Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies

Guided by the vision of its founder, Lawrence J. Schoenberg, the mission of SIMS at Penn is to bring manuscript culture, modern technology and people together to bring access to and understanding of our cultural heritage locally and around the world.

We advance the mission of SIMS by:

  • developing our own projects,
  • supporting the scholarly work of others both at Penn and elsewhere, and
  • collaborating with and contributing to other manuscript-related initiatives around the world.

Locally, we manage the Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts, which enables scholars to trace the provenance of manuscripts from origin up to today, and we provide space for the meetings of the Penn graduate student paleography seminar.

Farther afield we collaborate with T-PEN, a web-based tool for working with images of manuscripts, and the Shared Canvas initiative at Stanford University. SIMS is active in the local rare books and manuscripts community, and welcomes manuscript-minded scholars and students to join our conversations.

SIMS is a community of people at Penn and beyond who love manuscripts and manuscript culture. The SIMS Blog serves as our virtual home, where we talk about what interests us and bring together important and fun information from around the Internet.

The SIMS Brain Trust is located on the sixth floor of the Van Pelt-Dietrich Library, on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania, and anywhere else people are thinking and talking about manuscripts.

We are on Twitter @SIMS_Mss

We post and share videos about manuscripts on YouTube

We maintain a presence on Facebook

 

