The history of the library in Western civilization: 6 Epilogue and general index
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1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English Greek |
Veröffentlicht: |
New Castle, Del.
Oak Knoll Press [u.a.]
2013
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Ausgabe: | 1. English ed. |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | 213 S. |
ISBN: | 9781584561859 9789061943303 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a The history of the library in Western civilization |n 6 |p Epilogue and general index |c Konstantinos Sp. Staikos |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | contents
The History of the Library in
Western Civilization
From Petrarch to Michelangelo
(volume V)
Acknowledgements IX
Preface XI-XIX
Table of Contents XXI-XXXI
I. FROM THE MIDDLE AGES TO THE RENAISSANCE
Pioneers of the humanist idea, humanistic libraries,
the teaching of Greek gains ground
3-58
Introduction
3-4
The teaching of Greek gains ground
4-5
The character of the humanistic library
5
The humanistic philosophy
5-6
A complete humanistic library
6-7
Revision of the university curriculum
7-8
The Church s attitude to the classics
8-9
Academies and scholarly coteries
9-Ю
Typography at the service of humanism
10-12
Public libraries
12-13
Private libraries owned by scholars
13-14
France
14-17
65
Germany 17~18
Geneva
18 20
Spain 2O 22
England 22 23
The Netherlands 23 24
Libraries of contemporary literature
25-26
The history of geography 26
The Holy Roman Empire and its future
26-27
The Italian peninsula and political anarchy
27-30
The Iberian peninsula and the
Reconquista
30
The Scandinavian Union
30-31
France, England and the consequences of the Hundred Years War
31-32
The dawning of a sense of national identity
32
The library as the basis for Petrarch s literary studies
33-37
Greek teachers and owners of humanistic libraries in Petrarch s circle
37-39
Boccaccio and his library
39
Leonzio Pilato
40
The teaching of Greek language and literature is introduced into the West:
Manuel Chrysoloras
40-44
The first bilingual (Greek and Latin) library of the Renaissance:
Palla Strozzi
44-49
Notes
53-58
II. FROM THE EAST TO THE WEST
Libraries of Byzantine scholars in the West and of Italian humanists.
Academies and the first great libraries of the Renaissance
61-119
Libraries of Byzantine scholars in the West: From Manuel Chrysoloras
to Ianos Laskaris
61-62
Manuel Chrysoloras
63
Cardinal Bessarion
53
Theodoras Gazis
63-64
66
Ioannes Argyropoulos
ß4
Demetrios Chalkokondyles
64-65
Andronikos Kallistos
65
Konstantinos Laskaris
ев
Ianos
Laskaris
66-67
Markos Mousouros
67-68
Itinerant
suppliers of manuscripts to libraries:
Poggio
68-70
Academies in Italy and their role in the diffusion of ancient literature
70-71
The Platonic Academy of Florence
71-73
Pico
della Mirandola
and his library
73
Pico s library
74
Novello Malatesta s
library at
Cesena
74
Novello Malatesta
74-78
The donation of Cardinal Bessarion
78-80
Cardinal Bessarion s library
83-84
Bessarion s Academy
84
The scriptorium
86
The motivation for Bessarion s donation
86-87
The contents of the library
87-88
The library s fortunes after the donation
88-89
The librarians
89-90
The Vatican Library
93-101
A literary scholar on a par with Petrarch: Politian and his library
102
Politian s library
102-105
Notes
109-119
III. THE INVENTION OF PRINTING
The role of printing in the dissemination of knowledge and the contribution
of Aldus Manutius to the advancement of Greek and Roman literature.
