The Missing Antique Archive of Fabre-Palaprat's Ordre du Temple (original) (raw)
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Revue bénédictine, 2023
AS ARCHIVIST AND CORRESPONDENT OF THE CABINET DES CHARTES Modern scholarship into the medieval past owes a great deal to the efforts of seventeenth-and eighteenth-century researchers. 1 Labouring in secular and especially ecclesiastical archives, they inventoried, transcribed, and subsequently also disseminated the contents of original documents, many of which were later confiscated, dispersed, or destroyed during the revolutionary period. Arguably the most ambitious of these efforts was coordinated by the Cabinet des Chartes, an office specially created for this purpose by the French government. Here, over the course of less than three decades (1762-90), the staff assembled an extraordinary collection of tens of thousands of copies of charters pertaining to the nation's medieval history. 2 Nearly two thousand volumes full of charter copies, letters, and working papers in the Collection Moreau of the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris bear witness to the enormous scope of the project, the Cabinet's origins, and its internal organization. Furthermore, they also reveal the challenges faced by director Jacob-Nicolas Moreau (1717-1803) in realizing the analogue precursor of the modern full-text database that was the Dépôt des Chartes. 3 1. I wish to thank Melissa Provijn for her comments on the draft version of this paper. 2. D. Gembicki, 'Das Dépôt des chartes (1762-1790). Ein historisches Forschungszentrum', in K.
The Lost Library of Jacques Philippe d’Orville
Quaerendo, 2017
The present article is an investigation of the manuscripts and annotated books formerly belonging to the Dutch scholar Jacques Philippe d’Orville (1696-1751) which did not enter the Bodleian Library along with the rest of his library. Evidence is provided that disproves the commonly accepted assertion that d’Orville’s library, which today is known as the D’Orville collection, entered the Bodleian almost intact.
Verifying the Continuation of the French Ordre du Temple and the OSMTJ
Templar Succession: Establishing Continuity 1307-Present, 2021
One of the most signifcant gaps in the chronologies regarding the continuation of the Ordre du Temple and the modern Templar movement lies in dim period that exists from the waning days of the late 1800s until 1932. From there we see the emergence of the Sovereign and Military Order of the Temple of Jerusalem under Theodore Covias. In most retellings, the time of the Grandmastership of Josephin Peladan in 1892 until the registration of name of OSMTJ are left with little comment, and yet, this period of time is crucial to establish a legitimate continuance. Even the historicity of the Grandmastership of Peladan is a matter of question. Peladan, famous for his voluminous wrtings, paintings, and his fervent Catholic mysticism, has scholars devoted to his study, and yet even they cannot verify a connection beyond doubt. Nevertheless, in this treatise the subject of the continuation from Peladan to the 1932 registration will be attempted with every source available to the author, and will be dealt with honestly.
Archive Matters: Works of Ahmet Polat, Tayfun Serttaş and Hakan Kırdar
Archiving goes back to the third millennia BC, but modern archival thinking has many of its roots in the French Revolution. The French National Archives (created during the revolution) possess perhaps the largest archival collection in the world, with records going as far back as the seventh century A.D. Yet archiving only became a "fever" in the eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries, when collecting and archiving things and making taxonomies, became credited as an important part of cultural heritage. Almost any kind of document was collected and categorized in the form of different mediums; letters, notes, books, drawings and last but not least photographs.
De Gruyter eBooks, 2018
Early Christianity was heir to the archival practice and discourse of Greek and Roman societies, in which public and private archives enjoyed a great deal of consideration. Even before creating their own archives, Christian congregations, when becoming a structured society, adhered to the archival discourse of their times, and the mention of archives in their writings served apologetic and theological aims. The article argues that the main impulse to undertake archival activity came from the new form of leadership, the bishop: alone, or in connections with other colleagues, in particular within the meetings (synods), the bishop produced a huge number of written records, which was to be arranged in archival form. After a brief presentation of the papyrological evidence, the article discusses the traces of ancient episcopal archives detectable in the historiographical and apologetic writings compiled in the main episcopal sees, such as Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch. 1 Historical introduction and methodological issues Early Christianity was heir to the archival practice and discourse of Greek and Roman societies. The high amount of consideration achieved by public and private archives, 1 regarded as authoritative repositories of memoirs and legal docu-|| 1 I will begin with a working definition of 'archive' offered by Vandorpe 2009, 217-218 in a recent handbook of papyrology, notoriously a discipline which pays great attention to the study of dossiers and archives: '[an] archive is a deliberate collection of papers in antiquity by a single person, family, community, or around an office'. Obviously, in the course of the work, I will also make use of Schenk's and Friedrich's papers and take into account the sophisticated conceptual framework they proposed at our conference: I am thinking in particular of Schenk's distinction between archival records, archives and archival thinking, and Friedrich's reconstruction of the dialectics between archival practices and archival discourse, both of which are very useful for approaching the scant clues we have about Late Antique archives. See also their books: Friedrich
The Ottoman Archives of the Athonite Monasteries
Ce volume réunit des études présentées lors du colloque « Lire les Archives de l'Athos » tenu à Athènes du 18 au 20 novembre 2015, ainsi que des contributions et éditions de documents supplémentaires. Ce colloque fut organisé pour célébrer les 70 ans de la col lec tion des Archives de l'Athos, refondée par Paul Lemerle en 1945, dont l'objet est la pu bli ca tion des actes grecs conservés dans les monastères du Mont Athos en Grèce jusqu'en 1500. Vingt-trois volumes de cette édition ont déjà été publiés comprenant les actes de quatorze monastères, la dernière parution étant celle des Actes de Vatopédi III en novembre 2019. Ce livre n'a pas pour objectif de faire le bilan exhaustif de l'apport de la documentation athonite à l'historiographie de Byzance. Cependant, les contributions ici rassemblées démontrent l'importance capitale des actes conservés à l'Athos pour l'étude de domaines de recherche variés, allant de l'archivistique à la société et à la culture. D'autres articles et éditions d'archives modernes rendent hommage aux savants de diverses nationalités qui, depuis le xix e siècle, ont contribué de façon remarquable à l'avancée de notre connaissance du corpus documentaire athonite. Une dernière partie du volume est dédiée aux corpus d'actes écrits dans d'autres langues que le grec, qui demeurent aujourd'hui insuffisamment connus et utilisés par la communauté internationale des byzantinistes. Le colloque « Lire les Archives de l'Athos », organisé par Olivier Delouis, Raúl Estangüi Gómez, Christophe Giros, et Kostis Smyrlis, a bénéficié de l'appui de l'École française d'Athènes et du Musée byzantin et chrétien d'Athènes, qui ont généreusement mis leurs locaux à notre disposition. Le Laboratoire d'excellence « Religions et sociétés dans le monde méditerranéen » (RESMED, Sorbonne Université) a apporté un important concours financier. Par ailleurs, notre manifestation a été honorée de la présence de représentants du Patriarcat oecuménique de Constantinople et de la Sainte Communauté de l'Athos. Que tous soient ici remerciés. Nous voudrions enfin exprimer notre gratitude à Paule Pagès pour sa contribution décisive à la préparation de ce volume, ainsi qu'à Marek Eby, qui a relu les articles en anglais. Lire les Archives de l'Athos, éd. O. Delouis & K. Smyrlis (Travaux et mémoires 23/2), Paris 2019.