39
A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

A Meander through the History of Indexing

ByPeter Duncan

2010

Page 2: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

First “Indexes”

• Cannon of the Gospels e.g. Lindisfarne 7th Century

• Masoretes 10th Century

• Stephen Langdon (1150-1228)

• Knowledge of the Alphabet

Page 3: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

First Printed IndexesInvention of printing 1456

• Alphabet important part of technique• Specialization & commercialization • Peter Schoeffer (ca. 1425-1503)

regards his books as being superior better because they have indexes

Page 4: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Peter Schoeffer (ca. 1425-1503)

Page 5: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

First Printed Indexes Named

• Dating not so clear Epistolae Hieronymi (1470?) List of first words of each section

• Clearly dated: Turrecrematta Expositio Psalteri (4 Oct 1470) printed by Ulrich Han List of words of each double sheet

• Undated possibly earlier: Augustine De arte praedicante (146-?) Two editions produced by Furst and Schoeffer

Page 6: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

First named indexerBernardo Machiavelli (1428-1500)

Niccolò His son

Livy Fictitious

Page 7: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Sixteenth Century Indexes

What an index is, is not clear• Table of the contents?• Alphabetical list of subjects?

Page 8: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

St John Chrysostom. Commentarium (1554)

Page 9: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

St John Chrysostom. Commentarium (1554)

Page 10: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Toscanelli. Observationi … di Virgilio (1568)

Page 11: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Toscanelli. Observationi … di Virgilio (1568)

Page 12: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

OrteliusTheatrum orbis terrarium (1570)

Page 13: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Ortelius

Theatrum orbis terrarium (1570)

Page 14: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

OrteliusTheatrum orbis terrarium (1570)

Page 15: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Seventeenth Century

Plan of the book and indexes where we would expect them

Page 16: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Thevenot. Travels (1686)

Page 17: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Thevenot. Travels (1686)

Page 18: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Important indexer:

Samuel Pepys (1633-1703)

Page 19: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Eighteenth century

Indexing format recognizable

Page 20: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

The ladies magazine or Entertaining companion for the fair sex. Vol. 7,

1776.Advertisement, an extraordinary oneDead, select dialogues of the letters from the,

to the livingDissipation, dangers ofDullness, humourously [sic] describedFair sex, effusions in praise of themFans, moral reflections on themI’ll tell you what, a fable ofMistake, a terrible onePerseverance, in point of loveVirtue in distress 

Page 21: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Important indexer:

Alexander Cruden (1699-1770) , A Complete Concordance to the Holy Scriptures (1737).

Page 22: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Nineteenth Century

Professionalism begins?But first the Same old thing

Page 23: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

The ladies monthly museum. Vol. 6, 1801

Page 24: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

The ladies monthly museum. Vol. 6, 1801.

Page 25: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

The ladies monthly museum. Vol. 6, 1801.

Similar index entries to previous Affability and gentleness, essay on, 45 Affectation, the destruction of beauty, 127 Aigrette worn by the Queen on her

birthday, described, 217 Duties due to Society, 474 Words, remarkable ones, 429

Page 26: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Notes and queries. Vol. 1, 1849-50.

Anecdote of a peal of bellsBald head, defense ofB. (J.M) on finkle or finkel- -on howkey or horkey- -St. WinifredaBlack broth, Lacedaemonian, was it

coffee?Curious custom--symbolic custom

Page 27: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Notes and queries. Vol. 1, 1849-50.

Depinges, what are they?Ed., what are deepenings?Hints to intending editorsLimb of the law on a maiden assize and

white glovesMess (A) meaning ofSinger (S.W.) on the Dodo queries--Dodo repliesTo endeavour oneselfUse of coffins 

Page 28: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Fiske. Darwinism and other essays (1893)

Bow-wow theoryBuckle, H.T., his History of civilization, 43 his death at

Damascus, 211; -- his mental impatience, 212; his lack of subtlety, 214Electric girls, 129Fasting girls, 130Heredity in book-making, 350; Mr Buckle’s loose talk

about heredityLouis XIV., his injurious influence on science and

literature, 193Title pages, slovenliness of, 349Virtue and pleasureWallace, A.R., on causes of man’s intellectual

supremacy, 38, 46; his surprising credulity as to spiritualism, 127

Page 29: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Professional indexing

• Indexing Society, 1877-90• Mary Petherbridge

Page 30: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Petherbridge . Indexing as a profession for women. Good housekeeping. (1923)“There are four stages in indexing: (a) The writing of the slips; (b) The alphabetical listing of them; (c) The critical editing and its

attendant research; (d) The proof reading, which must

always be done by the indexer personally.”

Page 31: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953)

Page 32: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Belloc. Marie Antoinette . (1909)

Boston, British man of war arrives in harbor of, to impose tea tax, at same hour as Louis XV.’s death, 72

D’AIGUILLON, Duc de, chief Minister at end of Louis XV.’s reign after Choiseul’s fall, made by the Du Barry, 55,58,59; receives grant of public money on dismissal in the modern English fashion, 83; Fall of largely due to Marie Antoinette, 84

Elizabeth, Madame, Marie Antoinette’s relations with, 122; brought to Paris by mob in Days of October, 230, 231

Page 33: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Belloc. Marie Antoinette . (1909)

Joseph II., son of Maria Theresa, first association with her in the empire, 23; hastens the conclusion of Marie Antoinette’s marriage, 30,31; accompanies Marie Antoinette for the first day on journey to Versailles before her marriage, 36 his insufficient character, 103; his ignorance of La Marck and Lavoisier, 105 his ludicrous misjudgment of French military power, 105; his Bungling in religion, 131

MADAME. See AdelaideMadame Elizabeth, her passage of arms with

Pétion, 287-288; watches sun rise with the Queen before attack upon the palace, 320.

See also Elizabeth.

Page 34: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Charlotte Yonge (1823-1901)

Page 35: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)

Page 36: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)Portrait by Erickarla

Page 37: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Beatrice Webb (1858-1943)

Page 38: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

Georgette Heyer (1902-1974)

Page 39: A Meander through the History of Indexing By Peter Duncan 2010

“This is not a profession to be taken up casually. Only a real student can hope to make a success of it; but to that privileged student the work is a

delight” 

Thanks