Incunabula Cataloguing Project. Number 11: Blockbooks (Part 5) – The Art of Memory
In this final blog on the John Rylands Library’s collection of 15th-century blockbooks, we take a look at the memory aid known as the “Ars memorandi”
In this final blog on the John Rylands Library’s collection of 15th-century blockbooks, we take a look at the memory aid known as the “Ars memorandi”
Continuing our look at the blockbooks in the John Rylands Library: an early guidebook to Rome and a book on the art of palm-reading
Guest author Ed Potten discusses a newly acquired 15th century coffret containing a woodcut print
Guest author Ed Potten discusses the dating of the unique St Christopher woodcut
John Gandy, Incunabula Cataloguer at the John Rylands Library, talks about the newly published early printing collection on Manchester Digital Collections
Continuing our look at the blockbook collection in the John Rylands Library, this blog focuses on the Ars Moriendi (“The Art of Dying”)
A look at two rare blockbooks in their original 15th century binding
An introduction to the blockbook collection and possibly the oldest printed European book to exist
The first non-religious book to be printed … or was it?
A description of Johannes Regiomontanus’ Kalendarium of 1476