Libraries of the literati and monumental libraries
123-177
67
The role of typography in the dissemination of knowledge
123-126
Matthias Corvinus s library
128-130
The early history of the library
130-136
The library of a humanist beyond the Alps: Janus
Pannonius
139
Manuscripts belonging to
Pannonius
139-140
Lost manuscripts
141-142
Pannonius s library at
Pécs
143
What became of his library
143
The Medici library
145-146
Niccoli
and his library
146-148
Cosimo s heirs
148-149
The library under Lorenzo the Magnificent
149-154
Aldus and his contribution to the promotion of Greek and Latin literature
157-161
Notes
165-177
IV. THE GREAT CENTRE OF HUMANISM IN THE NORTH
The pioneers of French humanism
,
the role of the Parisian
printing houses, and the French royal libraries
181-225
The character of French humanism and its pioneers
181-182
The French Church and classical literature
182-184
The classics seen as French literature
184-186
The great story of Greek printing in France
186-190
Greek books printed by
Estienne
(1545-1551) 190-193
The formation of the French Royal Library
193-195
The library of Louis
de
Bruges
196
Manuscripts commissioned by Louis
XII 196-197
The library is transferred to the
Château
of Blois
197
The catalogues
198
The contents of the library
198
The library of
François
I
198-200
In search of Greek manuscripts
200-201
68
Printed books in the royal collections
201-202
From Blois to
Fontainebleau
202
Works by Aristotle and his commentators in French libraries and
the character of French libraries in the first hundred years
of typography
202-208
Other Aristotelian publishing centres
208-2
U
Notes
2
9-225
V. AN APOSTLE OF HUMANISTIC IDEAS FROM THE NORTH: ERASMUS
Retracing the map of printing and hooks in the context
of the Reformation
229-301
Erasmus
229-260
From Paris to Geneva. A book centre that was a bastion of
the Reformation and heir to the classical tradition
263-265
Libraries at the service of printing houses
266-271
The great printing houses of Geneva: Crespin and
Estienne
272-275
The Catholic Church s polemic against book production
275-276
Book fairs as a means for the enrichment of libraries
277-280
Censorship: the bane of books
280-282
The character of Renaissance libraries: from manuscripts to printed books
282-283
The Reformation Library
283-287
Notes
291-301
VI. LIBRARIES FOR A NEW CHRISTIAN LITERATURE
Translations of the Bible, the Dissolution of Monastic Libraries
in England, and Libraries belonging to Men of Letters
305-378
Towards a new Christian literature: humanist involvement in the
emendation and translation of the Old and New Testaments.
305-306
The Hebrew Bible
306-309
69
The Vulgate: St. Jerome s Latin translation
309
The Gutenberg Bible 310
Erasmus s New Testament
310-312
Ximenes s Complutensian Polyglot Bible
312-313
Luther s German Bible 313
The Bible in English
314-315
Coverdale s Bible
315-316
Matthew s Bible
316-318
The English Bible of Geneva
318-319
The chronicle of the publication of the Paris Bible
319-325
The dissolution of England s historic monastic libraries
326-327
John Leland s list
327-328
Leland s role as a protector of manuscripts
328-330
Leland s library and its fate
330
Other losses of library books
331
Libraries of scholars and men of letters from Italy to Northen Europe
333-334
Italy
334
A Poet s Library: Gioviano Pontano
334-335
The library of a future Pope. Paul Ill s collection
336-337
Library catalogues and publisher/printers lists
338
The international library of
Gian Vincenzo Pinelli
338-341
Libraries belonging to intellectuals
341-342
Book collections assembled on scientific criteria
342-343
Germany
343
Reuchlin s interests as a student and teacher
344-345
The Battle of Books
345-347
Reuchlin s Library
347-349
France
350
Michel
de Chameleťs
Library
350-352
SPain
352-353
Ponce s Library
353-355
70
England 356-357
Public Libraries 357-358
Private Libraries 358-359
England
and the
international
book
market 359-300
English libraries organized around Italian models
360-362
Towards the compilation of national and international bibliographies
363
The library of a book-aesthete:
Willibald
Pirckheimer
364-367
The main body of his library
367-370
Beatus Rhenanus s library at
Sélestat
373-374
Basel: the most important humanist printing centre in Northern Europe
374-376
The creation of Rhenanus s library
376-377
The humanist library of
Sélestat
378
Notes
383-397
VII.
