The team of PI, 5 post-doctoral researchers and 3 PhD students analysed sales catalogues, newspaper reports, publications about manuscripts and unpublished archival records. They added over 15,000 records to the Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts and improved the data in a further 20,000 records. Collecting information from unpublished sources and European catalogues (in particular), contributed to the creation of an unprecedently granular account of the movement of manuscripts. They found that many manuscripts crossed national borders multiple times, that dealers were creative in their abilities to avoid attempts to control the movement of books through taxation and legislation, that members of the trade collaborated to facilitate sales and minimise risk, and that relationships between collectors and dealers played a major role in determining the movements of manuscripts.
In 2022 the major project conference brought together scholars from universities and libraries in nine countries. The resulting publication provides an overview of the state of current research, demonstrating the potential for further collaborative and comparative work.
In 2024 two PhD students successfully completed theses. The first demonstrated that women were active in the trade in manuscripts at all levels, including working in shops and libraries, producing scholarship, and as collectors. This research provides an important corrective to the traditional emphasis on the collecting and study of manuscripts as an overwhelmingly male-dominated activity. The second thesis examined the role of elite bibliophilic clubs in Britain, France and the USA in generating and disseminating information about manuscripts. Despite the exclusivity of these groups, their networks facilitated the movement of books and scholarship, but also demonstrated the increasingly international trade in rare books.
The PI and post-doctoral researchers have published articles and a mini-graph, providing in-depth case studies of the activities of particular dealers and collectors, and the trans-Atlantic trade. In addition the team collaborated to produce a collection of essays on the economics of the manuscript trade, designed to showcase their approach and to make the economic sources more accessible to humanities scholars. The PI is completing a monograph on the trade in manuscripts in Britain c. 1896-1945, which should be published in 2025.