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Dear friends,
I am very pleased to announce that the reconstruction of Otto Ege, "Fifty Original Leaves from Medieval Manuscripts" no. 46 that was undertaken by my students at the Simmons University School of Library and Information Science this fall is now online!
If you have one of these Ege portfolios in your collection, you will find your leaf no. 46 in this reconstruction (with the exception of three collections from whom we hope to acquire images soon). Our analysis of the recovered portion of the liturgy suggests that this Book of Hours was made for the Use of Rouen or Coutances, although because the evidence is incomplete we cannot say this with absolute certainty (the recovered portion of the manuscript includes the antiphon and chapter reading for None of the Hours of the Virgin as well as seven of nine Matins Responsories for the Office of the Dead, all of which combine to suggest the Use). You may wish to update your metadata accordingly.
This is the sixth Ege reconstruction undertaken by Simmons University students in my annual course, "The Medieval Manuscript from Charlemagne to Gutenberg." You can read about these fragmentology projects and the Ege-related work being undertaken by other scholars in this (updated) blogpost:
if you are interested in working on leaves in your own collection to determine if they may have an Ege provenance, you may wish to refer to my Ege Field Guide, a shared folder in which you will find images of more than 100 dismembered associated with Ege as well as a table that amalgamates codicological data from my own field work with data from Scott Gwara's monograph, Otto Ege's Manuscripts:
The image filenames in this folder incorporate the Gwara handlist number, a short title, and the number of lines per page, to facilitate discoverability. For example, if you have a 27-line breviary leaf in your collection, searching for "27ll" in the Dropbox search box will result in four leaves, one of which is from a breviary. Alternatively, you could search for "breviary," which returns eight leaves, one of which has 27 lines per page. You can then use the data table to confirm if the dimensions and date/place of origin are a match for the leaf in question.
Wishing you happy hunting and all the best in the New Year -
Lisa
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Lisa Fagin Davis
Executive Director
Medieval Academy of America
6 Beacon St., Suite 500
Boston, Massachusetts 02108
Phone: 617 491-1622
Fax: 617 492-3303
Email: LFD@TheMedievalAcademy.org