Home | Resources | Services | Hosting | Publications | Collaboration | Joining CERL | About CERL |

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revisionBoth sides next revision
resources:provenance:geographical [2016/02/03 15:17] – [ITALY] hartresources:provenance:geographical [2016/02/03 15:18] – [ITALY] hart
Line 210: Line 210:
 === Rome, Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale === === Rome, Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale ===
  
->  {{:resources:provenance:librerie_dei_conventi_riunite_nella_vittorio_emanuele_11_.pdf|The Libraries of the suppressed Religious Houses, Rome, 1876}} (//updated February 2008//).+>  {{:resources:provenance:librerie_dei_conventi_riunite_nella_vittorio_emanuele_11_.pdf|The Libraries of the suppressed Religious Houses, Rome, 1876}} (//updated February 2016//).
 >    Following the suppression of the religious houses in Rome (1873) as a consequence of the creation of the new Kingdom of Italy with Rome as its capital, the libraries of the suppressed religious houses were confiscated for the benefit of the newly created National Central Library (1876).\\ In her article ‘The computerised archive of owners in the older publications database of SBN: the experience of the National Central Library of Rome’, //[[:publications:cerl_papers:cerl_papers_v|CERL Papers V]]//, 2005, pp. 43-53 (see above), Marina Venier (Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale, Rome) describes the process of confiscation and the attempts of the religious to avoid the loss of their books. The Appendix to her article is reproduced here, listing the 78 libraries confiscated, their size and religious affiliation, reference to surviving catalogues of the original collections, and reproduction of ownership stamps and labels from many of the collections.  >    Following the suppression of the religious houses in Rome (1873) as a consequence of the creation of the new Kingdom of Italy with Rome as its capital, the libraries of the suppressed religious houses were confiscated for the benefit of the newly created National Central Library (1876).\\ In her article ‘The computerised archive of owners in the older publications database of SBN: the experience of the National Central Library of Rome’, //[[:publications:cerl_papers:cerl_papers_v|CERL Papers V]]//, 2005, pp. 43-53 (see above), Marina Venier (Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale, Rome) describes the process of confiscation and the attempts of the religious to avoid the loss of their books. The Appendix to her article is reproduced here, listing the 78 libraries confiscated, their size and religious affiliation, reference to surviving catalogues of the original collections, and reproduction of ownership stamps and labels from many of the collections. 
    
 resources/provenance/geographical.txt · Last modified: 2024/03/19 10:58 by lefferts

 

 

Recent changes RSS feed Valid XHTML 1.0 Driven by DokuWiki