A chapel with an altar on which a screen placed and Andrew Pettegree speaking to a group of conference participants with his lecture “Bookselling in Early Modern Europe”
Panoramic view of the room of the lecture: the Grauwzusters Chapel filled with people
Kicking off our #TudorAntwerp conference with a keynote lecture of renowned book historian @apettegree.bsky.social! No better start for our #earlymodern #bookhistory conference in this wonderful historical setting 💙📚📜
08.07.2025 18:15 — 👍 27 🔁 5 💬 0 📌 0
Some fabulous discoveries here from the National Library in Edinburgh.
10.05.2025 16:19 — 👍 6 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
The display window at a bookstore. Written on the window is the phrase "...is a home of invention" Books displayed include "The Roads to Roam" and "The Book at War."
Greetings @cathfletcher.bsky.social and @apettegree.bsky.social
I've been traveling in New Zealand and I thought you might be happy to hear that not only are your new books on sale here, they are next to each other in the shop's front window at Scorpio books in Christchurch.
28.03.2025 07:09 — 👍 9 🔁 2 💬 1 📌 0
In this order: USTC, KVV, followed by VD16-18. Good luck
24.02.2025 13:48 — 👍 14 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Me sitting next to big books.
With so many new followers, I guess it's time for an updated #introduction: Hi there! I am an #earlymodern historian with a weak spot for all things communication and media. My next book is about news flows. Here is a photo of me sitting silent next to books. Most used #: #bookhistory 🗃️ #skystorians
26.01.2025 12:15 — 👍 302 🔁 10 💬 7 📌 1
A tour of our stand at the Stuttgart book fair.
23.01.2025 17:16 — 👍 38 🔁 6 💬 2 📌 1
A page from the incunable "Der f°uszpfadt tz°u der ewigen seligkeyt/ diß Büchlein genant ist", from 1489 Heidelberg [GW 10429]. An armed knight sits on a horse. The missing lance has been drwan into the print by a later owner or user of the book.
Source: http://dl.ub.uni-freiburg.de/diglit/fusspfad1494/0057
When you printed a glorious knight late at night in 1489, and woke up to notice that you forgot the lance ...
#earlymodern #bookhistory #proofreading
23.01.2025 09:37 — 👍 292 🔁 64 💬 3 📌 6
Timely —- @apettegree.bsky.social
21.01.2025 19:51 — 👍 8 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Scilicet's own @jamesafox.bsky.social has published an article in @smithsonianmag.bsky.social - check it out here
21.12.2024 13:07 — 👍 9 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
What an incredible and productive week we have had at the @gladlib.bsky.social ! Loads of annotations achieved, a huge chunk of Introduction drafted. Still loads to do mind, but very happy already about the achievements of the ’eldest daughters editing club’.
11.01.2025 14:21 — 👍 29 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 1
Absolutely.
09.01.2025 11:58 — 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Thanks for the great starter pack!
09.01.2025 11:45 — 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Screenshot of an article: 'The Popular Politics of Local Petitioning in Early Modern England'. Abstract: 'This article examines the rise of a culture of local petitioning, through which growing numbers of ordinary people sought to win the support of state authorities through collective claims to represent the “voice of the people” at the local level. These participatory, subscriptional practices were an essential component in the intensification of popular politics in the seventeenth century. The analysis focuses on over 3,800 manuscript petitions submitted to the magistrates across fifteen jurisdictions with “sessions of the peace” in England, with nearly 1,000 dating from before 1640. Over the course of the early seventeenth century many, if not most, English parishes witnessed attempts to persuade the authorities through collective petitioning. Groups of neighbors across the kingdom formulated their grievances, organized subscription lists, and articulated their own role in the polity as “the inhabitants” or “the parishioners” of a particular community. In so doing, they not only directly shaped their own “little commonwealths” but also unintentionally helped to develop habits of political mobilization in a crucial period of English history.'
My article on 'The Popular Politics of Local Petitioning' has now been published in the latest issue of @jbritishstudies.bsky.social!
#OpenAccess here: www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
I've also added it to the #PowerOfPetitioning bibliography: petitioning.history.ac.uk/2019/05/13/p...
