On Chaucer
For a good introduction to Chaucer and to The Canterbury Tales
see the excellent resource at Harvard
University’s website, which includes a version of the text
in middle English with an interlinear
translation into modern English.
There is a middle English text of The Canterbury Tales
at the University
of Virginia's electronic library and also
at a free private website called Librarius.
It seems that all three provide the text which was orginally made
available online by the Oxford
Text Archive, and which is based on the Bodleian
Library’s
copy of The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer, edited by F. N.
Robinson (London: Oxford University Press, 1957).
The digitisation of the British Library copies of the Caxton Chaucers was undertaken by the HUMI
project of Keio University.
See also The
Canterbury Tales project at De Montfort University. Another De
Montfort website allows scholars to move to particular lines
of the British Library copies or search for specific words. A CD-ROM
edition with additional functionality is also available.
The Caxton's Chaucer site is the outcome of one of a number of digitisation
projects for early printed material held by the British
Library.
On Caxton
The Mercers’ Company,
the London guild of wholesale merchants to which Caxton belonged, is
no longer a guild, but the Mercers’ Company
is still in existence, and several of the documents relating to Caxton
are still to be found in its archives.
Portraits of some of the persons mentioned on the British Library’s
Caxton web resource can be found on the web pages of the National
Portrait Gallery, for instance Edward IV, Richard III and Henry
VII. You can also see a portrait of Louis
de Gruuthuse who protected Edward IV when he was in Flanders.
His magnificent town house still stands and is now a museum.
Information on the technique of printing can be found
on several websites, for instance a resource on type
making has
been made for the Huntington Library.
You will also find usefull information at the site of the Gutenberg
Museum in
Mainz, and the British Library's own web resource
on Gutenberg.
On the history
of papermaking, especially in England, see the British
Association of Paper Historians.
The museum in the old paper
mill in Basel has a short virtual tour, as
does the Italian
paper museum, which has some information
on the important early Italian paper making; see also The American
Museum of Papermaking
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