Hill Museum and Manuscript Library: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 20:03, 25 September 2012

Description

Started in 1965 at St. John's University, the Hill Museum and Monastic Library represents one of the largest and most comprehensive archives of medieval and renaissance sources in the world. It has more than 90,000 manuscripts on microfilm (ca. 30 million pages), representing holdings from Germany and Austria (including the National Library in Vienna), Sweden, Switzerland, Spain, Portugal, England, Malta, Ethiopia and smaller collections from other countries. Virtually every subject of knowledge--theology, philosophy, law (canon and civil), music, art, science and medicine, the mechanical arts and the liberal arts--is reflected in this vast collection. Languages include Latin, Greek, Syriac, Ethiopic, Arabic, Armenian, and dozens others.

Many of their manuscripts are available online. In association with the Electronic Access to Medieval Manuscripts Project, HMML assembled an international team to develop the first electronic manuscript cataloguing standards for document descriptions in both MARC and SGML format. HMML's online catalog, developed in collaboration with Columbia University and the University of California, Berkeley, incorporates these standards. An initial catalog listing of all of HMML microfilmed collections was made available to the public online in December 2000.

In September 2012 HMML announced the development of vHMML, an online environment for manuscript studies.

Staff members keep active blogs. Notable is Adam McCollum's blog, which documents interesting discoveries made in the digitized manuscripts, as they are catalogued.