22 JANUARY 2021
This Day in the Archive: 22 January
With so many changes happening around us, from fluctuating infection rates to alterations in our centuries-old Hall, it can help to find a wider sense of continuity with the past. The Stationers' Company is extremely lucky to have an extensive Archive dating back to the granting of its Charter, with relatively few breaks in its records. Over the next few months, I'll be making occasional forays into the Archive to highlight records of events in the Company's history that happened 'on this day'.
We start with a significant entry in the Stationers' Register for the 22nd of January, 1607:
'Master Linge - Entered for his copies by direccon of A Court and with consent of Master Burby under his handwrytinge these iii copies, viz Romeo and Juliett, Loves Labour Loste, The taming of A Shrew'
READ MORE25 NOVEMBER 2020
Richard Gilpin has written a detailed piece on the Stationers’ Company and its Almanacks which was abridged for Stationers' News but the whole article including images is reproduced here.
READ MORE29 JULY 2020
On 13 July the Stationers' Company held its first virtal Archive Event over Zoom to replace the event which had been planned for the Hall in April. There will be a write up in Stationers' News but those who would have liked to Zoom in on the night but were unable to do so can watch the webinar by clicking on the image below.
READ MORE12 JUNE 2020
Liveryman Margaret Willes's new book The Domestic Herbal comes out this month. Being something of an expert on the subject, Margaret explained to me how herbs were used at Stationers' Hall in the seventeenth-century - and why the hiring of a herbwoman was considered a crucial expense for any banquet.
READ MORE28 MAY 2020
Written communication has always been at the heart of what Stationers do and noting that letter writing has increased in populrity during the Covid-19 crisis, Ruth Frendo, the Company Archivist, has been researching how letter writing is important to the Company both as it is represented in the Archive and as a consistently popular form of communication with members.
READ MORE17 APRIL 2020
Unsurprisingly, there have been a lot of references to ‘the plague’ in the media over the last few weeks. The 400-year pandemic of bubonic plague which swept from China into Europe in the fourteenth century is, in the popular imagination, the closest parallel we have to our current situation. Lately, when answering research queries, writing ‘Archive News’ posts, or looking up references for the Master’s letter, I’ve found myself consulting our digital Archive to understand how Stationers responded to outbreaks of plague in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. With limited medical understanding, restricted communication technologies, and inadequate social welfare, their predicament must have seemed far more terrifying and isolating than our own.
READ MORE14 APRIL 2020
Literature in Lockdown - 3
As London settles into a period of restricted movement, we look at some documents from the Stationers' Company Archive, which show us how writers, printers and publishers have responded to similar crises over history.
In my final post on this subject, my starting point is the publication of Thomas Dekker's pamphlet The Wonderfull Yeare.
READ MORE6 APRIL 2020
Literature in Lockdown - 2
As London settles into a period of restricted movement, we look at some documents from the Stationers' Company Archive, which show us how writers, printers and publishers have responded to similar crises over history.
Here we discuss the publication of Shakespeare's long poem Venus and Adonis.
READ MORE31 MARCH 2020
Literature in Lockdown - 1
As London settles into a period of restricted movement, we look at some documents from the Stationers' Company Archive, which show us how writers, printers and publishers have responded to similar crises over history.
We start with the publication history of Shakespeare's King Lear.
READ MORE24 JANUARY 2020
Acclaimed folk musicians Naomi Bedford and Paul Simmons visited the Stationers' Company Archive last week, and were thrilled to discover the original registration, in the seventeenth-century, of a song which they have recently recorded. Read more here.
5 DECEMBER 2019
In November we were delighted to host two visits to the Archive for students at the University of Greenwich. Our Archivist, Dr Ruth Frendo has written about the visits which it is hoped will be the first of many and you can read her full report here.
READ MORE4 DECEMBER 2019
Yesterday three members of the staff from the Bodleian Library joined a guided tour of Stationers' Hall and the Church of St Martin- within-Ludgate. They also saw some of the documents in the Stationers' Company Archive which record the long association between their Library and the Company.
READ MORE