Ligatus Summer School 2020

This course is now cancelled, please see here for more information:
Ligatus Summer School 2020 cancelled

28 September – 2 October and 5 – 9 October
Dublin, Ireland

Deadline for applications: 30 June 2020
Successful applicants to be contacted by mid August 2020

The 2020 Ligatus Summer School is co-organised with the Saint Catherine Foundation and it will take place in Dublin, Ireland, in collaboration with the Edward Worth Library and visits to the Trinity College library, Maynooth University library, Marsh library and Chester Beatty Library.

Background
The contribution that bindings can make to our understanding of the history and culture of the book is often neglected, but they can offer insights into the study of readership, the book trade, and the provenance of books that are often not available elsewhere. In order to realise this potential, it is important to learn not only the history of the craft but also how to record what is seen in a consistent and organised way. Librarians, cataloguers, conservators, book historians, book collectors and all scholars who work with early books can benefit from understanding the structure and materials of the bindings they encounter and knowing how to record and describe them.
Clear descriptions of bindings are invaluable for the management of library collections, pursuing academic research and making informed decisions about conservation. They are also important for digitisation projects, as they can radically enrich the potential of image and text metadata. It is our belief that bindings should be seen as an integral part of the book, without which our understanding of the history and use of books is often greatly circumscribed.
The main purpose of the Summer School is to uncover the possibilities latent in the detailed study of bookbinding. Both courses offered in this Summer School look at bindings from different geographical areas and with a different approach.

Week 1 (28 September – 2 October): Eastern Mediterranean Bookbinding Structures and Linked Data for bookbinding description

Tutors: Dr Athanasios Velios and Dr Georgios Boudalis

This course is divided into two interconnected sessions.

In the first section, Dr Georgios Boudalis, will focus on the major structural and decorative features of the different bookbinding traditions that have developed in the eastern Mediterranean – including the Coptic, Syriac, Armenian, Georgian and Islamic – with special focus on the Byzantine and post-Byzantine bookbindings. The aim is to follow the evolution of these closely related bookbindings and establish their similarities and differences during lectures, slide-shows and demonstrations of real bookbindings from local collections. This part of the course will consist of six 90-minute presentations from Monday to Wednesday.

The second part of the course will be taught by Dr Athanasios Velios and will deal with the methodologies and techniques that can be used to record bookbindings. This session will focus on: a) Linked Data, the semantic web and the CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model (CRM); b) standardised vocabularies for book descriptions (Language of Bindings and SKOS); c) the development of database schemas for book descriptions; d) mapping bookbinding description databases to CIDOC-CRM and publishing Linked Data. A part of these sessions will be devoted to to the actual recording of specific bindings from the Worth library. This session will consist of a combination of presentations and hands-on workshops.

Week 2 (5 – 9 October): European Bookbinding 1450-1830

Tutor: Professor N. Pickwoad

This course will follow European bookbinding from the end of the Middle Ages to the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, using the bindings themselves to illustrate the aims and intentions of the binding trade. A large part of the course will be devoted to the identification of both broad and detailed distinctions within the larger groups of plain commercial bindings and the possibilities of identifying the work of different countries, cities, even workshops without reference to finishing tools. The identification and significance of the different materials used in bookbinding will be examined, as well as the classification of bookbindings by structural type, and how these types developed through the three centuries covered by the course. The development of binding decoration will be touched on, but will not form a major part of the discussion.
The course consists of ten 90-minute sessions with Powerpoint presentations (over 800 images will be shown). Actual examples of bindings will be examined in the afternoons during visits to collections.

Course Fees

Course fees are €400 per person per week.

Please note that course fees cover tuition only. Participants are responsible for arranging their own travel, accommodation, meals etc. during the School.

About the Worth Library

The Edward Worth Library is named after Dr Edward Worth (1676-1733), an early eighteenth-century Dublin physician. Worth was a connoisseur collector, particularly interested in the book as material object. His library holds bindings from Ireland, England, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain. These are in a unique state of preservation and offer historians of the book a treasure trove of material.

About the city of Dublin

Dublin is the capital city of Ireland and is a popular holiday destination. The city holds many important rare book libraries: the Long Room of Trinity College Dublin; the Chester Beatty Library; Marsh’s Library as well as libraries such as the National Library and the Royal Irish Academy. Likewise, there are fascinating museum to visit – all within walking distance of each other.

About the Saint Catherine Foundation

The Saint Catherine Foundation and its related organizations in the USA and Switzerland support conservation work at Saint Catherine’s Monastery, Sinai, Egypt. The foundations in London, New York, and Geneva collaborate with leading universities, museums, libraries and other institutions on cultural, educational and fundraising events and initiatives in Europe, the US and beyond. Partners include the Metropolitan Museum New York, British Library London, State Hermitage Museum St Petersburg, and the Bibliotheca Alexandrina Egypt. The Foundation has been collaborating with Ligatus researchers over the past 20 years.

About Ligatus

Ligatus undertakes work in the history of bookbinding, book conservation, archiving and the application of digital technology to the exploration of these fields. Ligatus’s main research projects currently include the conservation of the books in the library of St. Catherine’s Monastery on Mount Sinai and the development of the Language of Bindings (LoB) thesaurus of bookbinding terms and the Linked Conservation Data project.