This week’s post is another in a series adapted from papers on Rosenbach objects written by our wonderful new class of docents. – – – – – – Interior of front cover of Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám, the astronomer-poet of Persia. Translated into English verse. Edward Fitzgerald, trans. London: Bernard Quaritch, 1859. EL3.F553r859 Part translation, …
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Robert Burns
This week’s blog post is again courtesy of Emelye Keyser, the Rosenbach collections intern who wrote a previous post on Rudimentum Novitiorum. Given that Emelye came to the Rosenbach after graduating from the University of Edinburgh, we couldn’t resist asking her to write a piece for tomorrow’s Burns night. — — — — — — …
The Many Lives of Goody Two Shoes
This past fall the Rosenbach was joined by a wonderful new class of docents. Their rigorous training included ten weeks of lectures and workshops as well as two written assignments on books and objects in the Rosenbach collections. Over the next few weeks we plan to share a selection of their work; we hope you …
Turning Point
Spending time in another century is one of the joys of museum life. Over the last week I’ve been buried in Civil War manuscripts, to the point that when I walk down the street my brain reruns fragments of letters I’ve read or muses on the precise sequences of events in a particular day’s battle. …
Belt Book
If you have a smartphone or PDA, where do you keep it for easy access to all your important information? Maybe in your pocket (if it will fit), or in your purse (if you carry one), or maybe in a holster or belt clip. Here’s a close up of our librarian Elizabeth Fuller sporting her …
Holiday Merrymaking
The Rosenbach will be closed from December 24 through January 1, so this will be the last blog post of 2012. As I often do, I decided to turn to our collection of Cruikshank illustrations for some images, this time of holiday merriment. If you aren’t familiar with George Cruikshank, you might enjoy this post …
Death of Washington
Our national celebration of Washington comes on his birthday, February 22 (February 11 according to the Julian calendar that he would have used then), but December 14 marks the day of his death. Given that Washington has often been revered as a sort of secular saint, it seems only fitting to remember him today as …
Rudimentum Novitiorum
I’m Emelye, a new intern here with an inclination towards all things medieval. This week I want to share little bit about a particularly impressive item in the Rosenbach’s incunabula collection. Titled Rudimentum Novitiorum, this book was printed in Lübeck, Germany in 1475 – one year before the printing press even came to England. The …
Jewish History and Heritage Tours
What are you doing next Wednesday night at 6? Here at the Rosenbach we will be having a special docent-led thematic tour on “Jewish History & Heritage in the Rosenbach Home.” In order to support this tour (which will also run December 12 and 19) we will be putting out some special Jewish materials in …
Thanksgiving 1862
Although the last Thursday of November wouldn’t be set aside as a national holiday until 1863, the day was widely celebrated in the decade or so before, thanks in large part to the efforts of Godey’s Ladies Book editor Sarah Josepha Hale, who wrote scores of articles, petitions, and letters to officials promoting the idea …