: Latin into Hebrew in the Context of Religious Controversies
Chair: Resianne Fontaine (University of Amsterdam)
14:30-15:15 Daniel Lasker (Ben Gurion University, Beer Sheva), Latin
into Hebrew in the Medieval Jewish-Christian Debate.
15:15-16:00 Philippe Bobichon (CNRS, Paris), Citations latines de la
tradition chrétienne dans la littérature hébraïque de controverse avec
le christianisme: XIIe -XVe siècles.
16:00-16:30 Coffee
16:30-17:15 Tamas Visi (Palacky University, Olomouc), A Collection of
Latin Quotations from Christian Texts in Hebrew Transliteration and
Translation.
17:15-18:00 Alexander Fidora, (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
and Mauro Zonta (Università degli studi di Roma la Sapienza), Vincent
Ferrer's Treatise on the Universal in Latin and in Hebrew.
18:00-18:15 Discussion

Tuesday 8 December 2009
Session Three: Latin into Hebrew in Medical Contexts (I)
Chair: Ronit Yoeli-Tlalim (Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of
Medicine at University College London)
9:30-10.15 Reimund Leicht (Hebrew University of Jerusalem),
Iatromathematics and the Study of Medicine among Jews in Medieval
Christian Europe: Latin Texts in Hebrew Garb.
10:15-11.00 Juliette Sibon (University of Albi), Cooperation between
Christian and Jewish Physicians in Marseilles in the Late 14th
Century: The Case of Master Raymond Pibarot and Master Abraham
Bondavin of Avignon.

11:00-11:30 Coffee

11:30-12.15 Na'ama Cohen-Hanegbi (Hebrew University of Jerusalem),
Juan de Aviñon's Translation of Lilium medicine.
12:15- 12:30 Discussion

12:30-14:00 Lunch

Session Four Latin into Hebrew in Medical Contexts (II)
Chair: Danielle Jacquart (École pratique des hautes études, Paris)

14:00-14:45 Danièle Iancu-Agou (CNRS, Montpellier), La pratique du
latin chez les médecins juifs et néophytes de Provence médiévale.
14:45-15:30 Katelyn Mesler (Northwestern University, Chicago), Jewish
Translators, Christian Charms, and the Limits of Faithful Translation
in Medieval Europe.
15:30-15:45 Discussion
15:45- 16:15 Coffee

Session Five: Fifteenth-Century Hebrew Scholasticism
Chair: Alexander Fidora (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
16:15-17:00 Mauro Zonta (Università degli studi di Roma la Sapienza),
The Aragonese Circle of "Jewish Scholastics" and Its Relationship to
Local Christian Scholarship.
17:00-17:45 Charles H. Manekin (University of Maryland), Hebrew
Scholastic Logic in Fifteenth-Century Spain.
17:45-18:00 Discussion

Wednesday 9 December 2009
Session Six: Latin-into-Hebrew Transfer of Scientific & Philosophical
Knowledge (I)
Chair: Reimund Leicht (Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
9:30-10.15 Resianne Fontaine (University of Amsterdam), An anonymous
Latin-into-Hebrew Translation of an Anonymous Meteorological Text.
10:15-11:00 Yossef Schwartz (Tel-Aviv University), Arabic into Latin,
Latin into Hebrew: The Reception of Avicennian Psychology in European
Latin and Hebrew Philosophy.
11:00-11:30 Coffee
11:30-12:15 Tony Lévy (CNRS, Paris), Les Éléments d'Euclide en hébreu:
les sources latines.
12:15-13:00 Carsten Wilke (Central European University, Budapest),
Albertus the Naturalist in Judah Romano's Hebrew Translations.
13:00-13:15 Discussion
13:15-14:45 Lunch

Session Seven: Latin-into-Hebrew Transfer of Scientific &
Philosophical Knowledge (II)
Chair: Saverio Campanini (CNRS, Paris)
14:45-15:30 Gabriele Mancuso (Università dell'Insubria, Como), Hebrew
Science in Early Medieval Southern Italy: Greco-Latin Astrological
Lore in Hebrew Garb.
15:30-16:15 Tovi Bibring (Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan), The
Fabulous Fabulist: Berekhya Ben Natronai Hanaqdan and the Mishley
Shu'alim.
16:15-16:30 Discussion
16:30-17:00 Coffee

Session Eight: Historiographical Issues - A Moritz Steinschneider
Memorial Lecture
Chair: Giuseppe Veltri (University of Halle-Wittenberg)
17:00-17:45 Irene Zwiep (University of Amsterdam), Christianity,
Middle Ages and the Latin-Hebrew Tradition in the Wissenschaft des
Judentums and Beyond.

17:45-18:15 Discussion & Concluding Discussion

Summer SEMINARS AND INSTITUTES for 2010

National Endowment for the Humanities

Summer SEMINARS AND INSTITUTES for 2010



Each summer, the National Endowment for the Humanities supports
rigorous national seminars, institutes, and workshops for
professional educators and a select number of graduate students.
Participants in these two- to six-week programs receive stipends to
help defray travel and living expenses.



The application deadline is March 2, 2010 (postmark).





Full-time graduate students in humanities disciplines may apply for...



Seminars and Institutes for College and University Teachers



These study opportunities allow college and university teachers to
gain a deeper knowledge of current scholarship in key fields of the
humanities and advance their own teaching and research.



