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rare books

  • Must Love Dogs: E. J. Detmold

    Posted

    <html><body><p>This month's "Must Love Dogs" blog series again focuses on an illustrator.  E. J.

  • World War I in the Everyday Experience

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    <html><body><drupal-media data-align="left" data-caption='"19 May 1918, Sunday" from the Radha Mohan Lal B.A. Diaries, 1915-1922 (Mss. Acc.

  • Must Love Dogs: Cecil Aldin

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    <html><body><p>Cecil Aldin (1870-1935) was a British artist and illustrator, famous for his portrayal of dogs.</p>

  • Handmade books and the Old Stile Press

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    <html><body><drupal-media data-align="right" data-caption data-entity-type="media" data-entity-uuid="66ca1da9-628f-45b6-b1b2-7e6fef6938b9" data-view-mod

  • Founders: The People Behind William & Mary

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    <html><body><p>This year's Charter Day marked the 325th anniversary of the founding of William &amp; Mary by William III and Mary II, the first and (to date) only joint-m

  • Tis the Season

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    <html><body><p>In this month's dog series post, we decided to focus on dog books related to the December holidays.

  • Must Love Dogs: 11/11/18

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    <html><body><p>In 1918, at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, an armistice was signed between the Allies and Germany, effectively ending World War I.

  • Must Love Dogs: Journal of a Neglected Bulldog

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    <html><body><p>You may recall from our <a href="https://scrc.blogs.wm.edu/2017/09/13/mu…

  • Must Love Dogs

    Posted

    <html><body><p>If you've ever visited the Special Collections Research Center, you may have learned that we hold the second largest collection of books about dogs in the Unit

  • "The Looted Book"

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    <html><body><p>Institutional knowledge is an awesome thing and something that is often taken for granted and/or overlooked.

  • Mosaic Intern's Work Offers Glimpse of Artistic Text

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    <html><body><p>What do Indiana Jones and the Content Services Mosaic Intern have in common?

  • Instruction in Special Collections: A Closer Look at SCRC's Recent Acquisitions

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    <html><body><p>With a goal of not only collecting and preserving texts and objects for future generations, the Special Collections Research Center is devoted to acquiring books an

  • A Lover of Words Reveal'd

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    <html><body><p>Swem Library holds two editions of <u>A grammar of the English tongue, with the arts of logick, rhetoric, poetry, &amp;c.</u>, but it is in the earl

  • Bingo Finds his Way to Belarus: Yiddish Dog Books in the Interwar Period

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    <html><body><p>Many of the treasures in Special Collections don't actually live in the stacks downstairs but are instead housed in Swem Library's Offsite Stacks (SOSS).

  • Printing Anti-Spanish Propaganda for European Purposes

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    <html><body><p>It may seem like Spanish empire in the Americas would have little to do with European politics, but we should not assume that the Atlantic world of the sixteenth an

  • The ties that bind: How the decay of a binding shows its construction

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    <html><body><p>Swem Library has a great many books in very bad bindings. Most modern books, for instance, are held together only by glue at the spine.

  • Believable Lies

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    <html><body><p>The island of Taiwan, once commonly known in the West by the Portuguese name of Formosa, has recently resurfaced in the news in connection with the One China policy

  • Propaganda and the Beginnings and End of Spanish America

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    <html><body><p>The arrival of Europeans in the Americas was an event of global importance, and its effect on the people already living here was devastating.

  • The Research Behind a Catalog Record: Map of Coal Lands in Raleigh County, West Virginia

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    <html><body><p><span style="font-weight: 400;">An interesting old map, recently cataloged and made accessible in the Earl Gregg Swem Library Rare Books Collection

  • "Sea Fables Explained"

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    <html><body><p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Imagine, if you will, a creature with a lower body made of the skin and scales of a carp, a human-like upper body wi

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