1/🧵So there’s this box in the Genizah Research Unit at @theUL. It’s labelled “Worman Archive.” It’s supposed to be full of stuff associated with Ernest James Worman, a librarian who catalogued the #Genizah collection 120 years ago. Yesterday I found out that’s not all true.
2/See, Worman’s story is actually quite tragic. He was born in 1871 to a working-class #Cambridge family. That’s not the tragic part. In 1895, @theUL hired him as a “Library Assistant.” He then taught himself Arabic and Hebrew to catalogue the #Genizah manuscript collection. Worman in 1904 (age 33)
3/After 1902, Worman was the main employee at the library working on this collection. Solomon Schechter, the man responsible for bringing the collection to Cambridge in the first place, had left for America, leaving Worman more than 150,000 fragments to tend to (almost) alone. That's Schechter posing stoically in the Genizah research ro
4/He began to keep notebooks where he described each manuscript by hand. 5 of these notebooks survive with our “Worman Archive.” For many manuscripts, Worman’s descriptions remain the only catalogue data available.
5/Evidently, Worman he was paid by the hour, and he kept track of the hours he worked in the back cover his notebooks. Here’s his log from 1907 to March of 1908. You can see where his supervisor approved it in red ink. It seems he was paid about £1/hr, which is around £9 today.
6/The archive box also shows us that Worman’s process was not always so organized. Many descriptions are on loose sheets or slips of paper, sometimes just whatever Worman had on hand at the time. For example, these ticket stubs from the Cambridge Guildhall:
7/If you’re wondering what kind of paper he preferred, and I know you are, most of it is the very thin “Avonbrook Fine.” For serious stuff, he used “Extra Hard Sized Vellum,” which is neither vellum nor really that hard. "Lion Brand" was also popular in the library at the time.
8/Besides Worman’s catalogues, a lot of his other papers do survive in the archive, including publishers’ proofs of articles he wrote. Apparently, back in those days, authors received proofs in the form of long rolls, like this one sent by the Jewish Chronicle (feat. my foot).
9/In May of 1909, Worman contracted “acute pulmonary tuberculosis.” He died 4 weeks later at his home in Cambridge. He was 38.
10/Worman’s premature death is one reason the “Worman Archive” is so disorganized. The surviving library staff did their best to sort the papers left at his desk, but these included his own transcriptions alongside medieval manuscripts. Like this one that slipped through:
11/The opposite also happened. Some of Worman’s personal notes were actually added to the Taylor-Schechter collection by accident. They now have T-S classmarks and everything. @RJWJefferson
12/Worman’s notebooks were left incomplete. One of them - apparently the last one he worked on - is still mostly blank and includes an inscription on the inside cover. It was copied in 1910 by the same supervisor who used to approve Worman’s time cards:
13/Somehow, in the last few decades, wherever Worman’s papers were kept in the Genizah Research Unit became a receptacle for other office-related detritus. Like this letter from 1917, which @SolomonBenJudah says is very important to the discovery of Hebrew poetry by Yannai:
14/There are also lots of old photos of manuscripts, letters from the 1940s and 1980s, and 2 offprint articles from the University of Tiflis. Most of this stuff was identified years ago by Sarah Sykes, our office manager and the linchpin of the whole GRU machine.
15/One last thing I found amusing: a folder of memos about catalog orders, written by my former teacher, Geoffrey Khan. This was 1989, way before he became a big-shot Regius Professor. They come with a note from Sarah: “should be shredded - account numbers” which, yeah, probably.
16/16 So that’s Ernest Worman and the strange contents of his archive. Genizah research in Cambridge really declined after he died, with the whole sorting project being shut down until the 1950s. I wonder what would’ve be different if he’d had 30 more years at the library.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Dr. Nick Posegay (nposegay.bsky.social)

Dr. Nick Posegay (nposegay.bsky.social) Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @NPosegay

Aug 16, 2024
After 100 days of continuous action, the Cambridge Encampment for Palestine finally closed on Wednesday. This is a thread documenting the incredible things I witnessed there over the last 3 months, in the hope of demystifying the protest for my many colleagues who remain silent. Cambridge for Palestine encampment in front of King's College on King's Parade (ca. June 2024)
Cambridge students set up the first tents on the lawn in front of King’s College on May 6th (the same day as Oxford’s camp), inspired by similar camps at other schools. They stayed on King’s Parade in the heart of Cambridge for the next 14 weeks.
