Items
Type is exactly
Text
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Chaganbhai Shankarbhai Parmar
Oral history told by Chaganbhai Shankarbhai Parmar. Chaganbhai is a male from Aritha. Bhungroo Irrigation technology is not used. No education level reported.Date: 2019 -
Bhikhiben Kamabhai Vaghari
Oral history told by Bhikhiben Kamabhai Vaghari. Bhikhiben is a female from Aritha. Bhungroo Irrigation technology is not used. No education level reported.Date: 2019 -
Bhagwatiben Sanabhai Juthani
Oral history told by Bhagwatiben Sanabhai Juthani. Bhagwatiben is a 33 year old female from Nani Chandur. Bhungroo technology is used. No education level reported.Date: 2019 -
Ashokbhai Bachubhai Thakor
Oral history told by Ashokbhai Bachubhai Thakor. Ashokbhai is a 26 year old male from Nani Chandur and is the son of Rashmiben Bachubhai Juthani. Bhungroo technology is used. 12th standard education level reported.Date: 2019 -
Arvindbhai Sedhabhai Vaghari
Oral history told by Arvindbhai Sedhabhai Vaghari. Arvindbhai is a 26 year old male from Aritha. Bhungroo Irrigation technology is not used. No education level reported.Date: 2019 -
Arvindbhai Mafabhai Ashodiya
Oral history told by Arvindbhai Mafabhai Ashodiya. Arvindbhai is a 30 year old male from Aritha. Bhungroo Irrigation technology is not used. No education level reported.Date: 2019 -
Amthabhai Sundarbhai Parmar
Oral history told by Amthabhai Sundarbhai Parmar.Date: 2019 -
Alkaben Thakor
Oral history told by Alkaben Thakor. Alkaben is a 30 year old female from Aritha. Bhungroo irrigation technology is not used. No education level is reported.Date: 2019 -
Kronos [2001]
This edition of Kronos, published in 2001, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 2001 -
Kronos [1999]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1999, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1999 -
Kronos [1998]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1998, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1998 -
Kronos [1997]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1997, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1997 -
Kronos [1996]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1996, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1996 -
Kronos [1995]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1995, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1995 -
Kronos [1994]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1994, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1994 -
Kronos [1993]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1993, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1993 -
Kronos [1992]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1992, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1992 -
Kronos [1991]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1991, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1991 -
Kronos [1990]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1990, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1990 -
Kronos [1989]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1989, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1989 -
Kronos [1988]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1988, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Soft-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1988 -
Kronos [1987]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1987, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1987 -
Kronos [1986]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1986, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1986 -
Kronos [1985]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1985, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1985 -
Kronos [1984]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1984, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1984 -
Kronos [1983]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1983, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1983 -
Kronos [1982]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1982, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1982 -
Kronos [1981]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1981, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Hard-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1981 -
Kronos [1980]
This edition of Kronos, published in 1980, is the official yearbook of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, School of Medicine. Soft-bound.Original medium: SerialDate: 1980 -
Fifty original leaves from medieval manuscripts, Western Europe, XII-XVI century (Title page)
Title page for the portfolio on thin and thick paper stock.Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 20th c. -
Book of Hours: Horæ Beatae Mariæ Virginis
Leaf 50. The following text is taken verbatim from the information card, written by Ege: This beautiful manuscript leaf was written and illuminated about the year 1535 A.D. At this late date Books of Hours were also being printed in great numbers by such famous French printers as Vostre, de Colines, and Tory. These were elaborately illustrated and frequently hand-colored. The cursive gothic script used in this leaf, with its boldly accented letters and flourished initials, borrowed heavily from the decorative chancery or legal hands of the XIIIth and XIVth centuries.Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 16th c. -
Missal: Missale
Leaf 49. "One wonders why this particular manuscript copy on vellum was written some forty years after Antonius Zarotus had printed the first Missal in Milan (1471 A.D.), for, at this time, Missals were frequently reprinted on paper and sold at only a fraction of the cost of a manuscript copy. This bâtarde style of semi-gothic script was the molding force for the fraktur and schwabacher type-faces which dominated German printing for several centuries" (Ege).Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 16th c. -
