Description

Book Synopsis
2022 ILAB Breslauer Prize for Bibliography - First Prize Winner This catalogue of the substantial collection of the incunabula at the University of Glasgow Library, concentrates, in addition to the usual data, on the copy-specific aspects of the book such as provenance, use, binding and decoration. The University of Glasgow Library has one of the richest rare book collections in the UK outside London, Oxford, Cambridge and Manchester. There are 1042 incunabula (including many unique items). As witnesses of the first print revolution, these books are fascinating on many levels - as innovative survivors of the technological shift from manuscript to print, as late medieval texts available in duplicate to a commercial mass market for the first time, andas cultural artefacts containing over 500 years of ownership history. A well-presented catalogue is the key to accessing this rich resource for a wide range of historians and researchers. A further 64 itncunabula in other Glasgowmuseums and libraries are also included. Bibliographically, incunabula have been well documented. The aim of the Glasgow catalogue is to concentrate on the unique aspects of the books. A short-title catalogue approachis taken in providing enough information to identify each edition (with reference to standard bibliographical works such as ISTC) presented in author order. The main focus of each record is on the copy specific features of the book, including full details of provenance (ownership), evidence of use from annotation and other marks, binding, decoration and any other idiosyncratic features (such as hand-colouring of woodcuts or manuscript waste used in endpapers.

Trade Review
This two-volume folio catalogue of the nearly 2,000 incunables held in different Glasgow Museums and Libraries is not just very beautiful but also a handy reference book. [...] The printed catalogue [...] can serve generations of incunable scholars in its present form for centuries to come. * Journal of the Edinburgh Bibliographical Society *
The scholarship is meticulous, and the methodology is exemplary. * Library & Information History *

A Catalogue of Fifteenth-Century Printed Books in

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    A Hardback by Jack Baldwin

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      Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
      Publication Date: 19/06/2020
      ISBN13: 9781843844679, 978-1843844679
      ISBN10: 1843844672

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      2022 ILAB Breslauer Prize for Bibliography - First Prize Winner This catalogue of the substantial collection of the incunabula at the University of Glasgow Library, concentrates, in addition to the usual data, on the copy-specific aspects of the book such as provenance, use, binding and decoration. The University of Glasgow Library has one of the richest rare book collections in the UK outside London, Oxford, Cambridge and Manchester. There are 1042 incunabula (including many unique items). As witnesses of the first print revolution, these books are fascinating on many levels - as innovative survivors of the technological shift from manuscript to print, as late medieval texts available in duplicate to a commercial mass market for the first time, andas cultural artefacts containing over 500 years of ownership history. A well-presented catalogue is the key to accessing this rich resource for a wide range of historians and researchers. A further 64 itncunabula in other Glasgowmuseums and libraries are also included. Bibliographically, incunabula have been well documented. The aim of the Glasgow catalogue is to concentrate on the unique aspects of the books. A short-title catalogue approachis taken in providing enough information to identify each edition (with reference to standard bibliographical works such as ISTC) presented in author order. The main focus of each record is on the copy specific features of the book, including full details of provenance (ownership), evidence of use from annotation and other marks, binding, decoration and any other idiosyncratic features (such as hand-colouring of woodcuts or manuscript waste used in endpapers.

      Trade Review
      This two-volume folio catalogue of the nearly 2,000 incunables held in different Glasgow Museums and Libraries is not just very beautiful but also a handy reference book. [...] The printed catalogue [...] can serve generations of incunable scholars in its present form for centuries to come. * Journal of the Edinburgh Bibliographical Society *
      The scholarship is meticulous, and the methodology is exemplary. * Library & Information History *

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