News
News Flash: Memory Shop and Anime Zakka to Open in Harvard Square
News
Harvard Researchers Develop AI-Driven Framework To Study Social Interactions, A Step Forward for Autism Research
News
Harvard Innovation Labs Announces 25 President’s Innovation Challenge Finalists
News
Graduate Student Council To Vote on Meeting Attendance Policy
News
Pop Hits and Politics: At Yardfest, Students Dance to Bedingfield and a Student Band Condemns Trump
For the first time in many years, scholars again can quickly locate most of the more than 10,000 items of medieval and Renaissance manuscripts writing scattered in private collections and university and public libraries across North America.
They can think William H. Bond, Curator of Manuscripts in the Houghton Library, who spend his evenings and weekends for the past five years finding out where the manuscripts were.
His new Census, just published, supplements a 25-year-old "Census of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the United States and Canada."
Bond's new work has sold 400 copies is the few weeks since publication; and sales may reach 1,000. The purchaser receives for his $23 a 600-page listing of some 5,000 manuscripts acquired by American collections since the 1937 census, which listed 6,000 manuscripts.
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.