The 2006 paperback edition has a list price of €20/$35; the hardback currently lists at $110/€90
The first edition was printed in 1899, and it's still the sine qua non. (1) If you were in Italy, you could buy a copy of Cappeilli for €24 (ca. $30); high shipping costs (ca €40) discourage any thought of purchasing the book by mail directly from the publisher, but (2) You can get a copy from Blackwell’s online for £23/$40 + £3.50 shipping = £26.50/$46. (3) If you use one of the international book finding services (such as ABEbooks at ), you'll find a range of prices and selling points (many in Europe) with prices ranging from $40-200. A second-hand copy is fine if it's in viable physical condition. (4) You may purchase an enlarged edition of Cappelli's text on CD from Dr. Olaf Pluta (University of Bochum, Germany) for €99 (ca. $120); the CD has the advantage of being easier to carry about with you to libraries, assuming that you're taking your laptop as well. The disadvantage is that the abbreviations on the CD are presented in a highly formalized late gothic script, which falsifies their actual appearance in manuscripts (the script in the printed volume is closer to reality). For details and ordering information, see . (5) There is an English translation of Cappelli's introduction, published as The Elements of Abbreviation in Medieval Latin Paleography, translated by David Heimann and Richard Kay (Lawrence, KS: University of Kansas Libraries, 1982); but there is no particular need to go out of your way to acquire it unless you want it for your own library.
About one week before the course begins, we will mail to you a CD containing several scanned articles as a course-pack, with the request that you read certain ones before the first meeting.
|
Email us your comments about RBS or about this web site. Last Modified: Tuesday, 29-Apr-2008 22:24:27 EDT © 2005 Rare Book School at the University of Virginia |