THE NEW LITERATURE FILLS LIBRARY SHELVES;
AND A HISTORIC LIBRARY
New forms of literature in the aftermath of the Italian Renaissance,
the influence of the classics; of Petrarch and the
Plèiade,
and an exemplary university library: the Bodleian
40
í
-431
The new literature fills library shelves
401-403
Italian literature under constraint
403-405
The intellectual atmosphere in Catholic France
405-410
German, Danish and Dutch literature find their identity
410-411
The birth of Renaissance poetry in England
411-412
European literary masterpieces of the late sixteenth century
412
Luis
Vaz
de Camões
412-413
Montaigne
413-415
Cervantes
415-417
Shakespeare
417-418
71
The Bodleian Library
421-428
The Bodleian Library s first printed catalogue
428-431
Notes
VIII.
ARCHITECTURE
The evolution of library architecture from the Middle Ages
to the Late Renaissance
441-512
Architecture
441-443
The iconography of library decoration
443-444
Furnishings
444-445
Libraries on the Italian model
445
The library of Santa Annunziata in Florence
445
The library of San Marco in Florence
447
The
Biblioteca
Malatestiana
at
Cesena
449-456
Libraries in Italy following the lines of Michelozzo s design
456
Florence
456
The library of
Badia
456
The library of Santa
Croce
457
Bologna
457
The library of
San Domenico
457-459
The library of San Francesco
459
Padua
459
The library of San Giovanni
di Verdara
459-460
Parma
460
The library of San Giovanni
Evangelista
460-462
Piacenza
462
The library of
San Sepolcro
462
Perugia
462
The library of
San Domenico
462-463
72
Milan 463
The library of Sant Eustorgio
46,4
The library of Santa Maria
delle Grazie
463-464
The library of
San Vittore al Corpo
464
Monte Oliveto. The library of the Abbey
464-466
Mantua
466
The library of San
Agnese
466
The library of
San Domenico
466
The library of Santa Maria
degli Angeli
466
Brescia
466
The library of
San Barnába
466
Venice
466
The library of San Giorgio
Maggiore
466-467
Vicenza
467
The library of Santa Corona
467
The library of the Holy See
468-472
The furniture of the four rooms
472
The arrangement of the desks
472
The Latin Library
472
The Greek Library
473
The Secret Library
473
The Pontifical Library
473
Pope
Sixtus
V s library
476
The library of Duke
Federico da
Montefeltro
476-478
The Medici Library in Florence
480-483
The staircase
483-484
The Reading Room
484
The floor
484-486
The hidden pavements
486
The ceiling
486
73
The stained-glass windows
486
The desks
487
The
libreria secreta
487
The library of St. Mark s in Venice
488-490
The vestibule
490
The reading room
492
The
Escorial
library
495
The iconography
495-496
The furniture and fittings
497
The Bodleian Library in Oxford
499-501
Notes
505-512
ABBREVIATIONS
-
BIBLIOGRAPHY
514-554
INDEX
555.588
74
|
adam_txt |
contents
The History of the Library in
Western Civilization
From Petrarch to Michelangelo
(volume V)
Acknowledgements IX
Preface XI-XIX
Table of Contents XXI-XXXI
I. FROM THE MIDDLE AGES TO THE RENAISSANCE
Pioneers of the humanist idea, humanistic libraries,
the teaching of Greek gains ground
3-58
Introduction
3-4
The teaching of Greek gains ground
4-5
The character of the humanistic library
5
The humanistic philosophy
5-6
A complete humanistic library
6-7
Revision of the university curriculum
7-8
The Church's attitude to the classics
8-9
Academies and scholarly coteries
9-Ю
Typography at the service of humanism
10-12
Public libraries
12-13
Private libraries owned by scholars
13-14
France
14-17
65
Germany 17~18
Geneva
18'20
Spain 2O'22
England 22"23
The Netherlands 23"24
Libraries of contemporary literature
25-26
The history of geography 26
The Holy Roman Empire and its future
26-27
The Italian peninsula and political anarchy
27-30
The Iberian peninsula and the
Reconquista
30
The Scandinavian Union
30-31
France, England and the consequences of the Hundred Years' War
31-32
The dawning of a sense of national identity
32
The library as the basis for Petrarch's literary studies
33-37
Greek teachers and owners of humanistic libraries in Petrarch's circle
37-39
Boccaccio and his library
39
Leonzio Pilato
40
The teaching of Greek language and literature is introduced into the West:
Manuel Chrysoloras
40-44
The first bilingual (Greek and Latin) library of the Renaissance:
Palla Strozzi
44-49
Notes
53-58
II. FROM THE EAST TO THE WEST
Libraries of Byzantine scholars in the West and of Italian humanists.
