Cataloguing medieval manuscripts through the history of Oxford's college libraries

The history and methods of cataloguers of the medieval manuscripts in Oxford's libraries represent a centuries-old institutional balancing act between detailed study and basic accessibility. Until the second half of the twentieth century, catalogues rarely include a clear statement of methodolo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dunning, ANJ
Other Authors: Rundle, D
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Oxford Bibliographical Society 2024
_version_ 1817932443065253888
author Dunning, ANJ
author2 Rundle, D
author_facet Rundle, D
Dunning, ANJ
author_sort Dunning, ANJ
collection OXFORD
description The history and methods of cataloguers of the medieval manuscripts in Oxford's libraries represent a centuries-old institutional balancing act between detailed study and basic accessibility. Until the second half of the twentieth century, catalogues rarely include a clear statement of methodology. Many scholars use them as representing the state of knowledge of surviving medieval works, illustration, and provenance; yet it is rarely made clear how hastily some have been assembled or how dramatically approaches have evolved over the centuries. Digital catalogues have the potential to make this history more transparent, but they also risk obscuring the provenance of catalogues.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T08:19:36Z
format Book section
id oxford-uuid:0c997a95-2aa5-4ec8-828e-27059698d92c
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-09T03:37:59Z
publishDate 2024
publisher Oxford Bibliographical Society
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:0c997a95-2aa5-4ec8-828e-27059698d92c2024-12-06T13:48:49ZCataloguing medieval manuscripts through the history of Oxford's college librariesBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_1843uuid:0c997a95-2aa5-4ec8-828e-27059698d92cEnglishSymplectic ElementsOxford Bibliographical Society2024Dunning, ANJRundle, DWoudhuysen, HThe history and methods of cataloguers of the medieval manuscripts in Oxford's libraries represent a centuries-old institutional balancing act between detailed study and basic accessibility. Until the second half of the twentieth century, catalogues rarely include a clear statement of methodology. Many scholars use them as representing the state of knowledge of surviving medieval works, illustration, and provenance; yet it is rarely made clear how hastily some have been assembled or how dramatically approaches have evolved over the centuries. Digital catalogues have the potential to make this history more transparent, but they also risk obscuring the provenance of catalogues.
spellingShingle Dunning, ANJ
Cataloguing medieval manuscripts through the history of Oxford's college libraries
title Cataloguing medieval manuscripts through the history of Oxford's college libraries
title_full Cataloguing medieval manuscripts through the history of Oxford's college libraries
title_fullStr Cataloguing medieval manuscripts through the history of Oxford's college libraries
title_full_unstemmed Cataloguing medieval manuscripts through the history of Oxford's college libraries
title_short Cataloguing medieval manuscripts through the history of Oxford's college libraries
title_sort cataloguing medieval manuscripts through the history of oxford s college libraries
work_keys_str_mv AT dunninganj cataloguingmedievalmanuscriptsthroughthehistoryofoxfordscollegelibraries