Results 151 to 160 of about 2,022 (195)
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2000
Abstract This session opened with a summary of David Hiley’s keynote paper, which had been distributed in advance and which provided the main focus for discussion. Hiley first articulated the need to separate scientific study of chant notations from the aims of early palaeographers who wished to demonstrate the continuity of melodic ...
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Abstract This session opened with a summary of David Hiley’s keynote paper, which had been distributed in advance and which provided the main focus for discussion. Hiley first articulated the need to separate scientific study of chant notations from the aims of early palaeographers who wished to demonstrate the continuity of melodic ...
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This article seeks to explore new digital ways of distinguishing between scribal hands in medieval manuscripts. An analysis of traditional palaeographical approaches to hand identification will be followed by a discussion in which attention will be paid both to the use of computer software to enhance existing methods of scribal identification, and to ...
Aussems, Mark, Brink, Axel
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2005
Abstract Unhappily, even in the hands of the leading practitioners of the art—for science it is not—Ludwig Traube, E. A. Lowe, or T. J. Brown—the study of Irish script is still far from fulfilling this function. However, although general agreement has not been reached, there have been considerable advances from the early part of the ...
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Abstract Unhappily, even in the hands of the leading practitioners of the art—for science it is not—Ludwig Traube, E. A. Lowe, or T. J. Brown—the study of Irish script is still far from fulfilling this function. However, although general agreement has not been reached, there have been considerable advances from the early part of the ...
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2015
The Coptic alphabet developed out of a history of attempts to write the Egyptian language using the Greek alphabet, beginning soon after Alexander the Great’s conquest of Egypt toward the end of the fourth century BCE. Various selections of characters from the Demotic writing system (which was the last of the native Egyptian writing systems, after the ...
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The Coptic alphabet developed out of a history of attempts to write the Egyptian language using the Greek alphabet, beginning soon after Alexander the Great’s conquest of Egypt toward the end of the fourth century BCE. Various selections of characters from the Demotic writing system (which was the last of the native Egyptian writing systems, after the ...
openaire +1 more source

