library - Merton College Library in Oxford, Oxfordshire
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This summer we 'retired' our full visitors' book and started a beautiful new one made by conservator and binder Victoria Stevens. It's the inside that really matters however. Leafing through the old volume I noticed the first entry was made by someone from Brno, Czech Republic and the last by a group of Merton students. In between, the entries reveal a variety of reasons for coming to Oxford or to Merton (to attend a wedding or graduation, to keep a hospital appointment, to ...propose marriage, to study, to have a family vacation). We're happy to welcome visitors and to share the special atmosphere of this library. All those comments and records of visits will become part of the library, as the old visitors' book will be added to the archives. There is still time to visit Merton this summer! see the website for information https://www.merton.ox.ac.uk/library-an/visiting-the-library. See more
This summer one of Merton’s books has returned temporarily to an earlier home for an exhibition focussing on the life and work of previous owner Prince-Bishop of Würzburg, Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn. The volume of sermons of Jacques de Vitry, printed in Antwerp in 1575, retains its distinctive binding made for Echter’s library. The alum tawed pigskin binding bears Echter’s coat of arms, and the fore-edge is stamped with the author, title, and Echter’s ownership inscriptio...n. Echter’s Hofbibliothek was plundered by the Swedish army in the Thirty Years War, and his books survive today in a number of libraries. The exhibition, ‘Julius Echter (1573-1617). Der umstrittene Fürstbischof. Eine Ausstellung nach 400 Jahren‘ can be seen at the Museum am Dom in Würzburg until 17 September 2017. The exhibition presents the religious, social, and political situation in Franconia in the late 16th century and early 17th century. See more
The summer exhibition in the Merton Library celebrates the re-cataloguing of our Hebrew books onto SOLO by Dr Rahel Fronda this year. Many of them were sent to the college as gifts from Fellow Robert Huntington (c1637-1701) in 1673, while he was chaplain to the Levant Company in Aleppo. Although not large in number, Huntington's books at Merton include examples of Hebrew printing from the Ottoman empire. An example here: David Kimhi's Sefer Mikhlol, printed in Constantinople in 1532-43.
Last weekend Merton College hosted the second Teaching the Codex symposium. Thanks go to Dr Mary Boyle and Dr Tristan Franklinos for organising a great day. Thanks also to all speakers and helpers. Themes included Outreach with medieval manuscripts, pedagogical approaches to music manuscripts, teaching art history & manuscript studies, and Continental and Anglophone approaches to teaching palaeography. But don't feel badly if you missed it, because Dr Colleen Curran has produced a Storify summary of tweets during the day http://tinyurl.com/mhgqay3 Of course there was a visit to the Merton Upper LIbrary too!
We're back for Trinity Term and highlighting a recent article by Seb Falk of Girten College, Cambridge. He suggests a link between a 14th-century treatise and the mid-14th-century astrolabe-equatorium which is one of the stars of Merton Library's small remaining collection of medieval astronomical instruments. Donated by fellows of the college, these instruments could be borrowed to aid in study and in making astronomical observations. Dr Falk's article appears in Sciamus vol. 17 (2016). (http://www.sciamvs.org/2016.html
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Locality: Oxford, Oxfordshire
Phone: +44 1865 276380
Address: Merton St OX1 4JD Oxford
Website: http://www.merton.ox.ac.uk
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