Dear Clemency Montelle,

a recommendable start would be:


Klaus Ludwig Janert, Bibliographie mit den Berichten über die mündliche und schriftliche Textweitergabe sowie die Schreibmaterialien in Indien. Bonn: VGH-Wiss.-Verl. 1995.

 

Katrin Einicke, Korrektur, Differenzierung und Abkürzung in indischen Inschriften und Handschriften. Wiesbaden 2009. [AKM 68].


Kindly regarding,

WS


-----------------------------
Prof. Dr. Walter Slaje
Hermann-Löns-Str. 1
D-99425 Weimar
Deutschland

Ego ex animi mei sententia spondeo ac polliceor

studia humanitatis impigro labore culturum et provecturum

non sordidi lucri causa nec ad vanam captandam gloriam,

sed quo magis veritas propagetur et lux eius, qua salus

humani generis continetur, clarius effulgeat.

Vindobonae, die XXI. mensis Novembris MCMLXXXIII.



2014-07-03 6:26 GMT+02:00 Clemency Montelle <clemency.montelle@canterbury.ac.nz>:
Dear All,

 

I have been considering the ways in which scribes made corrections in the manuscripts they were copying, specifically in numerical tables.  Of course, there are a variety of practices that  (some are neater than others!).  One way of interest is the use of what appears to be (in the colour copies of manuscripts I have) a yellowish paste or paint (an early version of modern day “white-out” or “twink”?) which can then written over.

 

I attach a couple of examples. (The first example it has been used along several successive values in the third row, and in the second an entire column as well as individual entries.)

 

Does anybody know more about this technique?  What was the substance used?  How widespread is this?  Where can I read more about this?

 

With best wishes,

Clemency

 

Dr Clemency Montelle

http://www.math.canterbury.ac.nz/~c.montelle/

Department of Mathematics and Statistics

University of Canterbury | Te Whare Wananga o Waitaha

Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8140

NEW ZEALAND

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