I would like to draw your attention tho the recently-completed 
project of the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Munich to catalogue and 
digitize its holdings of early modern Codices iconographici 
(pictorial manuscripts with little or no explanatory text):
http://www.manuscripta-mediaevalia.de/hs/laufende_projekte.htm
or directly at:
http://mdzx.bib-bvb.de/codicon/start.html
Within the project, 117 manuscripts dating from the 15th to mid-17th 
centuries were catalogued and made available in digital reproduction 
online. Further information on the collection, which currently 
comprises c. 550 items, is provided from the inventory drawn up by 
Johann Andreas Schmeller in the early 19th century, which was 
converted into full electronic text.
The manuscripts were described by Dr. Marianne Reuter, who 
characterizes the collection as follows:
"The items contained in this is pictorial "Realienkunde" date from 
the 15th to 20th century with particular focus on the 16th to 19th 
centuries. The places of origin are rarely known. With regard to the 
provenances, the ducal and princely collections of the Munich and 
Mannheim courts form the basis with 30 and 60 manuscripts 
respectively. Some of the oldest items were already part of the 
Munich court library at its foundation by Duke Albrecht Vth of 
Bavaria in 1558. This includes the so-called "Kleinodienbuch" 
(depictions of jewellery owned by the dukes, Cod.icon. 429), which 
was recently also made available in facsimile:
Das Kleinodienbuch der Herzogin Anna von Bayern. Handschrift 
Cod.icon. 429 der Bayerischen Staatsbibliothek München. Faksimile und 
Kommentar in russischer und deutscher Sprache mit Beiträgen von Kurt 
Löcher, Marianne Reuter, Irmhild Schäfer, Lorenz Seelig und Stefanie 
Walker. Kindler Verlag Berlin 2008.
18 volumes come from the library of Johann Jakob Fugger at Augsburg, 
which was acquired by Duke Albrecht Vth in 1571 and also comprised 
the library of the Nuremberg humanist Hartmann Schedel (the author of 
the 'Nuremberg chronicle'). Among the items from Mannheim are 4 
manuscripts from the electoral library at Düsseldorf and 7 from the 
collection of the Florentine humanist Petrus Victorius (died 1585) 
and his descendants, which Elector Karl Theodor bought in 1779 in 
Rome and which were transferred to Munich with the Mannheim court 
library partly in 1783 and finally in 1803.
A further c. 20 items have been identified as formerly owned by 
monasteries and another 6 from the city library of Regensburg, having 
been transferred to Munich after the dissolution of monasteries in 
the early 19th century. Subsequently, the collection was also 
increased by purchases like the Parisian collection of the 
orientalist Quatremère and the Augsburg collection of the banker Paul 
Joseph von Cobres. Further noteworthy owners include Andreas Felix 
Oefele, Anton Johann Lipowsky, Maximilian Joseph Graf Montgelas, the 
travellers to South America Johann Baptist Spix and Carl Friedrich 
Philipp von Martius, the architects Haller von Hallerstein and 
Friedrich von Gärtner. For some 19th-century items, additional 
materials are kept in the BSB's collection of modern papers (e.g. 
Klenziana, Schlagintweitiana, Zieblandiana)."
Some prominent examples of this unusual collection, e.g. the globes 
by Philipp Apian, can at the moment be seen at the exhiibition to 
celebrate the 450th anniversary of the BSB and have been described in 
the exhibition catalogue:
http://www.450jahre-bsb.de/
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2 comments:
Quite useful information!
Keep on posting things like this. Thanks!
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