Join the Permanent Seminar on Manuscript Analysis, Description, and Documentation and its Seminar Series
25 March 2021, by Webmaster

Photo: CSMC
The first five meetings of the seminar series Forms of manuscripts and their description: Rolled up Manuscripts have been scheduled on the following dates. The meetings will start with an introduction and subsequent sessions on rolled up manuscripts:
Monday, 12 April 2021, 2.30-4.00 PM CET
- Marilena Maniaci (Cassino / Rom), Patrick Andrist (Munich/Fribourg): Introduction to the ‘Forms of manuscripts and their description’ seminar series
Monday, 17 May 2021,2.30-4.00 PM CET
- Thies Staack (Hamburg): Wooden and bamboo Chinese rolls
- Stefan Baums (Munich): Gandhāran birchbark scrolls
Monday, 14 June 2021, 2.30-4.00 PM CET
- Imre Galambos (Cambridge): Medieval Chinese paper scrolls
- Nathan Carlig (Liège): Coptic papyrus rolls
Monday, 19 July 2021, 2.30-4.00 PM CET
- Élodie Attia (Aix-en Provence): Parchment/Leather Hebrew liturgical scrolls
- Marilena Maniaci (Cassino / Rom):Greek and Latin Vertical rolls/scrolls
Monday, 13 September 2021, 2.30-4.00 PM CET
- Final wrap-updiscussion
If you would like to join the Permanent Seminar and receive information on this series along with all future activities, please follow this link to the registration page or go to https://www.csmc.uni-hamburg.de/research/working-groups/permanent-seminar/join-seminar.html.
Please note that in order to comply with EU privacy regulations, there is a double opt-in process. This means that the registration has to be confirmed through a brief process laid out in an automatic email.
If you would like to only join the seminar series, please follow this link to sign up or go to https://www.csmc.uni-hamburg.de/research/working-groups/permanent-seminar/semiar-series.html#16040551.
The Permanent Seminar on Manuscript Analysis, Description, and Documentation is intended as an open, informal and exploratory space that will aggregate researchers from different manuscript and scholarly traditions on the theme of manuscript description and documentation, addressed in a widely comparative perspective. The aim is to create a network that includes established scholars and manuscript cataloguers, early stage researchers and professionals from a variety of universities, research centres and conservation libraries. For more information, follow this link.