Skip to main content
154 results from Collation on

Manuscripts

Manuscripts in the Folger collections
Folger manuscripts out and about: a field trip to Penn!
Collation

Folger manuscripts out and about: a field trip to Penn!

Posted
Author
The Collation

During the Folger’s building renovation, we have been fortunate to be able to send a selection of twenty-nine pre-modern manuscripts up to the University of Pennsylvania Libraries’ Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts in Philadelphia. This exciting…

My True Meaning: emotions in seventeenth-century wills
Collation

My True Meaning: emotions in seventeenth-century wills

Posted
Author
Elizabeth DeBold

Anyone who has read early modern wills, whether in an attempt to confirm the names of family members or out of interest in material history, knows that they are full of emotion. Dying men and women describe their family members…

Printed Pamphlets for the Witch of Wapping
Collation

Printed Pamphlets for the Witch of Wapping

Posted
Author
Elizabeth DeBold

During September of last year, while browsing digital resources in the London Metropolitan Archives, a familiar name caught my eye. It was a 1652 indictment from the Middlesex quarter sessions, which tried criminal cases, where a woman named Joan Peterson…

Slurrop! An ode to soup
Collation

Slurrop! An ode to soup

Posted
Author
Elizabeth DeBold

In 1595, English writer William Fiston (or Phiston) produced a translation of a French book of manners for children. Topics included proper behavior that was important for Church and school, but also a section on table manners. Here, Fiston admonishes…

George Goodwin, neo-Latin poet, identified as George Goodwin, rector of Moreton, Essex
Collation

George Goodwin, neo-Latin poet, identified as George Goodwin, rector of Moreton, Essex

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

Today’s Collation post is short and sweet, and courtesy of Heather Wolfe, the Folger’s Curator of Manuscripts. Heather is currently on sabbatical in the UK, having been awarded the 2021–22 Munby Fellowship at Cambridge University Library, but she still occasionally…

Recipe Books, Plague Cures and the Circulation of Information
Collation

Recipe Books, Plague Cures and the Circulation of Information

Posted
Author
Yann Ryan

a guest post by Yann Ryan As well as its terrible consequences for health and mortality, plague in early modern England had a major impact on the communication and circulation of information. Movement was restricted, towns with suspected cases were…

The book thief
page of Elizabeth Parris's deposition
Collation

The book thief

Posted
Author
Heather Wolfe

Response of James Tabor, public notary, July 10, 1604, in Henry Cotton vs. William Windle. Cambridge University Archives, Comm.Ct.II.11, fol. 57v. Today’s post is about a woman, Margaret Cotton, who allegedly stole a book in 1602. The book might have…

The mystery of Humphrey Walcot’s grocery bill and early-modern popular numeracy
detail of 17th century handwrittne document showing roman and arabic numerals
Collation

The mystery of Humphrey Walcot’s grocery bill and early-modern popular numeracy

Posted
Author
Ray Schrire

a guest post by Ray Schrire It is time for an unofficial Crocodile Mystery. Humphrey Walcot’s grocery bill. Folger, L.f.196 These are a few of my favorite items from the merchant Humphrey Walcot’s shopping list of May 8, 1601 (a…

Small Latin and Less Greek
Collation

Small Latin and Less Greek

Posted
Author
Abbie Weinberg

with many thanks to Sara Schliep, Bob Tallaksen, Emily Wahl, Nicole Winard, and Heather Wolfe for their generous and careful assistance with this post. They are just a few of the folks who have been working on this project. Thank…

Camaraderie, congeniality, and collaboration: paleography at the Folger
Collation

Camaraderie, congeniality, and collaboration: paleography at the Folger

Posted
Author
Morgan McMinn

a guest post by Morgan McMinn Research libraries and archives are often thought of in terms of their physical existence but those misconceptions were challenged by the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020. The Folger Shakespeare Library is…

An Experiment in Following a Worm Through a Folded Letter
Collation

An Experiment in Following a Worm Through a Folded Letter

Posted
Author
William Davis

A guest post by William Davis Folger staff have long been interested in folding early modern letters for mailing. It comes up periodically when someone finds a letter with unusual folds. Both Heather Wolfe and Erin Blake have written Collation…

Decoding Early Modern Gossip
Collation

Decoding Early Modern Gossip

Posted
Author
Alicia Petersen

A guest post by Alicia Petersen What comes to mind when you think of a coded letter? Political intrigue? Espionage? As the Folger Shakespeare Library’s 2014-5 exhibition Decoding the Renaissance: 500 Years of Codes and Ciphers highlighted, these guesses are…

1 2 3 4 5 13