Iberian Books Explained

Iberian Books is a bibliographical research project set up to chart the development of printing in Spain, Portugal and the New World in the early-modern period.[1] It offers a catalogue of what was known to have been printed, along with a survey of surviving copies and links to digital editions.[2] It is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.[3] The records created are made available in an open-access database under a Creative Commons license.[4]

Established in 2007 and based in the School of History at University College Dublin, as of December 2016 the project has made available data for the period from the beginning of printing in the Iberian Peninsula around 1472 to the middle of the seventeenth century. In late 2017, the project expects to publish the datasets for the second half of the seventeenth century. The datasets currently available online (1472-1650) hold information on 66,000 items, 339,000 copies, and 15,000 digital copies.[5]

The project works in partnership with the Digital Library Group at University College Dublin and with the Universal Short Title Catalogue Project based at the University of St Andrews.

Project

Iberian Books is a bibliographical resource similar to the English Short Title Catalogue, helping to identify works by a given author or publisher, or on a given subject.[6] In addition, it helps in identifying and mapping broader publishing trends.[7] The datasets are published via a platform that facilitates the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH) harvesting of metadata in OAI-compliant Dublin Core and Metadata Object Description Schema (MODS) formats.[8] The datasets have also been incorporated in the open-access Universal Short Title Catalogue (USTC) based at the University of St Andrews.[9]

The dataset has been cited in academic monographs and journal articles,[10] and by major auction houses.[11]

See also

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About Iberian Books . website of the project team . 2016-12-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161223201430/http://iberian.ucd.ie/about/ . 2016-12-23 . dead .
  2. Alexander S. Wilkinson, 'Exploring the Print World of Early-Modern Iberia', Bulletin of Spanish Studies (2012), 89 (4):491-506 and Alejandra Ulla Lorenzo, 'Iberian Book Project (1472-1650): sobre los usos del catálogo en el estudio del impreso científico antiguo'. Ciencias y traducción en el mundo hispánico. 3, Mantua, "Pliegos"
  3. Web site: Mellon Grant Awards. 2016-12-23 .
  4. Web site: Terms of Use. 2016-12-29.
  5. Web site: About Iberian Books . project website . 2016-12-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161223201430/http://iberian.ucd.ie/about/ . 2016-12-23 . dead .
  6. See David McKitterick, 'Bibliography, Population and Statistics', in Joseph P. McDermott and Peter Burke (eds.), The Book Worlds of East Asia and Europe, 1450-1800. Connections and Comparisons (Hong Kong: HKU, 2015), p. 82
  7. For the contours of publishing revealed by the data, see the introductions to the printed catalogue Alexander S. Wilkinson (ed.), Iberian Books. Books Published in Spanish or Portuguese or on the Iberian Peninsula before 1601, (Leiden: Brill, 2010)'
  8. Web site: About Iberian Books . project website . 2016-12-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161223201430/http://iberian.ucd.ie/about/ . 2016-12-23 . dead .
  9. Web site: Information on the USTC Project. project website . 2016-12-29 .
  10. Web site: Google Scholar. Google Scholar Citations for Iberian Books . 2016-12-23 .
  11. Web site: Sotheby's Auction Catalogue 2011. 2016-12-23 .