Academies and the first great libraries of the Renaissance
61-119
Libraries of Byzantine scholars in the West: From Manuel Chrysoloras
to Ianos Laskaris
61-62
Manuel Chrysoloras
63
Cardinal Bessarion
53
Theodoras Gazis
63-64
66
Ioannes Argyropoulos
ß4
Demetrios Chalkokondyles
64-65
Andronikos Kallistos
65
Konstantinos Laskaris
ев
Ianos
Laskaris
66-67
Markos Mousouros
67-68
Itinerant
suppliers of manuscripts to libraries:
Poggio
68-70
Academies in Italy and their role in the diffusion of ancient literature
70-71
The Platonic Academy of Florence
71-73
Pico
della Mirandola
and his library
73
Pico's library
74
Novello Malatesta's
library at
Cesena
74
Novello Malatesta
74-78
The 'donation' of Cardinal Bessarion
78-80
Cardinal Bessarion's library
83-84
Bessarion's Academy
84
The scriptorium
86
The motivation for Bessarion's donation
86-87
The contents of the library
87-88
The library's fortunes after the donation
88-89
The librarians
89-90
The Vatican Library
93-101
A literary scholar on a par with Petrarch: Politian and his library
102
Politian's library
102-105
Notes
109-119
III. THE INVENTION OF PRINTING
The role of printing in the dissemination of knowledge and the contribution
of Aldus Manutius to the advancement of Greek and Roman literature.
Libraries of the literati and monumental libraries
123-177
67
The role of typography in the dissemination of knowledge
123-126
Matthias Corvinus's library
128-130
The early history of the library
130-136
The library of a humanist beyond the Alps: Janus
Pannonius
139
Manuscripts belonging to
Pannonius
139-140
Lost manuscripts
141-142
Pannonius's library at
Pécs
143
What became of his library
143
The Medici library
145-146
Niccoli
and his library
146-148
Cosimo's heirs
148-149
The library under Lorenzo the Magnificent
149-154
Aldus and his contribution to the promotion of Greek and Latin literature
157-161
Notes
165-177
IV. THE GREAT CENTRE OF HUMANISM IN THE NORTH
The pioneers of French humanism
,
the role of the Parisian
printing houses, and the French royal libraries
181-225
The character of French humanism and its pioneers
181-182
The French Church and classical literature
182-184
The classics seen as 'French literature'
184-186
The great story of Greek printing in France
186-190
Greek books printed by
Estienne
(1545-1551) 190-193
The formation of the French Royal Library
193-195
The library of Louis
de
Bruges
196
Manuscripts commissioned by Louis
XII 196-197
The library is transferred to the
Château
of Blois
197
The catalogues
198
The contents of the library
198
The library of
François
I
198-200
In search of Greek manuscripts
200-201
68
Printed books in the royal collections
201-202
From Blois to
Fontainebleau
202
Works by Aristotle and his commentators in French libraries and
the character of French libraries in the first hundred years
of typography
202-208
Other Aristotelian publishing centres
208-2
U
Notes
2
\
9-225
V. AN APOSTLE OF HUMANISTIC IDEAS FROM THE NORTH: ERASMUS
Retracing the map of printing and hooks in the context
of the Reformation
229-301
Erasmus
229-260
From Paris to Geneva. A book centre that was a bastion of
the Reformation and heir to the classical tradition
263-265
Libraries at the service of printing houses
266-271
The great printing houses of Geneva: Crespin and
Estienne
272-275
The Catholic Church's polemic against book production
275-276
Book fairs as a means for the enrichment of libraries
277-280
Censorship: the bane of books
280-282
The character of Renaissance libraries: from manuscripts to printed books
282-283
The 'Reformation Library'
283-287
Notes
291-301
VI. LIBRARIES FOR A NEW CHRISTIAN LITERATURE
Translations of the Bible, the Dissolution of Monastic Libraries
in England, and Libraries belonging to Men of Letters
305-378
Towards a new Christian literature: humanist involvement in the
emendation and translation of the Old and New Testaments.