09.01.2025 09:33 — 👍 58 🔁 25 💬 1 📌 1
A detail from an etching of 1761 showing a boy serving coffee. The full image is titled "Der Buchdrucker".
Source: http://kk.haum-bs.de/?id=j-w-meil-ab3-0040
Coffee, anyone?
The year is 1761 and this boy is carefully serving coffee to the workers in an #earlymodern print shop.
(1/2)
09.01.2025 07:20 — 👍 224 🔁 39 💬 5 📌 3
Sinclair Lewis's brilliant book, published in 1935, imagines what happens when the United States drops FDR in favour of a populist. Well worth a read in these troubled times.
09.01.2025 10:41 — 👍 14 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 1
English prof. 17th century stuff. Prairie son. Working on a cultural and material history of the birchbark canoe in the early modern Americas.
Research Fellow @virtualtreasury.bsky.social @tcddublin.bsky.social, Houses of Parliament | Historian of the press, publicity, and popular political action in Ireland, America, Britain, and the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World
Sr Acq Editor, Early Modern Studies, Amsterdam University Press. Comm Editor, Art History, Lund Humphries. Founder, Art Herstory. Etsy shop, http://artherstorynotes.etsy.com
Prof EM Hist; Letters; Gloves; https://genderingthemuseum.co.uk; Swedish Res Council project on Hist of Separation; Histories of the Unexpected Pod: https://historiesoftheunexpected.com/about-us/; agent: https://www.curtisbrown.co.uk/client/james-daybell
Professor of History, with particular focus on women in England c.1300-1700. Was PI on AHRC-funded Alice Thornton’s Books project, 2021-25. https://thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/people/cbeattie/
We are a project based at the University of Edinburgh. Funded by the AHRC Sept. 2021-Feb. 2025. Our main output was a digital edition of the manuscripts of Yorkshire gentlewoman, Alice Wandesford Thornton (1626-1707). See http://thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk
Typographic historian. Investigator on AHRC-funded 'Small Performances'. Books: Pen+Print; John Baskerville; James Watt; Paris Underground; Tart Cards; Kynoch Press. cphc.org.uk / baskervillepunches.org
Historian PhD FHEA FRHistS. Wars of the Three Kingdoms, 1638-1660 and the Jacobities. Book on Covenants and Cromwell out now. http://routledge.com/9781409418696
Historian. PhD in early modern British and European religion and politics. Published with HJ, JEH, RSR and SPP.
Historian of the Long Eighteenth Century | Research Fellow, Books and Borrowing (2020-2023) | www.linkedin.com/in/karen-kit-baston-36998540
Researcher | Writer | Curator | Teacher
Historian of early modern England at the Open University. Convenor of the IHR Tudor & Stuart Seminar. Live-tweeting the reign of Elizabeth I. New(ish) book on Sir Christopher Hatton: https://manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/9781526159496/
PhD in history from Cambridge University. Examined coexistence & religio-political crises in early Stuart London through a case study of the Catholic queen's & embassy chapels.
https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.117058
https://doi.org/10.1017/bch.2022.21
The Library of Dr Thomas Plume (1630-1704), established 1704 in Maldon, Essex. www.thomasplumeslibrary.co.uk.
#Earlymodern historian | FRHistS | IHR Fellow
📚James VI, Britannic Prince (Routledge, 2024) | James VI & I: Kingship, Government & Religion (2025) | Co-editor: Mary Queen of Scots’ Lost Letters (forthcoming, Routledge)
https://bio.site/alexandercourtney
Associate lecturer at @mhafhs.bsky.social; Rettig Fellow. History PhD on the Swedish Empire & identity from St Andrews. Swedish & Sami History, history of empire, science and knowledge. Also expect baking, crocheting and cats 🐈
Historian. Cyclist. Runner. Irishman. Head of Early Modern Records at The National Archives, Kew. Co-I with the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland
Historian of the long 18thC, editor, genealogist.
📚 Book: The Fall of the House of Byron
📝 Writing about: Marie Antoinette’s ladies
ERC-funded project at the University of Trier that explores the political game of courtly parties in polemical prints in 18th century France