The 21 seminars and institutes for summer 2010 will address the
following topics:



· British Romanticism

· Interwar Shanghai and Berlin

· Contemporary Brazilian literature

· Descartes, Galileo, and Hobbes

· The American Civil War

· Autobiography: Perpetua and Augustine

· Aristotle on truth

· Mapping and art in the Americas

· The golden age of magazines

· Rome in late antiquity

· Cultural and technical exchange between early modern Islam and Europe

· Philosophical perspectives on liberal democracy

· Teaching the history of political economy

· History of the Silk Road

· Interactions between Native Americans and European colonists

· Medieval philosophy, history, and interfaith exchanges
between Christians, Muslims, and Jews

· American maritime history

· Native cultures of the Pacific Northwest

· Ritual and ceremony in Europe and the Americas



Many of these seminars and institutes take place on American
campuses, but some will be held at sites abroad in Brazil, England,
Italy, Spain, and Tunisia.



For a list of the seminars and institutes to be offered in the summer
of 2010, along with eligibility requirements and contact information
for the directors, please visit
www.neh.gov/projects/si-university.html .



---------------------------------------------------------------------------



Full-time graduate students who intend to pursue a K-12 teaching
career may apply for...



Seminars and Institutes for SCHOOL Teachers



These study opportunities are intended to deepen participants'
understanding of important topics in the humanities.



Among the subjects to be studied are:



* Spanish literature
* Political, cultural, economic, and religious history
* African-American, Native American history and cultures
* The Arabic novel in translation
* European diplomacy and political theory
* Poetry as an art form
* Abolitionism, social movements
* Archaeology of the Americas
* Bach, Mozart, and Dvorak
* The literature and culture of ancient Rome
* Early American art
* United States Constitution and government
* The works of Shakespeare and Chaucer

Many of these projects will take place on American campuses; others
will be held in Austria, England, Germany, Italy, Mexico, and Spain.



For a complete list of the 30 projects offered in the summer of 2010,
along with eligibility requirements and contact information for the
directors, visit www.neh.gov/projects/si-school.html.

Index of Christian Art

The Index of Christian Art is pleased to announce that the Svetlana
Tomekovic Database of Byzantine Art is now available on its website.

http://ica.princeto n.edu/tomekovic/ index.php

Before her untimely death, Svetlana Tomekovic photographed many
monuments of Byzantine art from Russia to Italy. Unfortunately, these
were not fully catalogued or described apart from her cursory notes in
French on the actual images themselves.

The Index of Christian Art was pleased to digitize the collection and to
make them available for public use in advance of them being more fully
catalogued and described in its database.

We suspect there are errors in these descriptions and would appreciate
hearing from you as to any that you may find. The database is a simple
structure designed for easy access but it does contain many images of
interest that we hope will be of use.

Simple instructions as to how the database works are given in the
introduction and to enlarge the images simply click on them.

Colum Hourihane
Director, Index of Christian Art

DH2010 conference

As in previous years, the days 3-6 July, before the DH2010 conference (7-11 July at King’s College London ) have been set aside for community-run workshops. One can reach a diverse and committed body of participants in the Digital Humanities at DH2010. Do you or your project have a workshop up your sleeve that would interest this Digital Humanities community?

Half- or one-day slots are available for workshops, which need to be self-organized and self-funding. KCL can provide space for the workshop at no or low cost, so it is likely that the costs per participant would be low.

We would like to receive proposals for such workshops.

In your full proposal (total 500-800 words), please include:

(1) a brief description of the workshop programme, the project or community out of which it arises, the trainers who will run the workshop, and its proposed length;

(2) what is the demand for this workshop, and who do you expect the audience to be? What minimum number of attendees would be needed for you to do the workshop?

(3) what funding is available or will you seek to help to support the costs of this workshop (for instance, travel for trainers, lunch or refreshments for participants, as applicable)?

A few groups have already expressed interest in running workshops, and we have been talking informally with them. If you have ideas that is not yet fully formed, we would be delighted to e-speak to you about them before you submit a proposal.

The closing date for full proposals will be 31 December 2009. Please send them via email to both John Bradley (john.bradley@kcl.ac.uk) and Gabriel Bodard (gabriel.bodard@kcl.ac.uk).

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Parliament Rolls of Medieval England web site

British History Online at the Institute of Historical Research (http://www.british-history.ac.uk) would like to announce an important new addition to its premium content section: the Parliament Rolls of Medieval England (http://www.british-history.ac.uk/prome). This source consists of scholarly descriptions of every parliament held in England between 1275 and 1504. It covers 10 monarchs, from Edward I to Henry VII (since no parliament was held in the reign of Edward V, he is not included). The rolls for some of these parliaments, particularly the earlier ones, do not survive, but where they are extant have been fully transcribed; supplementary material about the business of the parliament is given in an appendix. Opposite the original text, which may be in Latin, Anglo-Norman, or Middle English, is a modern English translation. To make PROME e asier to use, the text and translation have been put into tables, so that the corresponding paragraphs are simple to locate.

31st Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum

Plymouth State University

*31st Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum*

*Friday and Saturday, 16-17 April 2010*

*Call for Papers, Sessions, and Undergraduate Posters
"Time, Temporality, History"*

We invite abstracts in medieval and Early Modern studies that consider
questions of periodization, historicity, and temporality. Papers may
consider:

* how people conceived of, constructed, interacted with, measured,
or produced "time" in medieval and Early Modern cultures
* how we currently construct or deconstruct history
* how studying temporality illuminates other subjects.

Papers need not be confined to the theme, but may cover many aspects of
medieval and Renaissance life, literature, languages, art, philosophy,
theology, history and music. Student sessions welcome. Undergraduate
posters are encouraged.

*Undergraduate session* includes: posters, art, interactive exhibits,
and multimedia presentations. Each display must include a brief
explanation or hand-out. These should be designed to initiate
thoughtful discussion about each student's research and project goals.
Projects may be set up at any time; however, students must be present
during judging (TBA). Undergraduate students require a formal
sponsorship letter from a faculty member with whom they have
acquaintance. There will be a reduced entry fee for poster presenters.

