In cooperation with the Consortium of European Research Libraries (CERL) I created a database - MatMed-Readers (
https://data.cerl.org/matmed/_search(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)) for the systematic description of the reading traces now embedded in early printed books of ‘materia medica’: ownership inscriptions, manuscript annotations, drawings, critical comments etc. MatMed-Readers is primarily aimed at scholars and enables the qualitative and quantitative analysis of input data by means of refined search keys.
My research in and of itself mainly consisted of locating printed copies of 'materia medica' works in libraries and institutions, photographing copies with heavy traces of use and describing them in MatMed-Readers. Manuscripts and archival documents complementary to the research have been studied in a more traditional way. All together, they have been the subject of conferences and articles - published, forthcoming, or in the process of being written. See below some conference/talks programmes.
I also managed to create a website that I can update myself. A web page hosted by Ca’ Foscari (
https://www.unive.it/mat-med(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)) is being linked to the website I created in cooperation with the Center for Digital Scholarship (CDS) of Brown University (
https://library.brown.edu/create/cds/mat-med-in-transit/(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)). I conceived the MAT-MED in Transit website - temporarily accessible at
https://emylonas.reclaim.hosting/mat-med/(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre) but in the process of acquiring a cheap dedicated domain - as a tool to stimulate the interest of both scholars and a wider public. It offers a selection of manuscript and archival sources (many of which have never been published before), digitised and accompanied by archival/bibliographical references. Its main objective is to illustrate and share sources that explain us how, in the early modern period, 'materia medica' circulated and was studied to discover as yet unknown therapeutic (or harmful) properties, how medicinal plants were also cultivated in private gardens, and finally how they were processed in apothecary shops.
In MAT-MED in Transit website I also focused on a 16th-century source of special relevance to my project: the five-volume manuscript herbal of the Venetian Pietro Antonio Michiel (a non-professional who was very keen on exploring local and exotic 'materia medica'), now kept at the Marciana Library in Venice. With the help of Brown University CDS, I produced the digital edition (TEI) of the first volume - also preparing the remaining four tomes for the future digital edition (
https://emylonas.reclaim.hosting/mat-med/edition/(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)).
The Agreement facilitated the organisation of an exhibition at the Marciana Library (10 February - 2 April 2023) and a final international conference (29-31 March 2023), planned and largely prepared by 31 December 2022.
Videos illustrating "Gardens of Venice", "Herbal of P.A. Michiel" and "Apothecaries' Shop", planned and prepared by the PI by 31 December 2022, are being processed by Alicubi (
https://www.alicubi.it/edit.html(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)) will be screened during the final conference of the project (29-31 March 2023) and permanently available on the project website.
In cooperation with two engravers/graphic designer and a librarian, I created a board game, Il Giardino delle piante magiche ('The Garden of Magic Plants'): a sheet with 63 squares, a deck of 95 cards, two dice, 1 booklet with figures and descriptions of plant properties, in which the curious notion is combined with the latest scientific literature available on PubMed. The plant images are taken from a 1565 edition of Pietro Andrea Mattioli's Commentari a Dioscoride with watercolour woodcuts. The aim of the board game is for each player to create his or her own garden and, in doing so, learn about some of the properties of the plants they are collecting.