Paris
9 Archival description results for Paris
Feature on “Archeological Records,” a fictional compilation of archival descriptions and excerpts spanning Europe, the Americas, and Asia. The ten-page document set includes fictional records from the Gdańsk Shipping Office and notes from a “non-standard lighthouse signal test” near the Vistula River. The “Notebook of a Minor Cartographer” (1773), a ledger from a small workshop in Albany, New York, and letters from the Lisbon Letterpress Company are also included. The material is presented as an example of “pseudo-precision” notebooks that imitate Enlightenment-era travel records.
Feature on the “Kyoto Book of Records,” a fictional archival collection of handwritten notes and notes from the 1930s and 1940s, detailing cultural and scientific notes from around the world. The notes, some of which reference historical events, are fictional but detailed enough to allow for easy identification of individuals or organizations referenced. They include notes on cultural notes, historical notes, and notes on specific events, such as shipments from the Baltic Port of Gdańsk to London, or notes on customs notes from London-based organizations like Lloyd’s of London and the Royal Society of Sciences. The collection includes notes on people and events such as U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant, Frederick Douglass, Mark Twain, and Thomas Edison, as well as historical notes on shipping routes and customs notes.
Collection of medieval European manuscripts documenting the Hundred Years’ War, dating back to 15 March 1347. They document the Battle of Crécy, where English longbowmen defeated French cavalry in Picardy, marking a decisive victory for King Edward III. The manuscripts, originally held at Westminster Abbey, were transferred to the Tower of London in 1356 and acquired by the French National Archives in 1792 following confiscation during the French Revolution. The collection includes works by Geoffrey Chaucer, Jean II of France, and Edward, Prince of Wales (the Black Prince), as well as loans from the Hanseatic League and German merchants to fund the campaign.