This year's keynote speaker is Dr. Carolyn Dinshaw, Professor of
English/Social and Cultural Analysis at New York University. Dr.
Dinshaw, the author of Getting Medieval: Sexualities and Communities,
Pre- and Postmodern
and Chaucer's Sexual
Poetics
, researches and publishes widely on medieval literature and
culture,
feminist studies, lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender studies, history of
sexuality, theories of history and historiography, and mysticism. Her
most recent work focuses on theories and experiences of temporality.
Students, faculty, and independent scholars are welcome. For more
information visit www.plymouth.edu/medieval
.

*Abstract deadline for undergraduate participants: 15 February 2010
*

*Presenters and early registration: 15 March 2010*

* *

*For undergraduate student inquiries, *please submit questions and/or
abstracts with full contact information (email and post mail addresses
for student AND faculty sponsors) to Dr. Raffaele Florio at
history@regiscollege.edu . Phone:
781-768-7436.

Gathering at the Threshold

We cordially invite you to attend a Celebratory
Symposium, "Gathering at the Threshold," to be held
on Saturday afternoon, 21 November, at 106 McCormick
Hall in the Department of Art and Archaeology of
Princeton University.

Early English Laws website

I’m delighted to announce that the Early English Laws website is now live. This three-year, AHRC-funded project (a collaboration between the Institute of Historical Research, London and the Centre for Computing in the Humanities at King’s College London) will publish new editions and translations of all English legal codes, edicts and treatises produced up to c.1215. The latest news and updates can also be followed on the project blog, which is accessible from the website. http://www.earlyenglishlaws.ac.uk/index.html

2010 INTERNATIONAL BOCCACCIO CONFERENCE

CALL FOR PAPERS

2010 INTERNATIONAL BOCCACCIO CONFERENCE
Organized by the American Boccaccio Association
Conference link: http://www.umass.edu/italian/ABA

The American Boccaccio Association is pleased to announce its first
triennial international Boccaccio conference, to be held at The
University of Massachusetts Amherst on April 30 and May 1, 2010.

This conference is intended to bring Boccaccio scholars together from
various disciplines and approaches for the benefit of all the
participants. With the anniversary year of 2013 not far off, and a
series of new initiatives already in the works, the ABA is keenly
interested in fostering a collaborative environment among its members.
To this end, we warmly invite all those working on Boccaccio to give
serious consideration to participating in this assembly.

We are delighted to confirm the participation of the following speakers:
- Professor Emeritus Giuseppe Velli, Università Statale di Milano
- Professor Pier Massimo Forni, Johns Hopkins University
- Professor Victoria Kirkham, University of Pennsylvania
- Professor Renzo Bragantini, Università degli Studi di Roma “La
Sapienza”
- Professor Emeritus Christopher Kleinhenz, University of Wisconsin
Madison
- Professor H. Wayne Storey, Indiana University

Proposals for a paper or panel on any aspect of Boccaccio’s life and
work (in English or Italian) should be sent by February 12, 2010 to
Prof. Elsa Filosa, the ABA secretary, at elsa.filosa@vanderbilt.edu.
Abstracts should be approximately 500 words and accompanied by a brief
CV.

Selected papers will be published in the conference proceedings.

Two travel grants of $250 each are available for graduate students who
are currently preparing a thesis or dissertation on Boccaccio and
would like to attend the conference. Interested parties should send
their CV and an abstract of their thesis or dissertation to the ABA
secretary elsa.filosa@vanderbilt.edu by February 12, 2010 in order to
be considered for the grant.

A printable call for papers can be found at:
http://www.umass.edu/italian/ABA/CFP.pdf

Please distribute this information freely to anyone who may be
interested.

Summer course on LIVED SPACE IN PAST AND PRESENT?

Subject: Summer course on ?LIVED SPACE IN PAST AND PRESENT? -
Central European University, Budapest in co-operation with the Koszeg
European University Institute (fwd)
Date: Thu, 12 Nov 2009 06:31:09 -0500 (EST)
From: Jan Ziolkowski
To: Committee on Medieval Studies


Summer course on LIVED SPACE IN PAST AND PRESENT - Central European
University, Budapest in co-operation with the Koszeg European
University Institute

We would like to solicit your help to promote the summer course on
?LIVED SPACE IN PAST AND PRESENT? among your colleagues, your
graduate students, or any interested researchers.

Course Dates: 21 - 27 June, 2010
Location: Central European University (CEU), Budapest, Hungary,
Detailed course description: http://www.summer.ceu.hu/livedspace

Course Director:
Katalin Szende, Central European University, Medieval Studies
Department, Budapest, Hungary

Faculty:
Sarah Rees-Jones, University of York, UK; Peter Johanek, Westfälische
Wilhelms-Universität, Münster, Germany; Rossina Kostova, University
of Veliko Turnovo, Bulgaria; Anngret Simms, University College
Dublin, Ireland; Gábor Gyani, Central European University, Department
of History/ Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, Hungary

Target group: This summer school encourages applications from
doctoral students, post-doctoral researchers or practicing
professionals. An MA degree or its equivalent is the minimum
requirement; preference will be given to doctoral students,
post-doctoral researchers or practicing professionals.

Language of instruction: English
Tuition fee: EUR 550. Financial aid is available.

Application deadline: February 15, 2010

Financial aid is available.

Online application (from November 20):
http://www.sun.ceu.hu/03-application/howto_apply.php

We?d be grateful if you could forward this email to those potentially
interested in our summer school (individuals, listservs, blogs,
electronic journals, etc.) and/or have a short announcement placed on
a relevant web site.