305-306
The Hebrew Bible
306-309
69
The Vulgate: St. Jerome's Latin translation
309
The Gutenberg Bible 310
Erasmus's New Testament
310-312
Ximenes's Complutensian Polyglot Bible
312-313
Luther's German Bible 313
The Bible in English
314-315
Coverdale's Bible
315-316
Matthew's Bible
316-318
The English Bible of Geneva
318-319
The chronicle of the publication of the Paris Bible
319-325
The dissolution of England's historic monastic libraries
326-327
John Leland's list
327-328
Leland's role as a protector of manuscripts
328-330
Leland's library and its fate
330
Other losses of library books
331
Libraries of scholars and men of letters from Italy to Northen Europe
333-334
Italy
334
A Poet's Library: Gioviano Pontano
334-335
The library of a future Pope. Paul Ill's collection
336-337
Library catalogues and publisher/printers' lists
338
The international library of
Gian Vincenzo Pinelli
338-341
Libraries belonging to intellectuals
341-342
Book collections assembled on scientific criteria
342-343
Germany
343
Reuchlin's interests as a student and teacher
344-345
The 'Battle of Books'
345-347
Reuchlin's Library
347-349
France
350
Michel
de Chameleťs
Library
350-352
SPain
352-353
Ponce's Library
353-355
70
England 356-357
Public Libraries 357-358
Private Libraries 358-359
England
and the
international
book
market 359-300
English libraries organized around Italian models
360-362
Towards the compilation of national and international bibliographies
363
The library of a book-aesthete:
Willibald
Pirckheimer
364-367
The main body of his library
367-370
Beatus Rhenanus's library at
Sélestat
373-374
Basel: the most important humanist printing centre in Northern Europe
374-376
The creation of Rhenanus's library
376-377
The humanist library of
Sélestat
378
Notes
383-397
VII.
THE NEW LITERATURE FILLS LIBRARY SHELVES;
AND A HISTORIC LIBRARY
New forms of literature in the aftermath of the Italian Renaissance,
the influence of the classics; of Petrarch and the
Plèiade,
and an exemplary university library: the Bodleian
40
í
-431
The new literature fills library shelves
401-403
Italian literature under constraint
403-405
The intellectual atmosphere in Catholic France
405-410
German, Danish and Dutch literature find their identity
410-411
The birth of Renaissance poetry in England
411-412
European literary masterpieces of the late sixteenth century
412
Luis
Vaz
de Camões
412-413
Montaigne
413-415
Cervantes
415-417
Shakespeare
417-418
71
The Bodleian Library
421-428
The Bodleian Library's first printed catalogue
428-431
Notes
VIII.
