Dr Angeline Rais

Contact details

Name:
Dr Angeline Rais
Position:
Early Career Research Fellow (Institute of English Studies )
Institute:
Institute of English Studies
Email address:
angeline.rais@sas.ac.uk
Website:
https://ies.sas.ac.uk/people/dr-angeline-rais

Research Summary and Profile

Research interests:
History of the book, Library, Manuscript studies, Palaeography
Research keywords:
History of libraries, Provenance research, History of the antiquarian book-trade (19/20th c.), Bibliographical studies
Regions:
Europe, North America
Summary of research interests and expertise:

My research interests focus on the antiquarian book-trade, the formation of libraries, and book-collecting. My doctoral thesis (Oxford) explored the market in rare books in Switzerland in the first half of the nineteenth century through the purchases of Sir Thomas Phillipps (1792-1872) there in 1822–23 and their dispersal after his death. As a post-doctoral fellow on the CULTIVATE MSS Project (IES, SAS, London), I studied the activities of German antiquarian booksellers in early twentieth century. My current research develops this topic and examines the contributions of dealers to the scholarship on medieval manuscript and printed books.

I also catalogued incunables and printed books in the Bibliothèque cantonale et universitaire de Fribourg, Lambeth Palace Library in London, the Bibliothèque Mazarine in Paris, and the Médiathèque-Valais in Sion (Switzerland) and contributed to the databases 'Material Evidence in Incunabula', 'Bibliographie des Mazarinades', and the 'Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts'.

Languages:
Spoken Written
French Fluent Fluent
German Good Good
Latin Good -
Publication Details

Related publications/articles:

Date Details
01-Jul-2024 The Pre-Modern Manuscript Trade and its Consequences, ca. 1890–1945

Edited Book

01-Jul-2024 Jacques Rosenthal's Marketing Strategies: An Analysis of the Bibliotheca Medii Aevi Manuscripta (1925 and 1928)

Chapters

20-May-2024 A List of Manuscripts Offered for Sale by Jacques Rosenthal in Bibliotheca medii aevi manuscripta (Munich, 1925 and 1928)_version 2

Papers

01-Jan-2024 Valuing rare books in 1920s Germany: Prices in Jacques Rosenthal's Bibliotheca medii aevi manuscripta

Chapters

25-May-2023 Taxer avec Epicure: le discours de Samuel Engel devant l’Äusserer Stand de Berne (1732)

Chapters

Angéline Rais and Solmeng-Jonas Hirschi, ‘Taxer avec Epicure: le discours de Samuel Engel devant l’Äusserer Stand de Berne (1732)’, in Lionel Bartolini, Isaline Deléderray-Oguey, and Grégoire Oguey (eds), Chanter l’histoire en réveillant les sources. Mélanges d’histoire(s) offerts au professeur Jean-Daniel Morerod (Neuchâtel: Alphil, 2023), pp. 363–95

01-Oct-2022 Ein nationales Ereignis: der umstritten Verkauf des “Missale speciale” der Kapuziner von Romont (1953)

Journal articles

Adrian Holderegger and Angéline Rais, ‘Ein nationales Ereignis: der umstritten Verkauf des “Missale speciale” der Kapuziner von Romont (1953)’, Freiburger Geschichtsblätter 99 (2022), pp. 65–96

01-Oct-2022 Sur les traces du plus fameux bibliophile anglais en Suisse: Sir Thomas Phillipps et l’étude des montagnes

Chapters

Angéline Rais, ‘Sur les traces du plus fameux bibliophile anglais en Suisse: Sir Thomas Phillipps et l’étude des montagnes’, in Musée sauvage: habiter la collection, ed. Mélanie Hugon-Duc ([Le Châble]/Gollion: Musée de Bagnes/Infolio, 2022), pp. 75–85

01-Jan-2022 A National Affair. The Scandalous Sale of the Missale Speciale of the Capuchins at Romont

Journal articles

Angéline Rais and Adrian Holderegger, ‘A National Affair. The Scandalous Sale of the Missale Speciale of the Capuchins at Romont’, Helvetia Franciscana 50 (2021), pp. 91–124.

