Medieval History
Internet Archive reaches Two Million Free Texts
The Internet Archive has announced that with the posting of the medieval manuscript,
Homiliary on Gospels from Easter to first Sunday of Advent, they have now reached their 2,000,000th free digital text. Internet Archive has been scanning books and making them available for researchers, historians, scholars, people with disabilities, and the general public for free on archive.org since 2005.
?This 1,000 year old book which has only been seen by a select few people, can, with the technology of today, be shared with millions tomorrow," said Robert Miller, Director of Books of the Internet Archive. "Selecting this title for the 2 millionth text is a fitting tribute to the team of scanners who have been carefully working for the past 5 years.?
The Homiliary manuscript was copied on parchment by at least three different scribes at the important medieval Abbey of St. Martin in Tours less than 100 years after having been composed by Heiric of Auxerre and is the oldest known copy of Heiric?s original text. The manuscript was scanned from the University of Toronto's Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (PIMS) Library collection.
Jonathan Bengtson, Director of Library and Archives, University of St. Michael's College in the University of Toronto and Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, said that ?this rare and beautiful treasure from the first millennium of Christianity, is one of the gems in the renowned collection of the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. The Institute is dedicated to transmitting the inheritance of the Middle Ages to new generations; to deepening our understanding of the life and ideals of Western culture in the time of its first youth."
The University of Toronto has been one of the major partners of the Internet Archive, digitizing books at the rate of over 500 pages an hour, 14 hours a day, 5 days a week. The manuscript and out of copyriight books held at the PIMS Library will be scanned and added to the Internet Archive in the coming year.
Bengtson, one of the main coordinators of the project, notes that the Internet Archive is extremely useful to medieval scholars. "Beyond simply wider and easier access to the digital texts," he explains, "the library is actively collaborating internationally with efforts to build digital tools to exploit computing power in textual, linguistic and visual analyses of digital books and manuscripts."
Some titles of interest to medievalist include:
Homiliary on Gospels from Easter to first Sunday of Advent
Chronicles of the Crusades
A Mediaeval burglary
The Battle Abbey roll, with some account of the Norman lineages
The Internet Archive is a nonprofit digital library based in San Francisco that specializes in offering broad public access to digitized and born-digital books, music, movies and Web pages. It partners with the University of Toronto and over 150 libraries and universities around the world to create a freely accessible archive of texts representing a wide range texts which include non-fiction and fiction books, research and academic texts, popular books, children's books and historical texts.
Click here to go to the Internet ArchiveSource: Internet Archive
-
The Walters Art Museum Receives $265,000 Neh Grant To Digitize Over 100 Flemish Manuscripts
The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) has granted the Walters Art Museum $265,000 for a three-year project to digitize, catalog and distribute 113 illuminated medieval manuscripts from Flanders, present-day northeastern France and Belgium. This...
-
New Shakespeare Archive Launched
The Shakespeare Quartos Archive has been officially launched this week with a complete digital collection of rare early editions of Hamlet. For the first time, all 32 existing quarto copies of the play held by participating UK and US institutions are...
-
Scholarship On Ancient And Medieval Middle East Becomes Free Digitally
A wealth of material that documents the ancient Middle East has become available through a new, free online service at the Oriental Institute. ¨ The material comes from the extensive collection at the institute, which is a major publisher of important...
-
Centre For E-research Seminar: Digital Transformations Of Research And Styles Of Knowing
Digital Transformations of Research and Styles of KnowingRalph Schroeder, Senior Research Fellow, Oxford Internet InstituteEric T. Meyer, Research Fellow, Oxford Internet InstituteTuesday 17 January, 6.15pm, Anatomy Museum. Followed by drinks. In recent...
-
3rd Annual Lawrence J. Schoenberg Symposium On Manuscript Studies In The Digital Age
3rd ANNUAL LAWRENCE J. SCHOENBERG SYMPOSIUM ON MANUSCRIPT STUDIES IN THE DIGITAL AGE November 19-20, 2010 Cantus Scriptus: Technologies of Medieval Song In partnership with the Rare Book Department of the Free Library of Philadelphia and the Department...
Medieval History