The facsimile revived: a review and a reflection - Ed. Arlt Wulf Rankin Susan. Stiftsbibliothek Sankt Gallen Codices 484 and 381. Winterthur: Amadeus, 19963 volumes in a slipcase: 329, 91, 262 pp. ISBN 3 905049 67 8. - Ed.Ike de loos Charles Downey and Ruth Steiner LJtrecht, Bibliotheek der Rijksuniversiteit MS 406 (3.J.7).. Publications of Mediaeval Musical Manuscripts 21. Ottawa: Institute of Mediaeval Music, 1997. liii + 260 pp. ISBN 1 896926 03 7 Charles Downey, An Utrecht Antiphoner … Printouts from an Index in Machine-Readable Form. Musicological Studies LV/6. Ottawa: Institute of Mediaeval 1997. xx + 220 pp. ISBN 1 896926 05 3. - Ed.Martin Staehlin. Die mittelalterliche Musik-Handschrift W1: Vollständge Reproduktion des ‘Notre Dame’ -Manuskripts der Herzog August Billiothek Wolfenbüttel Cod. Guelf. 628 Helmst. Wolfenbütteler Mittelalter-Studien 9. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 1995. 470 pp. ISBN 3 447 03779 2. - Ed.Maria Carmen Góme Muntané. Polifonía de la Corona de Aragón Siglos XIV y XV: Ars Nova de la Corona de Aragón. Polifoní Aragonesa VIII. ZaragozaInstitución ‘Fernando el Católico’, 1993. 104 pp. ISBN 88 7820 167 X. - Ed.Agostino Ziino.Ii Codice T.III.2, Torino, Biblioteca Nazionale Universitaria. Ars Nova 3. LuccaLibreria Musicale Italiana, 1994. 190 pp. ISBN 88 7096 034 X. - Ed.Eugeen Schreurs. An Anthology of Music Fragments from the Low Countries (Middle Ages – Renaissance): Polyphony, Monophony and Slate Fragments in Facsimile.. LeuvenAlamire, 1995. xxiv + 136 pp. ISBN 90 6853 107 7. - Ed.David Fallows Oxford, Bodleian Library, s. Cannin. Misc. 213. Late Medieval and Early Renaissance Music in Facsimile 1. ChicagoChicago University Press, 1995. 362 pp. ISBN 0 226 23706 0. - Musical Codex Huelgas Reales Monastery (Burgos): Documentation for the facsimile edition. Madrid: Testimonio Compañia Editorial and Patrinionio Nacional, n.d. Brochure and sample pages.

1999 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Leech-Wilkinson
1974 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 267
Author(s):  
Alice S. Clark

As more academic and public libraries have some form of bibliographic description of their complete collection available in machine-readable form, public service librarians are devising ways to use the information for better retrieval. Research at the Ohio State University tested user response to paper and COM output from selected areas of the shelflist. Results indicated users at remote locations found such lists helpful, with some indication that paper printout was more popular than microfiche.


Author(s):  
Teofilo F. Ruiz

This chapter examines tournaments. The origins of tournaments in Western Europe can be traced back to classical sources and to a sparse number of references to events that looked like tournaments in the Central Middle Ages. While these early mentions provide interesting glimpses of the genealogy of fictitious combat, it was the twelfth century that truly saw the formal beginnings of these traditions of artificial warfare that would hold such a powerful grip on the European imagination for many centuries to come. Closely tied to courtly culture and in a symbiotic relationship with the great outburst of courtly literature that took place in the twelfth and early thirteenth centuries, the tournament sank deep roots in England, France, the Low Countries, and parts of Germany during the twelfth century, and then developed elaborate rules of engagement and pageantry in succeeding centuries.


1982 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 161-165
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Nedobity

The increased production and publication of professional and scientific literature makes it necessary that abstracts are pro duced in a quick, efficient and economical way. This can be achieved by the mechanization of abstracting. With the aid of computers, extracts can be produced of all kinds of texts which are available in machine-readable form. The main problem of this procedure is how to determine the key sentences of a text, i.e., the passages that contain the most relevant information. Various methods have been developed for this purpose; the one presented here is based on the fact that in order to convey relevant information, subject terminology is used. In many cases subject terminologies are now available in machine-reada ble form too and thus can be easily applied to the automatic production of abstracts.


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