Blog

You are here

13
Sep

Modern Manuscripts from the Military History Institute Prague

In 2023, the Military Historical Institute in Prague digitised another 22 manuscripts, dating from the first half of the 19th century and, with a few exceptions, written in German. In terms of content, these comprise military theory manuals, overviews Austrian army units, including the histories of some of them, texts on war events and the figures of military leaders, as well as geographical works, musical texts (shelf marks IIR D 796, IIR F 1622) and documents of personal nature, such as Ludwig von Benedek’s 1843 testimonial from 1843 (shelf mark IIR F 1621).

13
Sep

Manuscripts from the Czech Pharmaceutical Museum in Kuks

The Czech Pharmaceutical Museum in Kuks (a centre of Charles University in Prague – the Faculty of Pharmacy in Hradec Králové) digitised two manuscripts in 2023. The older of them is a copy of the 17th-century work Miracula chimici seu chrisosophiae by Johann Baptist Großschedel von Aicha (shelf mark HK-SR-5). The second manuscript is the register of the General Pharmaceutical Council in Prague (shelf mark sign. HGL, inv. č. 5, kn. 2), which contains records mostly from the years 1823–1826, complemented until the end of the 19th century; these primarily include a list of pharmacies and their owners or operators, as well as a list of the pharmacists who graduated from Charles-Ferdinand University.

13
Sep

Modern Manuscripts from the Museum of the Jindřichův Hradec Region

In 2023, the Museum of the Jindřichův Hradec Region provided access to ten manuscripts, chiefly from the last third of the 18th century and the first third of the 19th century. Most of them are Czech and German prayer books, with the exceptions being the Passion from 1713–1714 (shelf mark Rk 148), probably a copy of two printed books by Václav Karel Holan Rovenský, and a set of Marian and other hymns from 1827 (shelf mark Rk 29).

13
Jul

A Manuscript from the Regional Museum in Teplice

In 2023, the Regional Museum in Teplice digitised a codex containing notes from the lectures of Jeroným Besnecker (1678–1749), a later abbot of the Cistercian monastery in Osek, which he delivered on Aristotle’s treatises on logic, the works De anima and Metaphysics at the Archbishop’s Seminary in Prague in Prague in 1709–1710 (shelf mark Or II 24).

Pages