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Exploring Medieval Seals : A case study in research and outreach Enhancing Impact, Inspiring Excellence Conference Birmingham, 4 September 2013. Dr Elizabeth New ean@aber.ac.uk / Dr Susan Davies sud@aber.ac.uk Prifysgol Aberystwyth University www.exploringmedievalseals.org.
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Exploring Medieval Seals: A case study in research and outreachEnhancing Impact, Inspiring Excellence ConferenceBirmingham, 4 September 2013 Dr Elizabeth New ean@aber.ac.uk /Dr Susan Davies sud@aber.ac.uk Prifysgol Aberystwyth University www.exploringmedievalseals.org
- 2009-12: Research project funded by the UK Arts & Humanities Research Council- To investigate seals and sealing practices across Wales and the Marches, c.1200-1550- To explore seals as a new resource for answering a range of questions about medieval society, economy, administration, law and culture
Exploring Outreach through Medieval Seals www.exploringmedievalseals.org Follow-on project, funded by the AHRC 2013-14, for outreach and engagement across the UK
Who was involved? • Professor Phillipp Schofield, Professor of Medieval History, specialist in economic and social history and Principal Investigator for SiMeW and ExOMS • Dr Elizabeth New, medievalist, special interests in social and religious history and author of Seals and Sealing Practices, British Records Association Archives & the User 11: Senior Researcher / Project Manager , SiMeW & ExOMS • Dr John McEwan, medievalist, specialising in the political & administrative history and prosopography of London, Researcher for both projects, directing digital outputs for ExOMS • Dr Susan Johns, (Bangor University) medievalist, special interest in the seals of noble women: Co-Investigator, SiMeW
Also involved: Knowledge Transfer Advisory Board (SiMeW and ExOMS): • Dr Susan Davies (Aberystwyth University): archive specialist • Professor Paul Harvey (University of Durham): seals expert • Professor Mark Ormrod (University of York): medievalist and experienced director of research initiatives initiatives What have these projects done? Focusing on a wide range of seals and their across society between 12thC and c.1550 (rather than concentrating on formal high status or other specific categories of seals…..)
What did we do? • Investigated 26 collections from 9 different repositories • Recorded c.3,200 impressions, all still attached to their parent document, from c.2,600 different seal matrices • Included all seal impressions within the temporal / geographic parameters: no ‘cherry-picking’ as in many previous studies • Data gathered from sealed instrument as a whole
How did we do it?-Custom-built database enabled large amounts of information about the sealed instruments to be gathered efficiently (Database programing: Dr John McEwan)- Built upon previous descriptive methods to establish a stable recording template and controlled vocabulary
Shropshire Archives, Lilleshall Deeds 428 • Note: digital photography is a crucial research tool!
Also note: motif keyword tags are embedded in the photographic metadata to facilitate search and analysis
Who helped us? • Good relationships with repositories (archivists, conservators) were essential • A close working relationship with Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru / National Library of Wales was particularly important for SiMeW, and included a major public exhibition, April-September 2012
Why did we do this work? • These projects have created opportunities to investigate many interdisciplinary questions about women and men across society, including: • Who used seals in medieval Wales and the English border counties, and in what contexts? • What range of images and words were employed on medieval seals in these areas? • How can seals inform our understanding of identities in medieval Wales and the Marches?
What is the wider context? • These projects have built on past experience, current enthusiasm, and future plans for recording and research in an international context • In 2012, a new online international network and forum for seal-studies was launched as: SIGILLVM www.sigillvm.net
A Codicil! • Close collaboration and mutual understanding between researchers and archivists is vital for success • Advance planning, sharing expertise and mutual recognition of professional values are essential • Knowledge transfer to wide audiences should be a key element in planning and delivery • These projects have provided professional development for heritage practitioners and new information for interested researchers at all levels