Abstract

Ethiopian bookbinding is one of the material expressions of the ancient manuscript culture of Ethiopia and Eritrea, which is the research field of the Beta maṣāḥǝft project. Despite the significance of the materials and techniques adopted in bookbinding manufacture for the understanding of the manuscript they enclose, they have never been systematically recorded, until very recently. The present paper introduces the Beta maṣāḥǝft project’s innovative approach to bookbinding descriptions and its customization of the TEI schema to record the small variations of Ethiopian bookbinding elements. Since a standard vocabulary for Ethiopian bookbinding features was lacking, Beta maṣāḥǝft developed a tailored taxonomy to create consistent descriptions. The encoding of the binding occurs in the <binding> element, within which a <decoNote> element is assigned to each significant bookbinding feature. The descriptions consist partly of free text and partly of markup using keywords enforced by the taxonomy. This paper presents some applications offered by the Beta maṣāḥǝft project that use the recorded bookbinding features, and it shows how the encoding of this large amount of previously ignored data could open new research perspectives on Ethiopian book production.

Highlights

  • Ethiopian bookbinding is one of the material expressions of the ancient manuscript culture of Ethiopia and Eritrea, which is the research eld of the Beta maṣāḥǝft project

  • The present paper introduces the Beta maṣāḥǝft project’s innovative approach to bookbinding descriptions and its customization of the TEI schema to record the small variations of Ethiopian bookbinding elements

  • This paper presents some applications Journal of the Text Encoding Initiative, Issue rolling, 22/01/2022 Open Issue o ered by the Beta maṣāḥǝft project that use the recorded bookbinding features, and it shows how the encoding of this large amount of previously ignored data could open new research perspectives on Ethiopian book production

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Summary

The Object of Inquiry

10 Wooden boards can be left bare or be covered with leather. Covering material that exceeds the size of the boards is folded over to form turn-ins.. Covering material that exceeds the size of the boards is folded over to form turn-ins.11 The shape of these turn-ins varies enormously in the ways in which they are trimmed or overlapped. A less common feature is the presence in this area of a mirror, the function of which is still not clear. The cover is often embellished with blindtooled decoration using a variety of tools. In a few cases the boards are covered with metal sides or bear metal bosses (Bausi et al 2015, 172). The traditional two-part leather slip case (Bausi et al 2015, 172)

A Taxonomy for the Description of Ethiopian Bookbinding Features
Bookbinding Descriptions in Beta maṣāḥǝft: A Customization of the TEI Schema
Current Applications and Future Research Perspectives
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