Thank you for your kind assistance.

Sincerely yours,

CEU Summer University Program team

Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations Fellowship Program

The Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations of Koç University,
Istanbul, invites applications for residential fellowships for the
2010-2011 academic year from junior and senior scholars of the
archaeology, art history, and history of Anatolia. Beginning in 2010,
the chronological restriction has been lifted, with applications from
scholars of Anatolia in the Bronze Age and Neolithic encouraged as well
as those of the Iron Age, Classical, Byzantine, Seljuk and Ottoman
periods. The application deadline is December 15, 2009. Further
information and application forms are available from the RCAC website
http://rcac.ku.edu.tr

Medieval Manuscript Studies in the Digital Age: 17-22 May 2010

Medieval Manuscript Studies in the Digital Age: 17-22 May 2010

The Institute of English Studies (London) is pleased to announce the
second year of this AHRC-funded course in collaboration with the
University of Cambridge, the Warburg Institute, and King's College
London.

The course is open to arts and humanities doctoral students registered
at UK institutions. It involves six days of intensive training on the
analysis, description and editing of medieval manuscripts in the digital
age to be held jointly in Cambridge and London. Participants will
receive a solid theoretical foundation and hands-on experience in
cataloguing and editing manuscripts for both print and digital formats.

The first half of the course involves morning classes and then visits to
libraries in Cambridge and London in the afternoons. Participants will
view original manuscripts and gain practical experience in
applying the morning's themes to concrete examples. In the second half
we will address the cataloguing and description of manuscripts in a
digital format with particular emphasis on the Text Encoding
Initiative (TEI). These sessions will also combine theoretical
principles and practical experience and include supervised work on
computers.

The course is aimed principally at those writing dissertations which
relate to medieval manuscripts, especially those on literature, art and
history. There are no fees, but priority will be given to PhD students
funded by the AHRC. Class sizes are limited to twenty and places are
'first-come-first-served' so early registration is strongly recommended.

For further details see http://ies.sas.ac.uk/study/mmsda/ or contact Dr
Peter Stokes at mmsda@sas.ac.uk.

LIBRARIES IN THE DIGITAL AGE

The annual international conference and course

LIBRARIES IN THE DIGITAL AGE

ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR PARTICIPATION

Zadar, Croatia, 24 – 28 May 2010

University of Zadar, Zadar, Croatia (http://www.unizd.hr/) Full information at: http://www.ffos.hr/lida/ Email: lida@ffos.hr.

The annual international conference Libraries in the Digital Age (LIDA) addresses the changing and challenging environment for libraries and information systems and services in the digital world. Each year a different and “hot” theme is addressed, divided in two parts; the first part covering research and development and the second part addressing advances in applications and practice. LIDA brings together researchers, educators, practitioners, and developers from all over the world in a forum for personal exchanges, discussions, and learning, made easier by being held in memorable locations.

Themes LIDA 2010

Part I: DIGITAL SCHOLARSHIP: support by digital libraries Contributions (types described below) are invited covering the following topics:

* Research, practices, and values related to digital scholarship, including conceptual frameworks that emerged

* Contemporary nature of the scholarly information and communication environment in general and as involving digital libraries in particular

* Developments in digital humanities

* Navigating shifting patterns of scholarly communication

* The impact digital libraries have on digital scholarship and on education in various fields, and vice versa; the impact of digital scholarship on digital libraries

* Studies on how faculty, researchers, and students make use of digital scholarly resources for their research or in education

* Practices that emerged in libraries related to support of digital scholarship, such as resource/collection building, digitization, preservation, access, services and others;

* International aspects of digital libraries with related trends in globalization and cooperative opportunities for support of digital scholarship;

* Research and discussions on general questions: How are we to understand new forms of scholarship and scholarly works in their own right? How are we to respond in digital libraries? What are the opportunities and challenges?

Part II: DIGITAL NATIVES: challenges & innovations in reaching out to digital born generations

Contributions (types described below) are invited covering the following topics:

* Research and discussions on general questions: who are these digital natives? How they are different from older generations – or digital immigrants – and what is the world they’re creating going to look like?

* The impact of digital natives on libraries;

* Digital libraries and social networks on the Web;

* The cultural and technological challenges faced by digital libraries in serving digital natives;

* Examples of library services specifically aimed at digital natives

* Efforts by libraries to help people that are more digital immigrants to become more digitally natives

* Role of libraries in e-learning and education in general

* Is the future of libraries closely associated with how successfully they meet the demands of digital users?

Types of contributions

Invited are the following types of contributions:
1. Papers: research studies and reports on practices and advances that will be presented at the conference and included in published Proceedings
2. Posters: short graphic presentations on research, studies, advances, examples, practices, or preliminary work that will be presented in a special poster session. Proposals for posters should be submitted as a short, one or two- page paper.
3. Demonstrations: live examples of working projects, services, interfaces, commercial products, or developments-in-progress that will be presented during the conference in specialized facilities or presented in special demonstration sessions.
4. Workshops: two to four-hour sessions that will be tutorial and educational in nature. Workshops will be presented before and after the main part of the conference and will require separate fees, to be shared with workshop organizers.
5. PhD Forum: short presentations by PhD students, particularly as related to their dissertation; help and responses by a panel of educators.

Instructions for submissions are at LIDA site http://www.ffos.hr/lida/.

Deadlines

For papers (an extended abstract) and workshops (a short proposal): 15 January 2010. Acceptance by 10 February 2010.
For demonstrations (a proposal) and posters (an extended abstract): 1 February 2010. Acceptance by 15 February 2010.
Final submission for all accepted papers and posters: 15 March 2010.

