Project Description

Printing R-Evolution 1450-1500. Fifty Years that Changed Europe

How

How

How can we track the circulation of ideas and knowledge? By tracking the movement of the books which carried them. How do we track the movement of the books? By tracking the times and places of the people who owned them: we call it provenance research. We gathered data from 50,000 books; in itself an extraordinary number, but 450,000 more await our investigation.

How do we know what we know? Specialist skills, technology, and international collaboration.

‘Big data’ in provenance research is only as effective as the quality of the data itself. In fact, the work necessary to reach this level of historical detail is huge.

It requires the specialist skills of scholars with the palaeographical knowledge to be able to read ownership inscriptions in Latin, Greek, and any European vernacular language; who can date and locate a binding or a decoration style to 15th-century Italy, or 16th-century Germany, or 17th-century England; who can identify a coat of arms; who can distinguish different types of marginal annotations, from corrections, comments, to censorship.

Evidence & skills to decipher it

Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek: Bartolus De Saxoferrato, Super Prima Parte Codicis, Venice: Nicolaus Jenson, 25 Apr. 1478
Evidence: Printed in Venice but with contemporary German-style decoration and coat of arms of the Gessel family of Augsburg
Skill: History of illumination and heraldry, to identify coat of arms
Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek: Eike von Repgow, Sachsenspiegel: Landrecht (Saxon custom law), Augsburg: Anna Rügerin, 1484
Evidence: Printed in Augsburg, bound in Indersdorf, as shown by the impressions on the binding
Skill: History of binding
Venice, BN Marciana: Hortus sanitatis, [Strasbourg: Johann Prüss, not after 21 Oct. 1497]
Evidence: Printed in Strasbourg, but annotated by an Italian hand of the beginning of the 16th century
Skill: Palaeography, the study of historical handwriting

Technology

Provenance research requires the development of an appropriate database system to not only record but also to retrieve intelligently the valuable data. One which enters into dialogue with other systems.

Incunabula Short Title Catalogue (ISTC)

Created and curated by the British Library, and powered by CERL. An inventory of editions, with location of the copies
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Gesamtkatalog der Wiegendrucke (GW)

Curated by the State Library of Berlin. The typographical analysis of each edition
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Typenrepertorium

Curated by the State Library of Berlin. The analysis of type forms
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Material Evidence in Incunabula (MEI) database

Created by Alex Jahnke (DCG Göttingen University) for Cristina Dondi and the 15cBOOKTRADE project, and powered by CERL. The story of each copy
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TEXT-inc

Created and powered by the Bodleian Library of Oxford, and curated by the 15cBOOKTRADE project. The content of each edition
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15cILLUSTRATION

Created by the Visual Geometry Group (University of Oxford) for the 15cBOOKTRADE. Image-matching: the technology that enhances the study of the circulation of images in books
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15cVISUALIZATION

Created by the Oxford e-Research Centre for the 15cBOOKTRADE project. The Visualization of the journey of each book over time and space
[currently unavailable]

Atlas of Early Printing

Created and curated by Gregory Prickman (Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington) and the University of Iowa
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International Team Work

Provenance research necessarily relies on extensive collaboration, and a vast logistical plan which coordinates the integration of data produced by hundreds of different libraries into one searchable database. The 15cBOOKTRADE Project coordinates the work of a very large number of people, over several years.

It has taken an amazing collaborative effort and network to achieve our results. We have demonstrated that the humanities can work with big data, producing results of very high quality:

Libraries which contribute to MEI
Editors working in MEI
MEI Statistics

Virtual Exhibition