One major theme of this semester’s Hargrett Hours course is the intersection of scientific analysis and humanities research. The study of medieval manuscripts is a…
Manuscripts at UGA
It’s Eclipse Day across the US, and here at UGA we caught 99% coverage (which was, I learned by sitting in Sanford Stadium with 20,000…
Wow – where have the days gone? The first week of the semester has flown by here at UGA and it was good to get…
This is a story. Actually, it’s several different stories. It could be the story of How I Spent My Summer Vacation. It’s in part a…
The Suffrage group made some good headway establishing the original owner(s) and provenance of the Hargrett Hours Suffrages this semester: the inclusion of local saints…
The semester is wrapping up here. Last finals are being administered today; students are packing up to head home for Christmas break; professors are grading…
As Bridget Ruth Whearty’s “Making a Digital Medieval Manuscript” blog post tells us, “Medieval manuscript scholars are increasingly interested in experiencing how medieval books were…
[Note: In October, I gave a presentation on the work of this course — a sort of apologia for the course as well as a…
The semester is wrapping up – we’re in the last week of classes here at UGA – so it’s time to reflect on where we’ve…
French Popular Piety: The Hargrett Hours The Hargrett Hours is a non-aristocratic, fifteenth century French manuscript. Like the Codicology and Calendar groups, our Suffrage group…