Friday, November 25, 2011

Thierry Delcourt: in memoriam


Photo © Philippe Savouret

Thierry Delcourt: in memoriam


With profound regret we learned of the death of Thierry Delcourt, Director of the Department of Manuscripts at the Bibliothèque nationale de France, on November 22.  The cause was brain cancer; he was 52 years old.

The Digital Library of Medieval Manuscripts at Johns Hopkins could not have had a better friend and collaborator than Thierry Delcourt. It is no exaggeration to say that without his vision and generosity, our site would not have the wealth of manuscripts of the Roman de la Rose it now contains.  

This is how it happened. In 2006, Winston Tabb, Dean of the Sheridan Libraries at Johns Hopkins, and I visited Thierry Delcourt, the newly appointed Director of Manuscripts, in his office on the Rue de Richelieu.  We had come to Paris in hopes of obtaining imaging rights to ten or twelve key Rose manuscripts in the BnF. When I explained our project, and showed him the site, Thierry smiled and asked if we wouldn’t rather have the image rights for all the Rose manuscripts in France!  Quickly calculating how much of a grant we would need to make this happen, we agreed that Hopkins would raise the necessary funds for the project, while the BnF would assume responsibility for the digital imaging of the 140+ publically-available Rose codices in France. And so began a wonderful collaboration born out of Thierry Delcourt’s visionary conception for the role of the BnF in the twenty-first century.

His vision grew naturally from his own training in and love for medieval French literature.  Trained as a paleographer-archivist at the prestigious École des Chartes in Paris, he specialized in manuscripts of the prose Tristan cycle, beginning with his thesis: Le Roman de Tristan en prose. Édition critique et commentaire de l’épisode du Château des Pucelles (1983). He subsequently published other books on the Prose Tristan, on Arthurian literature, bestiaries, crusade chronicles, and the tradition in France of early popular book formats.

Early in his career, Thierry Delcourt distinguished himself as an imaginative and entrepreneurial administrator both in the public and private sector. Appointed Conservator of the Audio-Visual Department at the BnF in 1983, he was recruited into the private sphere as a consultant in systems technology from 1989 to 1992, the year the BnF lured him back to his former post.  In 1995, he became director of the Municipal Library of Troyes, which, under his leadership, became one of the leading media centers in France…even, some feel, one of the most modern and innovative of its kind. In 2006, the BnF appointed him to the post he held until his death this week.  

Fate did not allow us to prolong our partnership with Thierry himself beyond five-and-a-half short, but wonderfully collegial years. With uncanny prescience, however, he leaves as a legacy an extraordinary team in the Department of Manuscripts and its Information Technology section at the BnF with whom we will continue to collaborate bien amicablement thanks to our shared memory of Thierry Delcourt.

Stephen G. Nichols                    November 25, 2011
Johns Hopkins University

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Digital Philology: Call for Submissions

~ Digital Philology: A Journal of Medieval Cultures ~

Call for Submissions, 2013 Open Issue

Digital Philology is a new peer-reviewed journal devoted to the study of medieval vernacular texts and cultures. Founded by Stephen G. Nichols and Nadia R. Altschul, the journal aims to foster scholarship that crosses disciplines upsetting traditional fields of study, national boundaries and periodizations. Digital Philology also encourages both applied and theoretical research that engages with the digital humanities and shows why and how digital resources require new questions, new approaches, and yield radical results.

Beginning in 2012 Digital Philology will have two issues per year, published by the Johns Hopkins University Press. One of the issues will be open to all submissions, while the other one will be guest-edited and revolve around a thematic axis.

Contributions may take the form of a scholarly essay or focus on the study of a particular manuscript. Articles must be written in English, follow the 3rd edition (2008) of the MLA style manual, and be between 5,000 and 7,000 words in length, including footnotes and list of works cited. Quotations in the main text in languages other than English should appear along with their English translation.

Digital Philology is welcoming submissions for its 2013 open issue. Inquiries and submissions (as a Word document attachment) should be sent to dph@jhu.edu, addressed to the Managing Editor (Albert Lloret). Digital Philology will also publish manuscript studies and reviews of books and digital projects. Correspondence regarding manuscript studies may be addressed to Jeanette Patterson at jpatterson09@gmail.com. Correspondence regarding digital projects and publications for review may be addressed to Timothy Stinson at tlstinson@gmail.com.

