Call for Nominations: TEI Board and Council

The Text Encoding Initiative Consortium (TEI-C) invites nominations for election to the TEI-C Board and Council. Nominations should be sent to the nomination committee at [nominations at tei-c.org] by July 1, 2009.

See http://www.tei-c.org/News/index.xml#CallForNominations for details.

TEI-C membership is NOT a requirement to serve on the Board or Council. Candidates should be familiar with the TEI and should be willing to commit time to discussion, decision-making, and TEI activities. If you have ideas about how to make the TEI stronger or can help it do a better job, nominate yourself! Or, if you know someone who you think could contribute to TEI, nominate him or her!

Medieval Science and Medicine Databases

Science and Medicine Databases
The following searchable databases are now available via the website of the Medieval Academy of America: http://www.medievalacademy.org/

eTK – a digital resource based on Lynn Thorndike and Pearl Kibre, A Catalogue of Incipits of Mediaeval Scientific Writings in Latin (Cambridge, MA: Mediaeval Academy, 1963) and supplements.

eVK2 – an expanded and revised version of Linda Ehrsam Voigts and Patricia Deery Kurtz, Scientific and Medical Writings in Old and Middle English: An Electronic Reference. CD (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2000).

See the link “Science and Medicine Databases at UMKC” listed as “new” on the homepage (as well as on the “Links” page). The homepage also contains a slide show of images from Brunschwig’s De arte distillandi. The citation under the slide show images is a hot link to the Linda Hall Library of Science and Technology, and the images themselves are links to larger versions.

Electronic Thorndike-Kibre (eTK) and Electronic Voigts-Kurtz (eVK2)

An expanded and updated digital version of Lynn Thorndike and Pearl Kibre, A Catalogue of Incipits of Mediaeval Scientific Writings in Latin (TK), rev. ed. 1963 with two supplements, has been produced with the permission of the copyright holder, Medieval Academy of America. While TK consolidates all manuscript information for a text into a single entry, eTK divides entries from the book into 33,000 records, each for a manuscript witness to a text.

Scientific and Medical Writings in Old and Middle English, by Linda Voigts and Patricia Kurtz, 2nd ed. (eVK2), an updated and expanded version of the CD published by the University of Michigan Press (2000), provides more than 10,000 records for the earliest technical and learned writings in English.

The digital records in both eTK and eVK2 are organized in multiple searchable fields and allow searching of incipit words and word strings and searching by manuscript, library, author, title, subject, translator, date, and bibliography.

Both electronic references allow scholars to retrieve new information and to make connections previously unthinkable in the study of medieval science and medicine. Both tools are now freely available via a link from the website of the Medieval Academy of America: http://www.medievalacademy.org/

New Digital Medievalist News Server!

Hi there!

Digital Medievalist has setup a news server based on sending items to a wordpress blog. The results are then incorporated back into our website based on the atom feed available from wordpress.

It is hoped that this will allow DM users to post news items more easily. To post an item please fill in our news posting form and your item will be submitted pending moderation. Eventually we will introduce browsing of news articles by the tags above.

You should be allowed to use any HTML or shortcodes which are allowed in a wordpress.com blog.

Thanks for your contributions, and if you have any questions do not hesitate to ask.

-James Cummings
James.Cummings@digitalmedievalist.org