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The Priory of St Giles and St Andrew, Barnwell, was among the
earliest English communities of Augustinian canons, founded by the
sheriff of Cambridge in 1092. Although little survives of its
buildings, its records form a significant source for both Cambridge
and Augustinian history. The Observances, translated and edited in
1897 by J. W. Clark, form the eighth book of the late
thirteenth-century Liber Memorandorum, also reissued in this
series. The fourth-century Rule of St Augustine is a short and
general guide to community life, and needed to be supplemented by a
fuller set of instructions for the day-to-day running of the
complex organisation which comprised a medieval monastery. The
Observances provide detail about the roles played by all the
officials of the priory and about the daily cycle of work and
prayer, and give the modern reader a real insight into medieval
monastic life.
The Priory of St Giles and St Andrew, Barnwell, was among the
earliest English communities of Augustinian Canons, founded by the
Sheriff of Cambridge in 1092. Although little survives of its
physical remains, the Liber Memorandorum, edited in 1907 by J. W.
Clark, is a significant source for both Cambridge and Augustinian
history. Although often referred to as a cartulary, its contents
are more wide ranging than just a collection of legal documents. It
includes a history of the foundation, and many items concerning the
relations between Barnwell and the surrounding area, including
disputes with the University. The text was compiled around 1296
from earlier records, although the calendar contains later
obituaries. The edition includes a valuable explanation of the
documents' legal content by the leading legal historian F. W.
Maitland, and is an important resource for researchers in medieval
legal or church history, as well as that of the Cambridge area.
'Grace books' were the volumes in which scribes recorded decisions
of the administration of the University of Cambridge during the
fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Grace Book, first published in
1908, is the third of the Grace Books, Books A and B having been
published in three volumes during the preceding decade. While Grace
Books A and B included details of financial transactions, this
volume focuses on the conferral of degrees by examination and
incorporation, and on various dispensations. This compilation, with
a substantial introduction and index by William George Searle and
J. W. Clark, constitutes a valuable source for those researching
British history and institutions in the early Tudor period, and
this reissue will make them readily available to scholars today.
First published in 1901, this is a rich repository of typefaces
(including English, Greek, Latin, Sanskrit, Arabic, Hebrew and
Cyrillic), ornaments, borders and various decorative devices used
in books printed at the University Press, Cambridge, until 1900.
Highlights of the compilation include a wide range of historical
typefaces (including Caslon, Marr, Figgins, Blake, and Miller and
Richards), stylish borders, corners and head and tail pieces,
university and college shields, and a detailed catalogue of
Egyptian hieroglyphs. It also contains sections on accented letters
and signs, 'poster founts' and ornately styled initial letters.
Prefaced with a brief 'Historical Sketch' by J. W. Clark, a noted
Cambridge academic and antiquarian, Specimens is a valuable archive
of the craft of lettering and design before the advent of the
digital age that will delight bibliophiles, typographers and
collectors.
Universities everywhere strive to enhance resources to improve
facilities, increase staffing, provide bursaries for students and
expand research capacity. As one of the world's oldest and greatest
universities, the University of Cambridge has throughout its 800
years cultivated and received philanthropic support from many
sources. This volume, originally published in 1904, details
university endowments from the thirteenth century onward. The first
major donation, from Nigel de Thornton, was land for part of the
site of the University Library. This was soon followed by a fund
bequeathed by Eleanor of Castile for the support of poor students -
confirming how key priorities have not changed over so many years.
This ambitious volume catalogues benefactions, grants, foundations,
memorial funds and much more. Explanations are given for how these
endowments have helped establish and maintain many of the
University's fine libraries, museums and historic buildings as well
as supporting its students and staff.
M. R. James (1862 1936) is probably best remembered as a writer of
chilling ghost stories, but he was an outstanding scholar of
medieval literature and palaeography, who served both as Provost of
King's College, Cambridge, and as Director of the Fitzwilliam
Museum, and many of his stories reflect his academic background.
His detailed descriptive catalogues of manuscripts owned by
colleges, cathedrals and museums are still of value to scholars
today. James' catalogue of the manuscript holdings of Peterhouse,
Cambridge, with an essay on the history of the college library by
John Willis Clark, was first published in 1899. Now reissued, it
will be welcomed by librarians and researchers alike.
John Willis Clark, a noted academic and antiquarian, published this
book in 1901 after completing his work on the architectural history
of Cambridge. His carefully researched study (Clark personally
visited and measured every building he described, and drew many of
the illustrations), provides a wide-ranging account of the history
of libraries from antiquity to the early modern period. Clark
describes the buildings used to store books: churches, cloisters,
and purpose-built libraries; the way collections were endowed,
audited and protected; the development of library furniture,
including lecterns, stalls, chaining systems and wall-cases; and
the characteristics of monastic, collegiate, and private
collections. The book is generously illustrated, and its
approachable style means it will appeal not only to academic
historians of libraries, but to a wider audience of those
interested in books and reading culture, historic buildings and
artefacts, and medieval, renaissance and early modern studies.
