As the TME team is a highly literate and scholarly mob, it will not surprise them to be told that:
The Bodleian is home one of the world’s oldest and greatest collections of books, maps and documents dating from 1602. These include the largest number of books printed before 1500 held in a university library, manuscripts from medieval Europe and the Byzantine Empire, and one of the largest concentrations of modern British political manuscripts.
The Register has a rather lovely article on the
new Bodleian Weston Libraryhttp://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/09/18 ... n_library/Not a lot of people know that most of the Bodleian Library's books are not in Oxford, they are next to the Honda factory in Swindon. By an amazing coincidence, my dear departed Dad was on the very same site in 1941. But he was, at that time, in charge of an anti-aircraft gun, next to the Supermarine Spitfire factory.
There's a couple of specific things in The Register's article of special interest to TME folk.
(1) The Gough Map.
a large, detailed reference of Great Britain showing 650 cities and towns, created in the 13th or 14th century for purposes unknown. ... It is a rich source of historical information, but because the circumstances of its making are so obscure, it raises as many questions as it answers. When and where was the map made? Is it an original map, or was it derived from a lost earlier map? Does the map show signs of revision? Many of the settlements identified on it are linked by a series of straight red lines, which provide information on the distances between them and appear to be associated with particular itineraries, but what is their exact purpose? The fact that a number of the key settlements of the time are not linked in this way adds to the mystery. What, indeed, was the overall purpose of the map itself?
http://genius.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/exhibit ... gough-map/(2) The Google book deal
Between 2004 and 2009, Google scanned some 300,000 out of copyright Bodleian books, mainly from the nineteenth century. As part of the deal, the library got its own copies of the scans to use in perpetuity, and these are accessible free to anyone as PDFs, through the library’s online catalogue
Solo.
http://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/primo_lib ... onfig=true