“The Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies”
Carolyn
P.
Schriber
Rhodes College
schriber@rhodes.edu
The "heart" of The Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies (ORB) is an
encyclopedia that provides original essays written by leading scholars in each
field. These introductory remarks, designed for entry-level college students,
are supplemented by bibliographic essays that lay out the state of current
scholarship in the field and discuss research methods. Specialized essays on
related topics expand each field for more advanced students. Links to other ORB
sections flesh out the encyclopedia. We provide detailed bibliographies, maps,
original source material in translation, diagrams, works of art, sound clips,
and photographs. Instructors can also find sample syllabi, teaching aids, lists
of related websites, addresses of specialized scholarly organizations, journals,
and discussion groups. These are the building blocks, from which instructors can
design individual courses that meet the specific needs of their students.
Current holdings have expanded to over 90 megabytes. We have 123 contributing
writers from 10 countries. Materials are primarily in English, but we also carry
entries in German, French, and Latin. We have affiliated websites around the
world; these allow our topic editors to maintain their materials at their own
universities while retaining full accessibility through ORB. Our Sourcebook,
which contains over 300 short teaching selections, resides at Fordham. The
library of book-length translations remains at Kansas and is mirrored at
Berkeley. The section on Late Antiquity is at Nipissing University in Ontario.
The Anglo-Saxon section, appropriately enough, runs from the Center for
Computing at Oxford. Medieval Spain is at Little Rock. The Encyclopedia of Early
Christianity is at Evansville. The database on women's religious houses is at
Mt. Holyoak. The database of liturgical imprints is at the University of
Michigan. Old English literature is at Georgetown, the Scots language and
Literature project is at the university of Glasgow, the Dante site is located in
Berlin, and the material on the Low Countries is centered in Amsterdam.
ORB has received favorable reviews in The Chronicle of Higher
Education and in a publication of the University of Wisconsin at
Madison. It has been catalogued for inclusion on OCLC and MARC--a sign of its
acceptance among librarians as a valuable research tool. ORB, of course, will
never be finished. It is an on-going project, in which materials are added and
updated on a regular basis. It will expand in step with our own increasing
technological capabilities. Of course the crucial question is whether these
materials are being used. At the moment the Rhodes server alone is receiving
over 6000 hits per day. That works out to over four connections per minute, 24
hours a day. Inquiries and comments come from all over the world. We are still
actively recruiting writers and expanding our coverage of topics. This
conference seems to be an ideal place to inform scholars of the resources we
offer and to encourage others to contribute to our efforts.
As editor of The Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies (ORB), I am very
interested in presenting our year-old WorldWideWeb project to participants in
the Joint International Conference of ACH-ALLC'97. I would be happy to present a
poster session and to conduct live demonstrations of our website at http://orb.rhodes.edu.