Editors and Editorial Board

Albert Lloret, Managing Editor, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Jeanette Patterson, Manuscript Studies Editor, Johns Hopkins University
Timothy Stinson, Review Editor, North Carolina State University
Nadia R. Altschul, Executive Editor, Johns Hopkins University

Stephen G. Nichols and Nadia R. Altschul, Founding Editors, Johns Hopkins University

Editorial Board

Tracy Adams, Auckland University
Benjamin Albritton, Stanford University
Nadia R. Altschul, Johns Hopkins University
R. Howard Bloch, Yale University
Kevin Brownlee, University of Pennsylvania
Jacqueline Cerquiglini-Toulet, University of Paris, Sorbonne - Paris IV
Suzanne Conklin Akbari, University of Toronto
Lucie Dolezalova, Charles University, Prague
Alexandra Gillespie, University of Toronto
Jeffrey Hamburger, Harvard University
Daniel Heller-Roazen, Princeton University
Sharon Kinoshita, University of California, Santa Cruz
Joachim Küpper, Free University of Berlin
Deborah McGrady, University of Virginia
Christine McWebb, University of Waterloo
Stephen G. Nichols, Johns Hopkins University
Timothy Stinson, North Carolina State University
Lori Walters, Florida State University

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Manuscript images temporarily unavailable

Due to a problem with the storage system, manuscript images are unavailable for viewing right now and have only been partially available for the last day.  The site is otherwise working.

We apologize for the downtime and hope to have images available again soon. Updates will be added to this post.

Update 1pm: Most ms images are available. Images from recently added ms should be available later today.

Update 4pm: The remaining images will be available in the next few hours.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

New Rose manuscripts and other improvements

We have just updated the Roman de la Rose Digital Library with some exciting new developments. We are proud to announce the addition of three new manuscripts from various German libraries. The new manuscripts include:

  • Ms. lat. qu. 65 from the Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg in Frankfurt. This 14th century manuscript includes 14 miniatures.
  • Cod. gall. 17 from the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek in Munich. This mid-14th century Parisian manuscript is beautifully illustrated with 82 miniatures.
  • Cod. poet et Phil. 6 from the Württembergische Landesbibliothek in Stuttgart. This is a 15th century manuscript with 37 miniatures.
In addition to the three new manuscripts, we are making the following additions and changes to the site:
  • Updated manuscript description for Bodmer 79
  • Corrected the image tagging on the following: Walters 143 (105v), Arsenal 5209 (107r), and Chicago 1380 (102v). Each of these descriptions were changed from "Husband Foolishly Confides in Wife" to "Procreating Couple".
  • Image tagging on Morgan 148, 162r moved to 162v.
  • Corrected numbering of flyleaves on Fr. 25526.
  • Missing links added to French-language home page.
As always, we welcome your comments and suggestions about the library. We hope that these additions and changes will enhance your research.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Site update

Additions:
  • Bibliography entry added for fr. 2438, fr. 1565, fr. 24391, fr. 1573, fr.1569, fr. 1561, and Dijon 526.
  • French translation of fr. 12595 added
Corrections:
  • fr. 12595 and Cox Macro manuscript descriptions had some small issues fixed.
  • fr. 12595 character Covoitise incorrectly identified as Cortoisie in image tagging of 2v.
  • French translation of Douce 195 description fixed.
  • Fixed dimensions in collection data spreadsheet for fr. 12595.
  • Added missing number of illustrations to a text in fr. 378.
Bug fixes:
  •  The smaller and larger buttons now work in the image browser view.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Usage statistics, May 2011

Following are usage statistics for the Roman de la Rose Digital Library for both the current month and cumulative statistics since September 2008.

Usage statistics for the period May 1-31, 2011:
1,738 visits from 71 different countries or territories
The top five countries represented (in order): United States, United Kingdom, France, Spain, Italy
1,213 absolute unique visitors
41% of these visitors have returned to the site
76 of these visitors have used the site 9-14 times
64 of these visitors have used the site 15-25 times
95 of these visitors have used the site 26-50 times
64 of these visitors have used the site 51-100 times
38 of these visitors have used the site 101-200 times
26 of these visitors have used the site more than 200 times
151 of these visits lasted between 10-30 minutes
144 of these visits lasted over 30 minutes

Since the launch of the site on September 2008 through May 31, 2011, the Rose team has noted the following usage statistics:
53,696 visits from 153 different countries or territories
The top five countries represented (in order): United States, France, United Kingdom, Spain, Canada
35,936 absolute unique visitors
34% of these visitors have returned to the site
1,614 of these visitors have used the site 9-14 times
1,469 of these visitors have used the site 15-25 times
1,272 of these visitors have used the site 26-50 times
1,096 of these visitors have used the site 51-100 times
1,090 of these visitors have used the site 101-200 times
1,401 of these visitors have used the site more than 200 times
3,933 of these visits lasted between 10-30 minutes
2,816 of these visits lasted over 30 minutes

Monday, May 9, 2011

Usage statistics, April 2011

Following are usage statistics for the Roman de la Rose Digital Library for both the current month and cumulative statistics since September 2008.

