OPenn: Primary Digital Resources Available to Everyone
OPenn contains complete sets of high-resolution archival images of
cultural heritage material from the collections of its contributing
institutions, along with machine-readable descriptive and technical
metadata. All materials on OPenn are in the public domain or released
under Creative Commons licenses as Free Cultural Works. Please see
specific repository pages and documents for applicable license terms.
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Bibliotheca Philadelphiensis
This collection, when completed, will include digital editions of more
than 400 western European medieval and early modern codices, plus
selected leaves and cuttings, from the collections of Philadelphia Area
Consortium of Special Collections Libraries (PACSCL) member libraries.
This collections is funded by the Council on Library and Information
Resources.
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Cairo Genizah
In the late 1990s, thanks to a significant gift from a Penn alum named
Jeffrey Keil, W' 65 and PAR '91, Penn initiated a project, in
collaboration with Cambridge University Libraries, to apply digital
technologies to discover new intellectual matches among physically
dispersed Cario genizah fragments. Through this initiative it was
demonstrated how digital technologies may serve as discovery tools to
identify matches among a global diaspora of thousands of fragments of
medieval manuscripts (see:
http://sceti.library.upenn.edu/genizah/index.cfm). This collection of
Cairo genizah fragments consists of Penn manuscripts that were part of
this project.
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Manuscripts of the Muslim World
This collection will include digital editions of more than 500
manuscripts and 827 paintings from the Islamicate world broadly
construed. Together these holdings represent in great breadth the
flourishing intellectual and cultural heritage of Muslim lands from 1000
to 1900, coving mathematics, astrology, history, law, literature, as
well as the Qur'an and Hadith. The bulk of the collection consists of
manuscripts in Arabic and Persian, along with examples of Coptic,
Samaritan, Syriac, Turkish, and Berber. The primary partners are
Columbia University, the Free Library of Philadelphia, and the
University of Pennsylvania with signifiant contributions from Bryn Mawr
College and Haverford College. This collection is funded by the Council
on Library and Information Resources.
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PACSCL Diaries
The PACSCL Diaries Project will allow researchers an intimate view into
a wide variety of personalities, largely from Philadelphia, as they went
about their daily lives and commented on the world around them. The
project will ultimately provide an online archive of diaries drawn from
PACSCL member collections. OPenn currently hosts a pilot group of 53
diary volumes.
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