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The collection of manuscripts and local archives in the University Library was encouraged initially by G.E. Flack, the first College Librarian. References in minutes of the University Council from the 1930s refer to the University Library's accession of significant gifts and deposits of archival materials, a process which accelerated after the war.
The antiphonal was kept safe by the Willoughby family (later the Barons Middleton) in Wollaton Hall library until 1924, when it was returned to the church. In 1974 it was put in the care of the Middleton collection at the department of Manuscripts and Special Collections, The University of Nottingham , [ 3 ] along with other papers belonging to ...
When the City and County Archives merged in 1974, Henstock became Principal Archivist and served in that post until he retired in 2003. [3] [4] Mark Dorrington succeeded him, [4] and remained in the post for 10 years, before becoming Keeper of Manuscripts and Special Collections, University of Nottingham in 2013. [5]
The complex was renamed "King's Meadow Campus" in 2005, and now houses the University of Nottingham's Manuscripts and Special Collections, in which the University has been collecting since the early 1930s. The original staff canteen and most of the floor-space in the studios has been converted to office and lecture space.
It is searchable by locale, content, and other measures. The service does not require complete repository details and does not search repositories' metadata. [1] OpenDOAR is maintained by the University of Nottingham under the SHERPA umbrella of services and was developed in collaboration with Lund University.
This is a list of archives in the United Kingdom. As of 2009 [update] there were 122 national, 654 local, 328 university, 1,224 special and 61 business archives. [ 1 ]
It is part of the SHERPA suite of services around open access and is run by Jisc (formerly the University of Nottingham). The database contains information about more than 100 funders, mostly from the United Kingdom. [11] For each of them, Juliet indicates their policy regarding self-archiving, open access journals and archival of research data ...
From 1997 to 2001, Turville-Petre headed the School of English at the University of Nottingham. Subjects taught by Turville-Petre at the University include Middle English literature. He has conducted important research on the Wollaton Manuscripts, Piers Plowman and other significant pieces of historical literature. [1]