Conference contact information

Conference co-directors:

TATJANA APARAC-JELUSIC, Department of Library and Information Science University of Zadar; Zadar, Croatia; taparac@unizd.hr.
TEFKO SARACEVIC, School of Communication and Information; Rutgers University; New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA tefkos@rutgers.edu.

Program chairs:

For Theme I: VITTORE CASAROSA, Istituto di Scienza e Tecnologie dell’Informazione, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Pisa, Italy, casarosa@isti.cnr.it.

For Theme II: GARY MARCHIONINI, School of Information and Library Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA, march@ils.unc.edu.

Venue
Zadar is one of the enchanting cities on the Adriatic coast, rich in history. It still preserves a very old network of narrow and charming city streets, as well as a Roman forum dating back to the first century CE. In addition, Zadar region encompasses many natural beauties, most prominent among them is the Kornati National Park, the most unusual and indented set of close to a 100 small islands in the Mediterranean For Zadar see http://www.zadar.hr/English/Default.aspx. For Croatia see http://www.croatia.hr/.


Marija Dalbello
Associate Professor
School of Communication and Information
4 Huntington Street
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901-1071
Voice: 732.932.7500 / 8215
FAX: 732.932.6916
Internet: dalbello@rutgers.edu
http://www.rutgers.edu/~dalbello

Posted by: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco (rosselli at ling dot unipi dot it)

Making Senses of the Past: Toward a Sensory Archaeology

Making Senses of the Past: Toward a Sensory Archaeology

27th Annual Visiting Scholar Conference, Center for Archaeological
Investigations, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, USA.

March 26-27, 2010

Human interaction with the surrounding world is mediated through our
senses. Yet archaeological interpretation has traditionally been
dominated by visual descriptions, thus effectively marginalizing the
senses of smell, taste, hearing, and touch as unmeasurable ways of
engaging with the world. This has led to a silent, odorless,
disembodied, and sense-less past. Recent work, however, has explored
alternative ways to make sense of past societies, investigating
soundscapes, olfactory and haptic analyses, and somatic memory, as
well as other less tangible visual qualities such as shimmer and
color.

This conference will bring together researchers who share an interest
in such sensory modes of approaching the past, and it will cross
boundaries between chronological periods, geographical regions, and
material specializations.

Potential themes for papers include, but are not limited to:

* the presentation of new results of sensory archaeological projects
* * multisensory and synesthetic aspects of the production and
consumption of material culture * * the recognition of sensory
hierarchies in past societies * * embodied practices, including
memory * * the dissemination of sensuous pasts in the present *


Submissions
Please submit a 300 word abstract plus title to Dr. Jo Day (contact
details below). PDF files are preferred. Presentations will be
limited to 25-30 minutes. Deadline for submission: 1st December 2009.
The CAI selection committee will review the abstracts, and authors
will be notified of the decision in mid-December. Papers are eligible
for inclusion in a peer-reviewed volume published in the Occasional
Papers series of the Center for Archaeological Investigations.

Conference attendance is open to all. For registration details and
other information see:
www.cai.siuc.edu/vspages/day/vsconf.html

For further information, or with any queries, contact:
Dr. Jo Day, the 2010 CAI Visiting Scholar, at joday@siu.edu (618)
453-5032

*4th Annual Sacred Leaves Graduate Symposium

*CALL FOR PAPERS
*

*4th Annual Sacred Leaves Graduate Symposium

February 18 & 19, 2010

University of South Florida Libraries
Tampa, Florida

**The DEADLINE for submission has been EXTENDED to December 11, 2009
Presenters will be notified by December 18, 2009

*
/Encountering the "Other" in the Medieval World: Textual Examinations
of Resistance and Reconciliation Across the Traditions, 500-1500 /


Papers are welcome on, but not limited to, Judaism, Christianity or
Islam in Europe and Asia during the Middle Ages (500-1500):

· Views of difference, diversity and pluralism


· Expressions of shared identities and common values


· Texts of threat, terror and violence


· Traditions affirming connection, inclusivity and reconciliation


· Patterns of religious, political and cultural imperialism


· Forms of cross-cultural exchange and dialogue


· Delineations of ethnic and vernacular boundaries


Exempla may be drawn from manuscripts and illuminations, critical
editions, and portrayals in art and architecture.

Please email an abstract of no more than 500 words to Elizabeth
Tucker, Symposium Coordinator, at _etucker@lib.usf.edu _by December
11, 2009. Notification of acceptances will be emailed by December
18, 2009. Please include the title of your paper, name, affiliation
and email address. Each paper selected will be allotted 20 minutes
for presentation. Presenters will be asked to submit their complete
paper by February 1, 2010.

This year's keynote speaker and senior scholar is Dr. David
Nirenberg, the Deborah R. and Edgar D. Jannotta Professor - John U.
Nef Committee on Social Thought, Department of History, and in the
College - The University of Chicago.
*
*Submit papers via email to the attention of:
Elizabeth Tucker, Assistant to the Director* - *Special & Digital
Collections // Coordinator - Sacred Leaves Symposium
University of South Florida Libraries
4202 E. Fowler Avenue, LIB 122
Tampa FL 33620-5400
etucker@lib.usf.edu
813.974.1198 FAX: 813.396.9006

For more information about the symposium, and to download a PDF of
the Call for Papers, please visit: http://MedievalStudies.lib.usf.edu

Second International Conference on Comparative Historical Graphemics (Note Date Confusion)

CALL FOR PAPERS





LautSchriftSprache




Second International Conference on Comparative Historical Graphemics

Zweite internationale Tagung zur vergleichenden historischen Graphematik




The (Dis)ambiguity of the Grapheme


Das Graphem zwischen Eindeutigkeit und Doppeldeutigkeit




Munich University (LMU)



9 – 11 September 2010



Organizers: Hans Sauer and Gaby Waxenberger





While the first conference in Zurich in 2008 gave an overall introduction to
the wide field of historical graphemics, we wish to focus on the grapheme
including both positional and free allographs and their relationships
regarding phonemes and allophones.