Book of Hours: Horæ Beatae Mariæ Virginis
Leaf 48. "In the middle of the [15th] century this whole area [the Netherlands and Northern France] was interested in naturalism and made its illustrations so vivid that sometimes they approached those of our seed catalogues. It is not difficult to recognize carnations, pansies, columbines, and strawberries" (Ege). "When such flowery decorations are found on a rather heavy piece of vellum, entangled with the swirling acanthus leaf and accompanied by a heavy lettre de forme script, one can be fairly safe in assigning the leaf to the province of Brabant."Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Book of Hours: Horæ Beatae Mariæ Virginis
Leaf 47. "In assigning this leaf from a Book of Hours to the Netherlands it must be remembered that some sections of the country were once part of France, while others belonged to what is now Germany. In this leaf French characteristics predominate, but in no other country did the study of nature have a more direct influence on miniatures and ornamentation than in the Netherlands. Carnations, pansies, columbines, and many other flowers were faultlessly and realistically drawn" (Ege).Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Book of Hours: Horæ Beatae Mariæ Virginis
Leaf 46. "The laymen who ordered and purchased theses books would at times stipulate the style of ornament and the amount of burnished gold to be used, and could even, to a certain extent, select the saints they esteemed most and wished to glorify. In this example, the border reveals by its wayside flowers entangled with the heavy acanthus motif of the North and by the use of the "wash" gold that it was executed in Northern France about 1475 A.D." (Ege).Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Book of Hours: Horæ Beatae Mariæ Virginis
Leaf 45. "This manuscript leaf came from a Book of Hours, sold probably at one of the famous shrines to which wealthy laymen made pilgrimages. To meet the demand for these books, the monastic as well as the secular scribes produced them in great numbers. The freely drawn, indefinite buds here entirely supplant the ivy, fruits, and realistic wayside flowers which characterized the borders of manuscripts of the preceeding half century. The initial letters of burnished gold on a background of old rose and blue with delicate white ine decorations maintain the tradition of the earlier period. The vellum is of silk-like quality that often distinguished the manuscripts of France and Italy" (Ege).Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Bible: Biblia Sacra Latina, Versio Vulgata
Leaf 44. "This leaf was written in Germany nearly sixty years after the invention of printing by movable type. Its semi-gothic book hand is similar to the type-faces used by the early printers. The numerous contractions and marks of abbreviation have been inserted boldly, but the little strokes which were added to help identify the letters i and u are barely visible" (Ege).Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Book of Hours: Horæ Beatae Mariæ Virginis
Leaf 43. "In general, the Books of Hours produced for the devout layman in the Netherlands at the end of the XVth century were written in Dutch. This particular example, however, is in Latin. The heavy, angular, and closely spaced vertical strokes, with very short ascenders and descenders, give a much darker tone to the page than do similar scripts in such northern countries as Germany and England. This book hand resembles very closely the types known as lettre de forme which were used by certain anonymous contemporary printers in the Netherlands between 1470 and 1500 A.D." (Ege).Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Psalter: Psalterium
Leaf 42. "This leaf from the Book of Psalms was written from the Benedictine monastery of St. Stephan in Wurzburg and dated 1499 A.D. The book hand closely resembles the fine early gothic types called lettre de forme and used by Fust and Schoeffer in their superb Psalter issued in 1457" (Ege). "A close examination indicates that the scribe apparently tried to imitate printing type characters in many instances."Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Dialogues of Gregory the Great: S. Gregorius Magnus, Dialogi
Leaf 41. "This composite text includes the Dialogues of Pope Gregory I (St. Gregory the Great, 540-604 A.D.), which are largely autobriographical, and his writings on the lives and miracles of the early Italian Church Fathers. The book hand used is known as lettre bâtarde, a semi-cursive hand closely related to the everyday writing used by people" (Ege).Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Thomas Aquinas: Commentary on the Sentences: Super Primo Libro Sententiarum
Leaf 40. "This text on the Sententiae of Peter Lombard by St. Thomas Aquinas, the "Angelic Doctor," was the forerunner of the latter's great work Summa Theologica. It is most unusual to find the writings of a Church Father presented in a humanistic book hand" (Ege). "In this humanistic script, fusion disappeared, letters became more simple, and shading decreased."Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Livy's History of Rome (T. Livii ab Urbe Condita Libri)
Leaf 39. "The known part of Livy's great work, the History of Rome, was completed about the year 9 A.D. The finished work consisted of one hundred and forty books, of which only thirty-five are extant" (Ege). "These earlier manuscripts had been written in a carolingian or pre-gothic script to which the XVth century humanistic calligraphers assigned the name antiqua littera."Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Missal: Missale Lemovicense Castrense