Hailed as 'one of the most important contributions to the social
and intellectual history of England which has ever been made by a
Cambridge man', Robert Willis monumental architectural history of
the University of Cambridge is here reprinted. Its unique
collection of over three hundred plans, antique and specially
commissioned engravings is alone sufficient to make this an
indispensable work of reference on Cambridge architecture before
the onset of the modern age. This selection from the Architectural
History presents in a single volume the complete text relating to
Peterhouse and features a new introduction by David Watkin,
Professor Emeritus in the History of Architecture at the Department
of Art History at Cambridge University.
Hailed as 'one of the most important contributions to the social
and intellectual history of England which has ever been made by a
Cambridge man', Robert Willis' monumental architectural history of
the University of Cambridge is here reprinted. Its unique
collection of over three hundred plans, antique and specially
commissioned engravings is alone sufficient to make this an
indispensable work of reference on Cambridge architecture before
the onset of the modern age. This selection from the Architectural
History presents in a single volume the complete text relating to
St John's College and features a new introduction by David Watkin,
Professor Emeritus in the History of Architecture at the Department
of Art History at Cambridge University.
Hailed as 'one of the most important contributions to the social
and intellectual history of England which has ever been made by a
Cambridge man', Robert Willis' monumental architectural history of
the University of Cambridge is here reprinted. Its unique
collection of over three hundred plans, antique and specially
commissioned engravings is alone sufficient to make this an
indispensable work of reference on Cambridge architecture before
the onset of the modern age. This selection from the Architectural
History presents in a single volume the complete text relating to
Trinity College and features a new introduction by David Watkin,
Professor Emeritus in the History of Architecture at the Department
of Art History at Cambridge University.
Hailed as 'one of the most important contributions to the social
and intellectual history of England which has ever been made by a
Cambridge man', Robert Willis's monumental architectural history of
the University of Cambridge is here reprinted. Its unique
collection of over three hundred plans, antique and specially
commissioned engravings is alone sufficient to make this an
indispensable work of reference on Cambridge architecture before
the onset of the modern age. This selection from the Architectural
History presents in a single volume the complete text relating to
King's College and Eton College and features a new introduction by
David Watkin, Professor Emeritus in the History of Architecture at
the Department of Art History at Cambridge University.
Robert Willis' monumental architectural history of the University
of Cambridge, first published in 1886 in a revised and extended
edition by his nephew J. W. Clark, was hailed as 'one of the most
important contributions to the social and intellectual history of
England which has ever been made by a Cambridge man.' These fully
illustrated volumes are here reprinted in their entirety, with a
modern introduction by Professor David Watkin. Although Willis and
Clark has always been recognised by those interested generally in
the conservation of buildings and in the historic development of
architectural style and taste, its unique collection of over three
hundred plans, antique and specially commissioned engravings is
alone sufficient to make this an indispensable work of reference on
Cambridge architecture before the onset of the modern age.
Adam Sedgwick (1785 1873) is chiefly remembered as one of the
founders of modern geology and an early mentor of Charles Darwin.
Originally published in 1890, this two-part collection is composed
of extensive extracts from Sedgwick's letters together with a rich,
detailed account of his life and work. Both volumes are thoroughly
researched and edited by J. W. Clark, with assistance from T. M.
Hughes. Sedgwick was a contradictory figure who combined devotion
to science with a conservatism borne of his strong religious
beliefs. Whilst the text is limited in its portrayal of these
contradictions as a result of proximity to its subject, this
remains a well-rounded portrait that will be of value to anyone
with an interest in geology or the history of science. Volume I
covers the period 1785 to 1840.
Adam Sedgwick (1785 1873) is chiefly remembered as one of the
founders of modern geology and an early mentor of Charles Darwin.
Originally published in 1890, this two-part collection is composed
of extensive extracts from Sedgwick's letters together with a rich,
detailed account of his life and work. Both volumes are thoroughly
researched and edited by J. W. Clark, with assistance from T. M.
Hughes. Sedgwick was a contradictory figure who combined devotion
to science with a conservatism borne of his strong religious
beliefs. Whilst the text is limited in its portrayal of these
contradictions as a result of proximity to its subject, this
remains a well-rounded portrait that will be of value to anyone
with an interest in geology or the history of science. Volume II
covers the period 1840 to 1873.
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