Image
Image
Their goal was to pressure University of Cambridge and its constituent colleges to disclose the contents of their investment portfolios, divest from all companies that support Israeli occupation & apartheid, and reinvest that money in protecting at-risk people at the University. Image
Read 26 tweets
Jun 9, 2023
1/🧵 Last year I made a thread about a slightly mysterious #archive at @theUL containing the writings of this man, Ernest Worman (). Yesterday was the 114th anniversary of his death, so I trekked across Cambridge to see if I could find his grave. Image
2/I have learned a lot about Worman’s life between 1871 and his untimely death in 1909, but it turns out, you can’t research Ernest Worman without learning a lot about #Cambridge too. So here’s a thread about some of the things I saw while taking a walk through his life. Image
3/Worman loved books, and in 1886, at the age of 15, he started his first job here at 1 Trinity Street. Back then, it was the bookshop of Macmillan & Bowes. Now, @CambridgeUP is using some clever wording to skirt around the fact that they only recently occupied the shop. Image
Image
Read 26 tweets
Jun 6, 2023
1/Going through the old #Genizah Instagram posts (for a secret project) and noticed something. This is the 'Memorandum for Opticians', a book on eye health written in the 11th century by ʿAlī ibn Īsā. There is a note attached that dates this copy to 1142. #arabic #manuscript Image
2/This is also the 'Memorandum for Opticians', but this time copied in Hebrew characters for the benefit of Jewish readers. The language is still Arabic, so we refer to the writing system as "Judaeo-Arabic." Both manuscripts came from the same synagogue in Old #Cairo. #hebrew Image
3/These folios are from different sections of the text, but it's easy to notice how similar the formatting and layout are with mixed red and black inks. The scribe(s) used black for the main body and red for section subheadings. Image
Image
Read 9 tweets
Oct 14, 2022
1/🧵This is Nabia Abbott. She was a groundbreaking scholar of #Arabic manuscripts, the first woman to be a professor at @UChicago’s Oriental Institute, and once sent me on a wild goose chase spanning 3 continents. She deserves a lot more than one thread, but here's a start.
2/Nabīha ʿAbūd (نبيهة عبود), later known as Nabia Abbott, was born in 1897 to a Christian family in Mardin (then the Ottoman Empire, now modern Turkey). Her family moved around a lot, which led to her attending school in India and completing a BA degree in Lucknow in 1919.
3/In 1923, Abbott moved to the US and earned her MA at @BU_Tweets. From 1925 on she taught at Asbury College (in Kentucky) where she eventually became the head of the Department of History. In 1933, she began a PhD at the @Orientalinst in Chicago (ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/z60…).
Read 19 tweets
Sep 22, 2022
1/Centuries before the #printingpress took off in Europe, printers in Egypt employed a type of woodblock printing known as “tarsh” (طرش). Only around 100 of these tarsh prints are known to exist. They are also very cool, so here’s a 🧵on #Arabic block prints in @theUL. #Cambridge
2/“Woodblock printing” is a term historians use to talk about making a big stamp and slapping paper onto it. Block printers would carve wood so the negative space looked like whatever image or text they wanted to print. Then they’d coat it in ink and stamp some paper. Easy.
3/Except it wasn’t easy. It takes a lot of skill to carve the negative image of Arabic calligraphy into a piece of wood. I mean just look at this thing. It’s an amulet quoting the #Quran that would have been carried for protection. Most tarsh prints are amulets like this.
Read 12 tweets
Sep 14, 2022
1/Recently @orietta_darold and I have been investigating European paper preserved in the Cairo #Geniza. So here’s a 🧵on what #watermarks can tell us about how paper moved from Europe to Egypt in the #MiddleAges and #EarlyModern period. Pics taken at @theUL. #WatermarkWednesday Image
2/Quick refresher: The #Cairo Geniza is a repository of over 300,000 (mostly) Jewish manuscripts preserved by Egyptian Jews between 1000 and 1897. Check out @GenizaLab and @AWormNotAMan to learn more. Most of these MSS are now in #Cambridge: lib.cam.ac.uk/collections/de…Solomon Schechter posing with the unsorted Cairo Genizah collection at the Cambridge University Library
3/So #medieval papermakers used watermark images like this one to identify their paper stocks. You can read more about how medieval paper was made in Prof. Da Rold’s book (DM me for access, sorry @CambridgeUP): doi.org/10.1017/978110…Image
Image
Read 18 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(