Fragmentology: A Journal for the Study of Medieval Manuscript Fragments
Fragmentology is an international, peer-reviewed Open Access journal, dedicated to publishing scholarly articles and reviews concerning medieval manuscript fragments. Fragmentology welcomes submissions, both articles and research notes, on any aspect pertaining to Latin and Greek manuscript fragments in the Middle Ages.Founded in 2018 as part of Fragmentarium, an international research project at the University of Fribourg (Switzerland) funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation, the Stavros Niarchos Foundation, and the Zeno Karl Schindler Foundation, Fragmentology is owned and published by Codices Electronici AG and controlled by the Editorial Board in service to the scholarly community. Authors of articles, research notes, and reviews published in Fragmentology retain copyright over their works and have agreed to publish them in open access under a Creative Commons Attribution license. Submissions are free, and Fragmentology does not require payment or membership from authors or institutions.
FRAGMENTOLOGY 1(2018)
Published December 2018, DOI: 10.24446/2nbpVOLUME PDF
- Fragments and Fragmentology (Editorial), William Duba and Christoph Flüeler (1-5)
- Reconstructing Burnt Anglo-Saxon Fragments in the Cotton Collection at the British Library, Andrew Dunning, Alison Hudson, and Christina Duffy (7-37)
- Psalms and Psalters in the Manuscript Fragments Preserved in the Abbey Library of Sankt Gallen, María Adelaida Andrés Sanz (39-63)
- A Seventeenth-Century Treasure Hunter in the Rubble of a Ninth-Century Library: Gathering Fragments and the History of Libraries, Pierre Chambert-Protat (65-81)
- Manuscript Fragments in the University Library, Leipzig: Types and Cataloguing Patterns, Ivana Dobcheva and Christoph Mackert (83-110)
- In situ manuscript fragments in the incunables of the Bodleian Library, Oxford: A Fragmentarium Case Study, Ruth Mullett (111-120)
- Fragments and Fakes: The Arbor consanguinitatis of the Fondation Martin Bodmer and a Contemporary Forgery, William Duba and Christoph Flüeler (121-153).
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