01-Jan-2021 How to Sell a Carolingian Illuminated Manuscript in the Nineteenth-Century? The Basle Book-dealer J. H. von Speyr-Passavant and the “Moutier-Grandval Bible”

Journal articles

Angéline Rais, ‘How to Sell a Carolingian Illuminated Manuscript in the Nineteenth Century? The Basle Book-dealer J. H. von Speyr-Passavant and the “Moutier-Grandval Bible”’, Histoire et civilisation du livre 17 (2021), pp. 215–36

01-Jan-2016 Livres et lectures d’un ecclésiastique de la fin du Moyen Âge. La bibliothèque de Guillaume Grimaître

Journal articles

Angéline Rais, « Livres et lectures d’un ecclésiastique de la fin du Moyen Âge. La bibliothèque de Guillaume Grimaître », Bulletin du bibliophile 275 (2016), pp. 275-303

Publications available on SAS-space:

Date Details
Oct-2021 How to sell a Carolingian illuminated manuscript in the nineteenth century? The Basle book-dealer J. H. von Speyr-Passavant and the "Moutier-Grandval Bible"

PeerReviewed

Nov-2023 A List of Manuscripts Offered for Sale by Jacques Rosenthal in Bibliotheca medii aevi manuscripta (Munich, 1925 and 1928)

NonPeerReviewed

The following appendix describes the 200 manuscripts Jacques Rosenthal offered for sale in his two-volume catalogue Bibliotheca medii aevi manuscripta (BMAM) published in 1925 and 1928. It presents data extracted from BMAM and archives I analysed in my publications investigating Rosenthal’s working methods and the criteria he used to assign a financial value to the manuscripts. Its aim is therefore not to provide detailed descriptions of the manuscripts but to gather information provided by BMAM, even though it has been since revised and could be completed by additional research, and archival sources. For my publications, see Angéline Rais, ‘Jacques Rosenthal’s Marketing Strategies: An Analysis of Bibliotheca medii aevi manuscripta (1925 and 1928)’ in The Pre-Modern Manuscript Trade and its Consequences, ca. 1890–1945, ed. by Laura Cleaver, Danielle Magnusson, Hannah Morcos, and Angéline Rais (York: ARC Humanities Press, forthcoming 2024); Angéline Rais, ‘Valuing Rare Books in 1920s Germany: Prices in Jacques Rosenthal’s Bibliotheca medii aevi manuscripta’, in The Economics of the Rare Book and Manuscript Trade, ca. 1890–1939, ed. by Federico Botana and Laura Cleaver (York: ARC Humanities Press, forthcoming 2024).

Feb-2024 THE ECONOMICS OF THE MANUSCRIPT AND RARE BOOK TRADE, ca. 1890–1939

PeerReviewed

The market for rare books has been characterized as unpredictable, and driven by the whims of a small number of rich individuals. Yet behind the headlines announcing new auction records, a range of sources make it possible to analyze the market as a whole. This book introduces the economics of the trade in manuscripts and rare books during the turbulent period ca. 1890–1939. It demonstrates how surviving sources, even when incomplete and inconsistent, can be used to tackle questions about the operation of the rare book trade, including how books were priced, profit margins, accounting practices, and books as investments, from the perspectives of both dealers and collectors.

May-2024 The Pre-Modern Manuscript Trade and its Consequences, ca. 1890-1945

PeerReviewed

This collection brings together current research into the development of the market for pre-modern manuscripts. Between 1890 and 1945 thousands of manuscripts made in Europe before 1600 appeared on the market. Many entered the collections in which they have remained, shaping where and how we encounter the books today. These collections included libraries that bear their founders’ names, as well as national and regional public libraries. The choices of the super-rich shaped their collections and determined what was available to those with fewer resources. In addition, wealthy collectors sponsored scholarship on their manuscripts and participated in exhibitions, raising the profile of some books. The volume examines the collectors, dealers, and scholars who engaged with pre-modern books, and the cultural context of the manuscript trade in this era.

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