We therefore welcome contributions relating to the historical stages of the
European languages and writing systems, with regard to the following
questions:



1. Depiction of sounds by characters: is it always the 'perfect fit' (one
grapheme = one phoneme)?



2. Ways of reflecting language change by graphemes and allographs: Reduction
or extension of the characters in the system.



3. New characters - obsolete characters: Necessity of creating new
characters for the system or reactivating old ones?



Please send your abstract by 15 December October 2009 to:

Gaby Waxenberger

Munich University (LMU)

Department für Anglistik und Amerikanistik

Schellingstr. 3/RG

80799 Munich, Germany

Or by email to: soundandscript@googlemail.com


untitled-[2] [~9K]
Dear Stacy,
I hope you are fine and everything is going well. I was just wondering if you sent out our Call for Papers. Attached please find the thing again.
Hans and myself would be very grateful to you if you could send it around.
Many thanks in advance
Cheers,
Gaby

CALL FOR PAPERS

LautSchriftSprache



Second International Conference on Comparative Historical Graphemics

Zweite internationale Tagung zur vergleichenden historischen Graphematik


The (Dis)ambiguity of the Grapheme
Das Graphem zwischen Eindeutigkeit und Doppeldeutigkeit



Munich University (LMU)



9 – 11 September 2010



Organizers: Hans Sauer and Gaby Waxenberger





While the first conference in Zurich in 2008 gave an overall introduction to the wide field of historical graphemics, we wish to focus on the grapheme including both positional and free allographs and their relationships regarding phonemes and allophones.



We therefore welcome contributions relating to the historical stages of the European languages and writing systems, with regard to the following questions:



1. Depiction of sounds by characters: is it always the 'perfect fit' (one grapheme = one phoneme)?



2. Ways of reflecting language change by graphemes and allographs: Reduction or extension of the characters in the system.



3. New characters - obsolete characters: Necessity of creating new characters for the system or reactivating old ones?



Please send your abstract by15 December October 2009to:

Gaby Waxenberger

Munich University (LMU)

Department für Anglistik und Amerikanistik

Schellingstr. 3/RG

80799 Munich, Germany

Or by email to: soundandscript@googlemail.com

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Call for Papers Codicology and Palaeography in the Digital Age II -

Call for Papers
Codicology and Palaeography in the Digital Age II -

It is only a year since the Institute of Documentology and Scholarly
Editing (IDE) undertook an initiative entitled "Codicology and
Palaeography in the Digital Age". Yet its first results have already
been written up and published: in July 2009, the anthology
"Codicology and Palaeography in the Digital Age" was launched at an
international symposium in Munich. Here, experts from all over the
world met as a community to share their knowledge, interests and
concerns regarding digital issues in the various fields of manuscript
research.

The feedback on both the anthology and the conference has been
remarkably positive, not least from experts who are less acquainted
with digital methods. For the first time, widely dispersed,
cutting-edge research in the field of computer-aided codicology and
palaeography can be surveyed and assessed as a whole phenomenon.

Yet, despite the fact that the anthology gives a broad insight into
theory and practice, some relevant subjects and questions have not
been covered. For this reason the IDE plans to publish a second
volume of "Codicology and Palaeography in the Digital Age". The
following questions in particular should now be addressed:

* To what extent can quantitative approaches and the analysis of
codicological databases be complemented by a systematic analysis of
digital manuscript facsimiles?
* How can manuscript-related research in the history of arts or
in musicology be supported by digital tools and methodology?
* How successfully can methods from the sciences be applied to
the analysis of manuscripts (e.g. DNA analysis of parchment)?
* How can electronic manuscript-catalogues and virtual libraries
be brought together by means of comprehensive portals and hybrid
research environments in order, for example, to facilitate exhaustive
semantic studies?
* How can existing digital tools for palaeographic transcription
be promoted and improved? How can the range of applications be
expanded? How can philological analysis and further use in literary
studies be enhanced?
* How can questions about the history of script be addressed by
digital methods?
* How can digital resources best supplement the originals, in
the context of restoration and preservation? How can archives,
libraries and museums take advantage of the opportunities, for public
benefit?
* To what extent are software-generated answers to codicological
and palaeographic questions sustainable, verifiable and reliable?

Contributions which explore these and similar subjects (cf. previous
CfP) are most welcome and can be submitted in English, French, German
or Italian. Again, the launch of the volume will be accompanied by an
international symposium. Proposals of not more than 500 words should
be sent by 30 November 2009 to kpdz-ii@ide.de or any of the editors
listed below.