ARCHITECTURE
The evolution of library architecture from the Middle Ages
to the Late Renaissance
441-512
Architecture
441-443
The iconography of library decoration
443-444
Furnishings
444-445
Libraries on the Italian model
445
The library of Santa Annunziata in Florence
445
The library of San Marco in Florence
447
The
Biblioteca
Malatestiana
at
Cesena
449-456
Libraries in Italy following the lines of Michelozzo's design
456
Florence
456
The library of
Badia
456
The library of Santa
Croce
457
Bologna
457
The library of
San Domenico
457-459
The library of San Francesco
459
Padua
459
The library of San Giovanni
di Verdara
459-460
Parma
460
The library of San Giovanni
Evangelista
460-462
Piacenza
462
The library of
San Sepolcro
462
Perugia
462
The library of
San Domenico
462-463
72
Milan 463
The library of Sant'Eustorgio
46,4
The library of Santa Maria
delle Grazie
463-464
The library of
San Vittore al Corpo
464
Monte Oliveto. The library of the Abbey
464-466
Mantua
466
The library of San
Agnese
466
The library of
San Domenico
466
The library of Santa Maria
degli Angeli
466
Brescia
466
The library of
San Barnába
466
Venice
466
The library of San Giorgio
Maggiore
466-467
Vicenza
467
The library of Santa Corona
467
The library of the Holy See
468-472
The furniture of the four rooms
472
The arrangement of the desks
472
The Latin Library
472
The Greek Library
473
The Secret Library
473
The Pontifical Library
473
Pope
Sixtus
V's library
476
The library of Duke
Federico da
Montefeltro
476-478
The Medici Library in Florence
480-483
The staircase
483-484
The Reading Room
484
The floor
484-486
The 'hidden pavements'
486
The ceiling
486
73
The stained-glass windows
486
The desks
487
The
libreria secreta
487
The library of St. Mark's in Venice
488-490
The vestibule
490
The reading room
492
The
Escorial
library
495
The iconography
495-496
The furniture and fittings
497
The Bodleian Library in Oxford
499-501
Notes
505-512
ABBREVIATIONS
-
BIBLIOGRAPHY
514-554
INDEX
555.588
74 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Staïkos, Kōnstantinos Sp. 1943- |
author_GND | (DE-588)1023380366 |
author_facet | Staïkos, Kōnstantinos Sp. 1943- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Staïkos, Kōnstantinos Sp. 1943- |
author_variant | k s s ks kss |
building | Verbundindex |
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edition | 1. English ed. |
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id | DE-604.BV023343241 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T21:02:25Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:16:25Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781584561859 9789061943303 |
language | English Greek |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016526977 |
oclc_num | 633736726 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-29 DE-824 DE-22 DE-BY-UBG DE-20 DE-Y2 DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-703 DE-384 DE-Y3 DE-155 DE-BY-UBR |
owner_facet | DE-29 DE-824 DE-22 DE-BY-UBG DE-20 DE-Y2 DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-703 DE-384 DE-Y3 DE-155 DE-BY-UBR |
physical | 213 S. |
psigel | gbd_8 |
publishDate | 2013 |
publishDateSearch | 2013 |
publishDateSort | 2013 |
publisher | Oak Knoll Press [u.a.] |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Staïkos, Kōnstantinos Sp. 1943- Verfasser (DE-588)1023380366 aut Ē istoria tēs bibliothēkes ston dytiko politismo The history of the library in Western civilization 6 Epilogue and general index Konstantinos Sp. Staikos 1. English ed. New Castle, Del. Oak Knoll Press [u.a.] 2013 213 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier (DE-604)BV019589793 6 Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen 21 - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016526977&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Staïkos, Kōnstantinos Sp. 1943- The history of the library in Western civilization |
title | The history of the library in Western civilization |
title_alt | Ē istoria tēs bibliothēkes ston dytiko politismo |
title_auth | The history of the library in Western civilization |
title_exact_search | The history of the library in Western civilization |
title_exact_search_txtP | The history of the library in Western civilization |
title_full | The history of the library in Western civilization 6 Epilogue and general index Konstantinos Sp. Staikos |
title_fullStr | The history of the library in Western civilization 6 Epilogue and general index Konstantinos Sp. Staikos |
title_full_unstemmed | The history of the library in Western civilization 6 Epilogue and general index Konstantinos Sp. Staikos |
title_short | The history of the library in Western civilization |
title_sort | the history of the library in western civilization epilogue and general index |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016526977&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV019589793 |
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