Search results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 671
  • Publication
    Penn Library's Ms. Codex 674 - [Horae de Sancta Katherina]. (Video Orientation)
    Porter, Dot
    Video Orientation to the University of Pennsylvania Library's Ms. Codex 674, Hours of St. Catherine, incomplete at the end, where prayers to St. Barbara, an Office of St. Barbara, and the Passion account from the Gospel of Matthew (partial) are added in a second hand. Written in Germany in the early 15th century (Zacour-Hirsch). 19th-century description tipped onto front endleaf has date ca. 1390. Record on Find (link to digitized copy): https://find.library.upenn.edu/catalog/9924874603503681?hld_id=22283686350003681
  • Publication
    Penn Library's Ms. Codex 665 - Venetian Capitulary. (Video Orientation)
    Porter, Dot
    Video Orientation to the University of Pennsylvania Library's Ms. Codex 665, statutes in 151 chapters of the Order of the Ship, founded in Naples in 1381 by King Carlo III 'di Durazzo'. Presumably copied sometime between the founding of the order on 1 December 1381 (date on f. 21 r) and the death of Carlo III in 1386. Record on Find (link to digitized copy): https://find.library.upenn.edu/catalog/9924874513503681?hld_id=22283691260003681
  • Publication
    Penn Library's Ms. Codex 1280 - [Ledger of Medici debtors and creditors]. (Video Orientation)
    Porter, Dot
    Video Orientation to the University of Pennsylvania Library's Ms. Codex 1280, ledger of debtors and creditors of the Medici family for the years 1537-1539. Often includes the nature of a given credit or debt and its amount, as well as listing the names of the individuals or institutions that hold the debt or credit, the most important being the Spedale e Spedaletto di Santa Maria Novella (p. 7, 22), a Florentine church which also offered pilgrims and those in need medical help; the Chapitolo and Convento delle monache delle convertite (p. 17), a nunnery for young women, often prostitutes, who converted to Catholicism; and the Opera di Santa Maria del Fiore (p. 60). An alphabetical index, with 18 lettered tabs, containing names of individuals and institutions that appear in the ledger, is laid into the manuscript. Written in Italy, ca. 1539 (date of latest entries, p. 98). Record on Find (link to digitized copy): https://find.library.upenn.edu/catalog/9944302523503681?hld_id=22416113250003681
  • Publication
    Penn Library's Ms. Codex 859 - Instrumenta mag. fratrum de Tartaleonibus. (Video Orientation)
    Porter, Dot
    Video Orientation to the University of Pennsylvania Library's Ms. Codex 859, copies of 23 documents concerning financial transactions of the Tartaleoni brothers of Milan, dating from 1565 to 1575, each followed by two notarial signets and signatures. Written in Mantua, ca. 1565-1575; 1564 written on cover. Record on Find (link to digitized copy): https://find.library.upenn.edu/catalog/9931780393503681?hld_id=22370445990003681
  • Publication
    Penn Library's Ms. Codex 736 - Venetian Capitulary. (Video Orientation)
    Porter, Dot
    Video Orientation to the University of Pennsylvania Library's Ms. Codex 59, a collection of papal letters and instruments regarding the order of the Eremite Friars of St. Augustine of Rouen, with copies of documents by Clement VI, Innocent IV, Urban VI, Boniface VIII, Alexander IV, Martin V, Eugene IV, Nicholas V, and Sixtus IV. Includes a letter by the cardinal protector of the order, Guillaume de Estouteville; collection notarized by Marco Marzio Saxoferratensis (f. 29). Written in Italy (Zacour-Hirsch), 29 March 1475 (f. 29r). Record on Find (link to digitized copy): https://find.library.upenn.edu/catalog/9924875873503681?hld_id=22283703620003681 Record on Internet Archive (link to PDF): https://archive.org/details/mscodex736
  • Publication
    Penn Library's Ms. Codex 59 - Venetian Capitulary. (Video Orientation)
    Porter, Dot
    Video Orientation to the University of Pennsylvania Library's Ms. Codex 59, a capitulary containing copies of Venetian statutes pertaining to officials concerned with financial matters (Tre savii sopra la remisio di conti, f. 34r). Written in Venice, from 1519 (f. 1r) to 1631 (f. 16r). Record on Find (link to digitized copy): https://find.library.upenn.edu/catalog/9914711863503681?hld_id=22412879400003681
  • Publication
    Collation Model for Ms. Codex 363: Triumpho de la morte contra li magni [et] valenti homini de Italia : cum le additione de li capitani moderni : novamente composte [et] correcta la prima hystoria.
    (2025-03-19) Porter, Dot
    Poetic work in 91 eight-line stanzas. Mentioned in the poems are Sforza, Galeazo, Contarini, Gonzaga, Malatesta, Spinola, Brandolini, etc.
  • Publication
    Collation Model for Ms. Codex 290: La legenda di s[an]ct[i]ss[im]i Thebey soto Dioclitiano & Maximiano i[m]p[er]ato[r]i.
    (2025-03-19) Porter, Dot
    An Italian version of the extremely popular legend of the martyrdom of the Theban Legion, supposedly decimated in the reign of Diocletian and Maximian because so many of its officers and men adhered to the Christian faith. The massacre is supposed to have taken place at St. Maurice-en-Valais (now in Switzerland). The commander of the legion (which was composed entirely of men from the Thebaid in Egypt) was Maritius, later canonized.
  • Publication
    Collation Model for Ms. Codex 197: [Contemplations of the dread and love of God] ... [etc.]
    (2025-03-19) Porter, Dot
    Manuscript copy of the text, Contemplations of the dread and love of God, sometimes erroneously attributed to Richard Rolle. This text covers f. 1-131 of the manuscript; it begins in the middle of the early section, What ys charite; how and whi thou schalt love God, and lacks the final leaf where this text ends and the next begins. Followed by additional prayers, poems, and homilies. These include prayers to Jesus, the Blessed Virgin, St. John the Baptist, St. Katherine and others. Also includes texts on virtues and on the seven gifts of the Holy Ghost.
  • Publication
    Collation Model for Ms. Codex 1881: [Astronomical treatises and tables].
    (2025-03-19) Porter, Dot
    Late 15th-century collection of Latin astronomical treatises and tables of the 12th through 14th centuries, illustrated with six volvelles and numerous diagrams. The Alphonsine tables have calculations added in the bottom margins for various cities, mostly in Germany, including Erfurt, Magdeburg, Leipzig, Mainz, Nuremberg, Paris, Prague, Regensburg, and Worms (f. 45v-51v), and a colophon dated 30 December 1481 (f. 61v). A leaf at the end of the volume has the Hebrew alphabet and a few Hebrew transliterations, including Magdeburg, carefully written parallel to the spine (f. 95v).