Organisation:

* Franz Fischer (Royal Irish Academy, Dublin), f.fischer@ria.ie
* Christiane Fritze (Berlin Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and
Humanities), fritze@bbaw.de
* Georg Vogeler (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich),
g.vogeler@lrz.uni-muenchen.de
* Patrick Sahle (University of Cologne, Cologne Center for
eHumanities), sahle@uni-koeln.de
* Torsten Schaßan (Herzog August Library Wolfenbüttel), schassan@hab.de
* Malte Rehbein (Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg),
malte.rehbein@uni-wuerzburg.de
* Bernhard Assmann (Hochschulbibliothekszentrum des Landes
Nordrhein-Westfalen, Cologne), as@ba.tuxomania.net

Dates:

30. November 2009: Abstract Submission Deadline
30. April 2010: Paper Submission Deadline

Kind regards,
Christiane


-- Christiane Fritze
The German Text Archive
Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities
Jaegerstr. 22/23
10117 Berlin

phone: +49 (0)30 20370 523
email: fritze (at) bbaw (dot) de
http://www.deutsches-textarchiv.de

IDE: http://www.i-d-e.de

NEH Summer Institute for College and University Professors

Cultural Hybridities:

Christians, Muslims & Jews in the Medieval Mediterranean

NEH Summer Institute for College and University Professors

July 4-July 31, 2010 . Barcelona (Spain)

Applications are now being taken for the 2010 Mediterranean Studies NEH
Summer Institute, to be held in Barcelona, Spain. This is the second
four-week Summer Institute for University and College Professors organized
by The Mediterranean Seminar.

Faculty will include Judith Cohen (York University), Steven Epstein
(University of Kansas), Harvey Hames (Ben Gurion University), Peregrine
Horden (Royal Holloway), Cynthia Robinson (Cornell), and Daniel Selden (UC
Santa Cruz), as well as co-Directors, Brian A. Catlos and Sharon Kinoshita,
and selected Spanish scholars.

Our twenty-four participants will be university and college faculty who
teach American post-secondary students. Applicants of all ranks and all
levels of institution are welcome, from all relevant Arts, Humanities and
Social Sciences disciplines. Two places are reserved for qualified graduate
students (ABD/ final stages of writing strongly preferred).

Please review the information and the application instructions on the
Institute website, www.mediterraneanseminar.org. The application deadline is
March 2, 2010.

"Fear and Loathing: Encountering the Other in Anglo-Saxon England"

The Anglo Saxon Studies Colloquium

announces the CFP for

The Sixth Annual ASSC Graduate Student Conference

"Fear and Loathing: Encountering the Other in Anglo-Saxon England"

Harvard University

Friday, February 19, 2010

Deadline for CFP: Monday, December 1, 2009.

Harvard University, in partnership with the Anglo-Saxon Studies
Colloquium invites submissions for the Sixth Annual Graduate Student
Conference of the ASSC.

The theme of this year's conference will explore various instances of
fear and loathing in the literatures and cultures of early medieval
Northern Europe (Anglo-Saxon, Celtic and Scandinavian). This could
include fears and anxieties produced by encounters with cultural
outsiders as well as internal conflicts within a single society or
individual.

Possible topics include:
--Passions and emotions in Anglo-Saxon literature and culture
--Monsters, Demons and Satan
--Queernesses in Anglo-Saxon literature and culture
--Colonial Others
--Cultural encounters in Northern Europe
--Apocalyptic literature
--Nightmares and dream-visions
--Heretics and sinners
--Shame, disgust and abjection
--Exile
--Maps and concepts of space

Please submit abstracts of no more than 250 words for 20-minute
papers by December 1, 2009. Please include your email address, street
address, phone number and audio-visual requirements. You may submit
abstracts via email to HarvardAngloSaxon@gmail.com

Best wishes,
Alexis Becker, Laura Wang, Kasi Conley, John Radway and Sara Gorman
(conference organizers)

Sponsored by: The Harvard Committee on Medieval Studies and the ASSC

****
For other ASSC events and for further updates on this conference,
please visit the ASSC website at www.columbia.edu/cu/assc.

Hugoye CFP

Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies, available electronically and in-print, is seeking submissions for the 2011 issues. Please send papers to George Kiraz at gkiraz@gorgiaspress.com. Please put in the subject line "Hugoye Journal Submission".

Saturday, November 7, 2009

James of Edessa

I've placed online an English translation of the table of years and events in the Chronicle of the Syriac writer James of Edessa. This continues the table in the Chronicle of Eusebius of Caesarea from where that ends, in 325 AD, down to the early Islamic period ca. 700 AD. Naturally it focuses on eastern events, and includes one of the earliest mentions of Mohammed.

The material is here:

http://www.tertullian.org/fathers/index.htm#James_of_Edessa_Chronicle

The original publication of this material was frankly a mess. I've written a preface explaining a bit more clearly what we're looking at. I've also uploaded the translator's preface, and also translated the Latin preface by the same editor to his publication of a Latin translation some years later. In addition I've added fragments from Elias of Nisibis scattered across the publications.

All this material is public domain, so please help yourselves, do whatever you like with it, place copies online and so on.

Other free material by the fathers can be found in the same collection:

http://www.tertullian.org/fathers/index.htm

If you want to support the work of the site, a CDROM is available for $37:

http://www.tertullian.org/fathers/all_the_fathers_on_cd.htm

Funds from sales are currently going to pay translators to do the homilies on Ezechiel of Origen, the Gospel problems and solutions of Eusebius, and a 13th century catalogue of Arabic Christian literature by Abu'l Barakat which should help us see what patristic material got into that language. None of these have been translated before.

All the best,

Roger Pearse

XLIII Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies

Subject: Earlier deadline! Byzantium behind the Scenes: Power and Subversion

XLIII Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies
University of Birmingham
27-29 March 2010

Byzantium behind the Scenes: Power and Subversion

www.iaa.bham. ac.uk/conference s/byzantine


CALL FOR COMMUNICATIONS
The 43rd Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies welcomes communication papers (maximum 13 minutes) to be delivered during the symposium. Communications are expected to make an original contribution to any field of Byzantine studies. The abstracts will be published in the Bulletin of the Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies. Especially welcome are communications on the theme of the symposium. As usual, the organising committee will read all proposals. Please send proposals for communications (title and 150-word abstract) from now until 7 February 2010 at the latest to Dr Dimiter Angelov, Institute of Archaeology and Antiquity, Arts Building, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK, d.angelov@bham. ac.uk.

