For starters, this link takes you to a very basic Book History Timetable, part of the Book Information Website now maintained by Cor Knops; another site looks specifically at renaissance printing history.
General introductory information about Your Old Books comes from a text originally written by the late Peter M. VanWingen (The Library of Congress) for people who (unexpectedly and without preparation) find themselves in possession of what appear to be old and unusual books and related materials.
This link takes you to information about, and the current schedule of, Philadelphia's book collectors' club, The Philobiblon Club, a group of which Traister is currently Program Chair.
This is the current schedule for Penn's Workshop on the History of the Book (also called the Workshop on the History of Material Texts).
Here is the website for the Washington Area Group for Print Culture Studies.
The program for the Gutenberg 2000, a conference on the History of the Book -- 8th Annual Conference of SHARP 2000, and the SOCRATES Symposium (3-8 July 2000, Mainz, Germany)
Miscellaneous materials of interest include:
Some more or less recent book reviews include:
Willie Sutton thought banks a good place to visit if you happened to be interested in money. The same line of reasoning suggests that libraries -- e.g., Penn's library, as well as some of the other libraries and library resources that Traister lists -- are good places in which to look for books and other evidences of the history of printing. This means going physically to literal libraries as well as eyeballing virtual ones on the screen (although the latter category [virtual libraries, their exhibitions -- the link takes you to Smithsonian's site, Library and Archival Exhibitions on the Web -- contents, and special resources] is growing by leaps and bounds even as Traister types and revises these evanescent electron-like words; see, e.g., a site announced in March of 1998, Early Printed Collections: British Library Reader Services and Collection Development).
Another useful source is the Home Page of the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading,
& Publishing (SHARP), which provides access to many book-history
sites, and whose SHARP-L archives are searchable back through 1992 at .
See also The
Reading Experience Database (RED) (Open University)
See, in addition, such sites as: For the history of libraries, see Library History
(PICK Quality Internet Rersources); see also the site created by the Library Association (UK)'s Library
History Group. A Swedish site (with some material in English) has been
mounted by The Library
Museum in Boraas, Sweden.
"Treasures from Europe's National Libraries" is a web-based exhibition
now accessible from several servers: Brown University mounts an Interpreting
Ancient Manuscripts Web.
The University of Pennsylvania Libraries hold microfilms of
European manuscripts; a list is available through the Library's
website.
A French site for the study of paleography, complete with exams, was
originally divided in two: here is the
first. The second part (orinally located at
http://www.arisitum.org/adihaf/paleo.htm, a site that has now shut down
for financial reasons) may be sought through Stephane Pouyllau's
website and through his principal paleography page.
Shirlee A. Murphy has mounted a Catalogue of
Illuminated Manuscript Facsimiles at the Michigan State University
Libraries (my italics--DT). (Michigan State University, located in
East Lansing, is a different place from the University of Michigan,
located in Ann Arbor--a point worth remarking, as someone might notice who
is located at Penn, not Penn State.)
Summary of a
conference on the encoding of descriptions for medieval manuscripts
(2-3 November 1996, Studley Priory, Oxfordshire, chaired by Peter Robinson
and Hope Mayo)
Numerous additional sources of information about books and their history
can be found on the web. These include, in addition to Traister's own
links to libraries and book sources (i.e., for purchase), a variety
of institutionally- and personally-maintained pages, among them:
Traister's syllabi for courses in this topic include
You can
send Traister e-mail concerning this page at
traister@pobox.upenn.edu
No doubt, they do not
recall Humbert Wolfe's lines on the topic (misquoted here from
memory):
You cannot hope to bribe or twist
One notes, too, that this format began to flourish,
apparently, as soon as the Puritans left for Massachusetts.
Thank God! the English
journalist.
Considering what the man will do
unbribed, there is no
reason to.3.
4.
Does the web address for the preceding
four sites ["xs4all"] mean "access" or "excess"? Both possibilities seem
equally appropriate.
"The Census of Italian 16th
Century Editions EDIT 16 aims at documenting Italian books printed during
the 16th century and at reviewing the countrywide heritage. It includes
editions printed in Italy between 1501 and 1600, in any language, and
editions printed abroad in Italian. At the present time the Census is
receiving input from some 1200 Italian libraries, the Biblioteca statale
della Repubblica San Marino and some libraries belonging to the State of
the Vatican City, among which the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana. Besides
the titles, EDIT 16 also contains information about the authors,
publishers, uniform titles, printers' devices and their digitalized
pictures. It therefore can be used for direct searches on authors,
printers and printers' devices (e.g. printers who used a given sign or a
given device, or those who worked in a given place and in a given year, or
the devices having the same motto, etc.)."
5.