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1. New Design for Fragmentarium
Like a new shirt, a new design makes you look good and feel better. But you should change it from time to time. Therefore we have changed the design from the form it has shown to the public since August 2017.
It is important that the design fits the project, and therefore that the new presentation makes understandable Fragmentarium Phase II's goal, namely, to represent an essential node of fragment studies with regards to digitization, research, and teaching, capable of continuing the discipline.
The various new programs of Fragmentarium Phase II, such as Partner Projects, Fellowships, Cataloguing Courses, and Workshops are individually presented.
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2. Partner Projects
One of the most important features of Fragmentarium are partnerships. In recent years, the growing worldwide interest in fragmentology has given rise to numerous new fragment projects. Fragmentarium offers such projects free, Open Access publication and scientific support.
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3. Fellowships
Fragmentarium is pleased to announce that six Fellowships for 2020 are currently in progress:
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Fragments Detached from Incunabula in the Department of Manuscripts and Rare Books of the Library and Information Centre of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Dr. Fanni Hende, HAS-NSZL Res Librariae Hungariae Research Group
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The Exeter Fragments Project, Dr. Francisco Álvarez Lopez, University of Exeter
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Medieval manuscript fragments of Teutonic Prussia, Dr. Paulina Pludra Żuk, L. & A. Birkenmajer Insitute for the History of Science, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw
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Maculature in the Van Buchell Collection, Dr. Vito Santoliquido, ENSSIB, Lyon
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Manuscript Fragments in Argentina, Dr. Marcela Borelli, IIBICRIT, Buenos Aires
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Detached Fragments in the Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig II, Ivana Dobcheva, Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig
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Library and Information Centre of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Department of Manuscripts and Rare Book, T 338
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4. Music Fragments in the Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart
The German Research Foundation has approved a second phase of the research project focusing on medieval music fragments from Württemberg monasteries now in the Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, the Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg, and the Württembergische Landesbibliothek Stuttgart. Led by Prof. Dr. Stefan Morent (Musikwissenschaftliches Institut, Universität Tübingen), with the collaboration of Dr. Waltraud Götz and Michael Braunger, the research team aims to describe, catalogue and publish on Fragmentarium some 2000 fragments. Over the next two years, the project will provide new insights into the medieval culture of monasteries in Württemberg prior to the destruction that followed the arrival of the Reformation in 1537.
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