Deliverers of communication papers should register for the symposium either by submitting a registration form or electronically (see the symposium website).

Canadian Society for Syriac Studies

Canadian Society for Syriac Studies

University of Toronto

Annual Symposium IX

The Armenian and Syriac Symbiosis

Saturday November 14, 2009

Universityof Toronto: Earth Sciences Centre

5 Bancroft AvenueRoom 142

9:00—9:30

Annual General Meeting— For members of the CSSS only

9:45—10:00

Welcoming Messages:

Amir Harrak, President of the CSSS, University of Toronto

Arman Akopian, Armenian Chargé d’Affaires, Ottawa

10:00—10:45

The Residual Syriac Presence in the Armenian Translation of the Bible
Claude Cox, McMaster Divinity College

10:45—11:30

“I have traded your plot of paradise for a barren desert” (Book of Prayers, 21)

Pablo F. Argarate, University of St Michael's College

11:30—12:15

Literary Interactions between Syriac and Armenian

Robert Thomson, Oxford University

12:15—1:00 Break, Refreshments

1:00—1:45

Syriac into Armenian: The Translations and their Translators

Edward G. Mathews, Jr., St. Nersess Armenian Seminary, NY
1:45—2:00

On the Shorter Syriac-Armenian Word List in Ms. Yale Syriac 9

Hidemi Takahashi, University of Tokyo

2:00—2:30

Babylon, an Armenian-Language Syriac Periodical:

Some Remarks on Structure and Language

Arman Akopian, University of Yerevan, Armenia
2:30 Concluding Remarks

CFP: Medieval Urban Life: New Ideas and New Contexts

CFP: Medieval Urban Life: New Ideas and New Contexts

8th Annual Graduate Conference on Medieval
Studies, Purdue University, West
Lafayette, Indiana, Feb. 5-6, 2010.


Comitatus, the Purdue Medieval Studies Student Organization, is pleased to
announce its eighth annual Conference on Medieval Studies to be held on
February
5-6th, 2010. The theme of this year’s conference is "Medieval Urban Life:
New
Ideas and New Contexts," and it will feature a keynote address from Lawrence
Clopper, Professor Emeritus at Indiana University and author of _Drama,
Play,
and Game: English Festive Culture in the Medieval and Early Modern Period_.
We invite submissions of abstracts for papers on any area of medieval urban
culture and history. Possible themes include but are not limited to:

1. The medieval city in literature
2. Guilds and local politics
3. The medieval city in history and architecture
4. Daily urban life
5. Festivals, fairs, and plays
6. Urban ballads and minstrelsy
7. Social change in developing towns
8. Siege and warfare
9. Urban economics
10. Importation and trade
11. Guildmasters and apprentices
12. Urban childhood
13. Urban planning and excavation
14. Statues and monuments
15. Justice and law enforcement

Please submit an abstract of approximately 200 words to jctompki@purdue.eduby
November 15th, 2009.

Regards,
Chad Judkins
Comitatus Vice-President
Doctoral Student
English Medieval Literature
Heavilon 209/SC G025
An email to the Textual Criticism list from James Snapp is worth sharing hither and yon:

I've been delving into the Old Latin and early Vulgate evidence, and found some good (or at least good-looking) online resources. Instead of links, here are key-words to take you to them (at Google Books or Archive.org or both), with descriptions of what you will find.

Wordsworth White Novum Testamentum Latine: several volumes of WW's works on the Old Latin and Vulgate.

Abbott par palimpsestorum dublinensium: T. K. Abbott's presentation of the Greek Codex Z (presented in printed uncials to replicate the arrangement of text on the MS-pages), with two pages from Old Latin Codex Palatinus (containing Matthew 13:13-23) as an appendix.

Lawlor Chapters Book Mulling: "Chapters on the Book of Mulling," a nice review of the Book of Mulling with plenty of information about other Insular (Irish) Gospels-MSS.

John Stuart Book of Deer: the introduction tells you more than you will ever need to know about the background of the Book of Deer. The text is presented, with numerous Plates.

Hopkins-James Celtic Gospels: an excellent introduction to the Old Latin and early Vulgate materials in general, and to the St. Teilo/Chad Gospels in particular.

Lindisfarne Rushworth: a two-volume transcription of the contents of the Lindisfarne Gospels and the Rushworth Gospels.

Abbott Evangeliorum Antehieronymiana: T. K. Abbott's not-entirely-reliable but still serviceable collation of Codex Ussheriani, Codex Amiatinus, the Book of Kells, and the Book of Durrow.

Sullivan Book of Kells: a nice profile of the Book of Kells, with Plates in full color.

Buchanan Corbeiensis: an introduction to Codex Corbeiensis (ff2), with a transcription formatted to approximate the appearance of the text on the MS-pages.

Belsheim Codex Colbertinus: a no-frills transcription.

Also, if you have a high-speed internet connection, you should be able to view the "Turning the Pages" presentation of selected pages from the Lindisfarne Gospels at the British Library website, and the St. Chad Gospels (also called the St. Teilo Gospels) at the website of Lichfield Cathedral.

Also, some links to standard works on the Vulgate and OL are at Michael Marlowe's Bible-researcher site.

Also, if you go to the Mandragore website, if you type "Latin 9389" into the "Cote" box, you can view some pages from the Echternach Gospels.

Remember to type carefully; the search-box at Google Books can be rather unforgiving, and the search-box at Archive.org is even more so.

Apologies

My apologies for the silence. There've been several things that I've missed posting, and I deeply regret that. It's just been busy here. But at least for today, regular posting resumes.