Usage statistics for the period April 1-30, 2011:
1,882 visits from 66 different countries or territories
The top five countries represented (in order): United States, France, United Kingdom, Russia, Spain
1,194 absolute unique visitors
45% of these visitors have returned to the site
64 of these visitors have used the site 9-14 times
99 of these visitors have used the site 15-25 times
111 of these visitors have used the site 26-50 times
31 of these visitors have used the site 51-100 times
163 of these visitors have used the site 101-200 times
41 of these visitors have used the site more than 200 times
143 of these visits lasted between 10-30 minutes
131 of these visits lasted over 30 minutes

Since the launch of the site on September 2008 through April 30, 2011, the Rose team has noted the following usage statistics:
51,958 visits from 149 different countries or territories
The top five countries represented (in order): United States, France, United Kingdom, Spain, Canada
34,887 absolute unique visitors
33% of these visitors have returned to the site
1,538 of these visitors have used the site 9-14 times
1,405 of these visitors have used the site 15-25 times
1,177 of these visitors have used the site 26-50 times
1,032 of these visitors have used the site 51-100 times
1,052 of these visitors have used the site 101-200 times
1,375 of these visitors have used the site more than 200 times
3,782 of these visits lasted between 10-30 minutes
2,672 of these visits lasted over 30 minutes

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Usage statistics, March 2011

Following are usage statistics for the Roman de la Rose Digital Library for both the current month and cumulative statistics since September 2008.

Usage statistics for the period March 1-31, 2011:
2,304 visits from 66 different countries or territories
The top five countries represented (in order): United States, France, United Kingdom, Belgium, Spain
1,533 absolute unique visitors
42% of these visitors have returned to the site
87 of these visitors have used the site 9-14 times
95 of these visitors have used the site 15-25 times
114 of these visitors have used the site 26-50 times
170of these visitors have used the site 51-100 times
77 of these visitors have used the site 101-200 times
15 of these visitors have used the site more than 200 times
185 of these visits lasted between 10-30 minutes
167 of these visits lasted over 30 minutes

Since the launch of the site on September 2008 through March 31, 2011, the Rose team has noted the following usage statistics:
50,076 visits from 149 different countries or territories
The top five countries represented (in order): United States, France, United Kingdom, Spain, Canada
33,842 absolute unique visitors
33% of these visitors have returned to the site
1,474 of these visitors have used the site 9-14 times
1,306 of these visitors have used the site 15-25 times
1,066 of these visitors have used the site 26-50 times
1,001 of these visitors have used the site 51-100 times
889 of these visitors have used the site 101-200 times
1,334 of these visitors have used the site more than 200 times
3,639 of these visits lasted between 10-30 minutes
2,541 of these visits lasted over 30 minutes

Monday, April 11, 2011

Digital Philology: A Journal of Medieval Cultures

Digital Philology: A Journal of Medieval Cultures

Call for Submissions

Digital Philology is a new peer-reviewed journal devoted to the study of medieval vernacular texts and cultures. Founded by Stephen G. Nichols and Nadia R. Altschul, the journal aims to foster scholarship that crosses disciplines upsetting traditional fields of study, national boundaries, and periodizations. Digital Philology also encourages both applied and theoretical research that engages with the digital humanities and shows why and how digital resources require new questions, new approaches, and yield radical results.

Digital Philology will have two issues per year, published by the Johns Hopkins University Press. One of the issues will be open to all submissions, while the other one will be guest-edited and revolve around a thematic axis.

Contributions may take the form of a scholarly essay or focus on the study of a particular manuscript. Articles must be written in English, follow the 3rd edition (2008) of the MLA style manual, and be between 5,000 and 9,000 words in length, including footnotes and list of works cited. Quotations in the main text in languages other than English should appear along with their English translation.

Digital Philology welcomes submissions for the 2012 and 2013 open issues. Inquiries and submissions (as a Word document attachment) should be sent to dph@jhu.edu, addressed to the Editor (Albert Lloret) and Managing Editor (Jeanette Patterson). Digital Philology will also publish reviews of books and digital projects. Correspondence regarding digital projects and publications for review may be addressed to Timothy Stinson at tlstinson@gmail.com.

