Diplomatics: New Uses for an Old ScienceDiplomatics was originally developed in France during the seventeenth century in attempts to prove the authenticity of archival documents. It was later refined in European universities as a legal, historical, and philological discipline, and in the twentieth century it has primarily been applied to medieval and early modern documents in order to evaluate their authority as sources of research. Diplomatics embraces the perspective of the modern archivist, and investigates the origin, development, and application of diplomatic concepts. It examines the organizational and evaluative effectiveness of diplomatic concepts in the context of modern records and archival systems, and looks at the relationship between originality and authenticity in records. The physical and intellectual form of records is examined, and the traditional methodology of diplomatic criticism is clearly explained and augmented by tips concerning its archival use. Diplomatics was originally a series of six articles that appeared in Archivaria, the journal of the Association of Canadian Archivists. In addition to those six articles, this volume contains an introduction that provides a broad synopsis of diplomatics, including its unused potential to help rethink record organization and use in a multimedia age fraught with increasingly complex informational problems. |
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Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The Origin Nature and Purpose of Diplomatics | 27 |
Why This Book? | 28 |
The Word Diplomatics | 35 |
The Origin and Development of the Discipline | 36 |
The Object of Diplomatics | 40 |
The Purposes of Diplomatics | 45 |
The Fact the Act and the Function of Documents | 59 |
Two Procedures | 109 |
One Integrated Procedure | 114 |
The Categorization of Procedures | 123 |
The Form of Documents and Their Criticism | 133 |
The Extrinsic Elements of Documentary Form | 134 |
The Intrinsic Elements of Documentary Form | 141 |
The Structure of Diplomatic Criticism | 151 |
The Uses of Diplomatics | 159 |
The Fact the Act and the Function of the Document in Relation to Them | 60 |
The Persons and the Public and Private Nature of Documents | 81 |
The Persons Concurring in the Formation of a Document | 82 |
Public and Private Documents | 98 |
The Procedure of Creation of Documents | 107 |
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Common terms and phrases
action activities addressee administrative American analysis application appraisal archival archival science archivists authentic body called carrying century chapter communication complete concepts concerned considered constitute contain contemporary context copy course created creation creators criticism defined definition determined diplomatics diplomatists direct discipline discussion dispositive docu documentary form documents draft effects electronic elements established evidence examination example existence expressing fact final followed formation function given groups historical ideas identified includes individual initiative intellectual interest issued Italy juridical system knowledge letter material means medieval ment method nature necessary organization original person phase physical possible present principles procedure produce received records refers relationship result rules signature signs specific structure theory tion transaction understanding University valid writing written