Throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries a large number of historical records were published in a wide variety of forms, most of which can be described as being part of wider historical and antiquarian practices. Taking the publishing of record editions as itself an historical practice, this essay surveys the varying people, practices and purposes involved before discussing a number of continuities and changes in the practice across two centuries. It will show how records publications were not only access driven, but also concerned with the preservation of records, and that they influenced archival practices, changing the way that archival collections were ordered and arranged. The essay will also argue that the place of record pu...
This paper is a much abridged version of a section of the opening chapter of the official history of...
Print culture provides the material and intellectual basis for historians interested in the history ...
Much of the peculiarity of recent historical research in intellectual property (IP) lies in the dist...
In the late nineteenth century Oxford colleges opened up their ancient muniments to be catalogued b...
Historical practice is described in terms of the intimacies involved in reading archival material an...
The history of archive cataloguing, particularly before the 20th century, has been much neglected. T...
This article analyses the publication trends of history in early modern Britain and North-America, 1...
This chapter looks at the role played by consumer magazines in a variety of areas of historical rese...
Abstract In the last decades, a vast body of literature has scrutinized the archive, regarding it as...
This article analyses publication trends in the field of history in early modern Britain and North A...
From the 1860s, Oxford colleges invited external scholars to catalogue their muniments. By looking a...
Archives are the factories and laboratories of the historian. Along with private studies and public ...
The State Papers were the principal executive instruments of the early modern English state. By 1610...
This report examines the creation of archival records in a publishing setting and discusses the rami...
Archives are the factories and laboratories of the historian. Along with private studies and public ...
This paper is a much abridged version of a section of the opening chapter of the official history of...
Print culture provides the material and intellectual basis for historians interested in the history ...
Much of the peculiarity of recent historical research in intellectual property (IP) lies in the dist...
In the late nineteenth century Oxford colleges opened up their ancient muniments to be catalogued b...
Historical practice is described in terms of the intimacies involved in reading archival material an...
The history of archive cataloguing, particularly before the 20th century, has been much neglected. T...
This article analyses the publication trends of history in early modern Britain and North-America, 1...
This chapter looks at the role played by consumer magazines in a variety of areas of historical rese...
Abstract In the last decades, a vast body of literature has scrutinized the archive, regarding it as...
This article analyses publication trends in the field of history in early modern Britain and North A...
From the 1860s, Oxford colleges invited external scholars to catalogue their muniments. By looking a...
Archives are the factories and laboratories of the historian. Along with private studies and public ...
The State Papers were the principal executive instruments of the early modern English state. By 1610...
This report examines the creation of archival records in a publishing setting and discusses the rami...
Archives are the factories and laboratories of the historian. Along with private studies and public ...
This paper is a much abridged version of a section of the opening chapter of the official history of...
Print culture provides the material and intellectual basis for historians interested in the history ...
Much of the peculiarity of recent historical research in intellectual property (IP) lies in the dist...