Editorial Board

Tracy Adams (Auckland University)
Benjamin Albritton (Stanford University)
Nadia R. Altschul (Johns Hopkins University)
R. Howard Bloch (Yale University)
Kevin Brownlee (University of Pennsylvania)
Jacqueline Cerquiglini-Toulet (Université Paris Sorbonne - Paris IV)
Suzanne Conklin Akbari (University of Toronto)
Lucie Dolezalova (Charles University, Prague)
Alexandra Gillespie (University of Toronto)
Jeffrey Hamburger (Harvard University)
Daniel Heller-Roazen (Princeton University)
Sharon Kinoshita (University of California, Santa Cruz)
Joachim Küpper (Freie University of Berlin)
Deborah McGrady (University of Virginia)
Christine McWebb (University of Waterloo)
Stephen G. Nichols (Johns Hopkins University)
Timothy Stinson (North Carolina State University)
Lori Walters (Florida State University)

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Small metadata correction

The Bibliothèque municipale de Lyon, PA 23, 24, and 25 shelfmarks have been corrected. Please let us know if you find any other errors.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Site update

There have been a number of changes behind the scenes, but users familiar with the site should notice only small tweaks and refinements. The book browser has a draggable separator.  Displays of tabular data have a new look.

If anything seems out of place or does not work, try clearing your browser cache and refreshing the site. Let the team know at contactus@romandelarose.org if the problem continues. Other feedback is welcome at the above email address or as comments on this post.

Metadata updates:

  • Correction to UC1380 102v image description.
  • Updates to instrument names in image descriptions of Arras 897 and Douce 332
  • Correctly attribute ms to Bibliothèque municipale de Lyon

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

New format for Rose usage statistics

At the request of some researchers, we will now be publishing both single-month as well as cumulative usage statistics for the Roman de la Rose Digital Library. Here are the numbers for February 2011.

Usage statistics for the period February 1-28, 2011:
1,563 visits from 58 different countries or territories
The top five countries represented (in order): United States, France, Spain, United Kingdom, Italy
1,033 absolute unique visitors
42% of these visitors have returned to the site
56 of these visitors have used the site 9-14 times
41 of these visitors have used the site 15-25 times
77 of these visitors have used the site 26-50 times
80 of these visitors have used the site 51-100 times
81 of these visitors have used the site 101-200 times
27 of these visitors have used the site more than 200 times
120 of these visits lasted between 10-30 minutes
144 of these visits lasted over 30 minutes

Since the launch of the site on September 2008 through February 28, 2011, the Rose team has noted the following usage statistics:
47,772 visits from 149 different countries or territories
The top five countries represented (in order): United States, France, United Kingdom, Spain, Canada
32,474 absolute unique visitors
32% of these visitors have returned to the site
1,387 of these visitors have used the site 9-14 times
1,211 of these visitors have used the site 15-25 times
952 of these visitors have used the site 26-50 times
831 of these visitors have used the site 51-100 times
812 of these visitors have used the site 101-200 times
1,319 of these visitors have used the site more than 200 times
3,454 of these visits lasted between 10-30 minutes
2,374 of these visits lasted over 30 minutes

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Usage statistics (through February 28, 2011)

Since the launch of the site on September 2008 through February 28, 2011, the Rose team has noted the following usage statistics:
47,772 visits from 149 different countries or territories
The top five countries represented (in order): United States, France, United Kingdom, Spain, Canada
32,474 absolute unique visitors
32% of these visitors have returned to the site
1,387 of these visitors have used the site 9-14 times
1,211 of these visitors have used the site 15-25 times
952 of these visitors have used the site 26-50 times
831 of these visitors have used the site 51-100 times
812 of these visitors have used the site 101-200 times
1,319 of these visitors have used the site more than 200 times
3,454 of these visits lasted between 10-30 minutes
2,374 of these visits lasted over 30 minutes

Usage statistics (through January 31, 2011)

Since the launch of the site on September 2008 through January 31, 2011, the Rose team has noted the following usage statistics:
46,209 visits from 149 different countries or territories
The top five countries represented (in order): United States, France, United Kingdom, Spain, Canada
31,571 absolute unique visitors
32% of these visitors have returned to the site
1,331 of these visitors have used the site 9-14 times
1,170 of these visitors have used the site 15-25 times
875 of these visitors have used the site 26-50 times
751 of these visitors have used the site 51-100 times
731 of these visitors have used the site 101-200 times
1,292 of these visitors have used the site more than 200 times
3,334 of these visits lasted between 10-30 minutes
2,230 of these visits lasted over 30 minutes

Monday, January 3, 2011

Usage statistics (through December 31, 2010)

Since the launch of the site on September 2008 through December 31, 2010, the Rose team has noted the following usage statistics:
44,791 visits from 149 different countries or territories
The top five countries represented (in order): United States, France, United Kingdom, Canada, Spain
30,788 absolute unique visitors
32% of these visitors have returned to the site
1,287 of these visitors have used the site 9-14 times
1,119 of these visitors have used the site 15-25 times
799 of these visitors have used the site 26-50 times
675 of these visitors have used the site 51-100 times
715 of these visitors have used the site 101-200 times
1,183 of these visitors have used the site more than 200 times
3,206 of these visits lasted between 10-30 minutes
2,108 of these visits lasted over 30 minutes