The plenary speakers at the c.800–c.1800 Welsh Manuscripts Conference will be Ceridwen Lloyd-Morgan, Bernard Meehan and Paul Russell. Notable scholars from Wales and beyond will also take part. More than 30 papers will be delivered relating to aspects of manuscripts of Welsh provenance, including their construction, palaeography, scribes, patrons and collectors, textual studies and digital presentation. Pedr ap Llwyd, the National Library’s chief executive and librarian, said: “This is undoubtedly one of the most important, if not the most important, scholarly research to be published by us. “We owe a debt of gratitude to Daniel for his outstanding work and I have been privileged to get to know this dear and unique scholar over the past few years. Our best wishes to him on his special birthday and our thanks to him for a lifetime of service to Wales, our culture and learning.” Professor Elin Haf Gruffydd Jones, director of the University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies, said: “This is a masterpiece indeed. We celebrate the scholarship of Dr Daniel Huws and are proud of the collaboration that has taken place so as to present this work to the world. “I would like to thank all those who have worked with us to publish these extraordinary volumes and we look forward – not only to the launch and conference this year – but also to the new work and research that will come as a result of the Repertory for decades to come.” This will be the most important publication on Welsh manuscripts for more than a century, and it will revolutionise the study of the country’s culture and literature. The three volumes will include a detailed study of the manuscripts safeguarded by the National Library of Wales, Bangor University and centres such as the British Library and the Bodleian Library, Oxford. It will also look at manuscripts that are kept further afield in places such as the Universities of Harvard and Yale, Stonyhurst College and Northamptonshire Archives. On the basis of these manuscripts, the work and motives of the individuals that created them are analysed – from the Middle Ages up to the Industrial Revolution. Readers are introduced to notable individuals in the history of the nation, some that have been long forgotten and other more interesting characters that deserve further attention. For more information visit https://llawysgrifaucymru.wordpress.com/rhaglen-programme-2/ or visit https://www.library.wales/events to book a ticket.
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