Leaf 38. "The provenance of this manuscript is clearly designated as Limoges because of the inculsion of certain parts of the masses proper to this diocese, and because of the presence of the coat of arms and obituary records of the noted de Rupe family of that city" (Ege). "The national book hand has become amazingly uniform. In this manuscript as in many manuscripts of the XVth century there is an increasing tendency to speed and slackness."Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Epistolary: Epistolarium
Leaf 37. "Epistolaries are among the rarest of liturgical manuscripts. Their text consists of the Epistles and Gospels with lessons from the Old Testament for particular occasions. Sometimes, as in this leaf, they had interlinear neumes in red neumes in red to assist the deacon or sub-deacon in chanting parts of this section of the church service while he was standing on the second step in front of the altar. This text is written in well executed rotunda gothic script with cold Lombardic intitials. Some of the filigree decoration which surrounds the initial letters has faded because it was executed in some of the fugitive colors which were then prepared from the juices of such flowers and plants as tumeric, saffron, lilies, and prugnameroli (buckthorn berries)" (Ege).Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Book of Hours: Horæ Beatae Mariæ Virginis
Leaf 36. "Books of Hours, beautifully written, enriched with burnished gold initials, and adorned with miniature paintings, were frequently the most treasured possessions of the devout and wealthy laymen" (Ege). "Books of this small size, two and one-half by three and one-half inches, are comparatively rare. The craftsmanship in this example imitates and equals that in a volume of ordinary size, about five to seven inches. Recently, these small "pocket" editions have been given the nickname "baby manuscripts."Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Writings of St. Jerome (Sanctus Hieronymus, Contra Jovinianum)
Leaf 35. "Jerome, the father of the Latin Church and translator of the Bible, shows in his writings his active participation in the controversies of his day (c. 332 to 420 A.D.)" (Ege). "This fine book hand, lettre de somme, obtained its name from the fact that Fust and Schoeffer used a type based on it for the printing of their Summa Theologica of St. Thomas Aquinas in 1467." "Simplicity and dignity are maintained by omitting all enrichment around the burnished gold letters.The first printed books followed the practice seen here of marking off by hand and with a stroke of red the capitals at the beginning of each sentence. Fifteenth century ink frequently had a tendency to fade to a gray tone as in this example."Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Psalter: Psalterium
Leaf 34. "This Psalter was written by Carthusian monks. Of all the orders the Carthusian was the smallest and most austere" (Ege). "The rotunda book hand used in this leaf is representative of the general excellence maintained by Italian scribes at the time when printing was being introduced into their country." "Close observation of the initial letters will frequently reveal a small black letter inserted as a guide for the monk who later added the colored initial. The use of two guide lines for the lettering is unusual. Ordinarily one line, below the writing, was deemed sufficient. The lines were drawn with a stylus composed of two parts lead and one part tin."Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Missal: Missale
Leaf 33. "The Missal, written for the convenience of the priests, combined the separate books formerly used in different parts of the service; namely the Oratorium, Lectionarium, Evangeliarium, Canon, and others. Gutenburg, who printed his famous First Bible about the time this manuscript was written, based his type designs on a contemporary book hand similar to this example. The craftsmen who created this manuscript had the difficult problem of writing, inserted rubrics, and large or small colored initials."Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Gradual: Graduale
Leaf 32. "The suberb example of calligraphy in this leaf illustrates the supremacy of the Italian scribes of the time over those of the rest of Europe. It is frequently assumed that this late revival of fine writing may have been caused by the concern of scribes over the impending competition with the newly invented art of printing. The music staff still retains here the early XIIth century form with the C-line colored yellow and the F-line red. The four-line red staff had been in use for over two centuries before this manuscript was written" (Ege).Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c. -
Book of Hours: Horæ Beatae Mariæ Virginis
Leaf 31. "The first printed and illustrated Book of Hours appeared in 1486. It was a crude work, but later noted printers such as Verard, Du Pre, Pigouchet, and Kerver issued in great numbers Books of Hours with numerous illustrations and rich borders. The decorations were frequently hand colored and further embellished with touches of gold" (Ege). "By this time the ivy spray had a variety of forms. It might be seen springing from an initial letter, from the end of a detached bar, in a separate panel in company with realistic flowers, or forming a three- or four-sided border intermixed with acanthus leaves and even birds, animals, and hybrid monsters which are neither man or beast."Original medium: ManuscriptDate: 15th c.