Entities

Jaski (Bart)

  • s. xx–xxi
  • scholars, historians
  • (agents)
Dutch scholar, historian and keeper of manuscripts at Utrecht University.
Jaski, Bart, “‘I am as yet incomplete’: A. G. van Hamel in his youth”, in: Bart Jaski, Lars B. Nooij, Sanne Nooij-Jongeleen, and Nike Stam (eds), Man of two worlds: A. G. van Hamel, celticist and germanist, Utrecht: Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies, 2023. 13–25.
Internet Archive: <link>
Jaski, Bart, “Bibliografie van A. G. van Hamel (1886-1945)”, in: Bart Jaski, Lars B. Nooij, Sanne Nooij-Jongeleen, and Nike Stam (eds), Man van twee werelden: A. G. van Hamel als keltoloog en germanist, Utrecht: Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies, 2023. 92–102.
Internet Archive: <link>
Jaski, Bart, “‘Ik ben nog niet af’: A. G. van Hamel in zijn jonge jaren”, in: Bart Jaski, Lars B. Nooij, Sanne Nooij-Jongeleen, and Nike Stam (eds), Man van twee werelden: A. G. van Hamel als keltoloog en germanist, Utrecht: Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies, 2023. 13–24.
Internet Archive: <link>
Jaski, Bart, “‘Die gekke eerzucht van mij’: A. G. van Hamel in Bonn tijdens de Eerste Wereldoorlog”, in: Bart Jaski, Lars B. Nooij, Sanne Nooij-Jongeleen, and Nike Stam (eds), Man van twee werelden: A. G. van Hamel als keltoloog en germanist, Utrecht: Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies, 2023. 25–32.
Internet Archive: <link>
Jaski, Bart, Lars B. Nooij, Sanne Nooij-Jongeleen, and Nike Stam (eds), Man van twee werelden: A. G. van Hamel als keltoloog en germanist, Utrecht: Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies, 2023.  

A collection of biographical articles about A. G. van Hamel, published on the special occasion of the centenary of Celtic studies in the Netherlands and made possible with the support of the Maartje Draakfonds and the Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen (KNAW). In addition to the articles listed, it also includes a poem by Van Hamel, a preface by Peter Schrijver, an introduction by the editors, biographical information about the authors, and a list of abbreviations.

Internet Archive: <link>
Jaski, Bart, “Bibliography of A. G. van Hamel (1886–1945)”, in: Bart Jaski, Lars B. Nooij, Sanne Nooij-Jongeleen, and Nike Stam (eds), Man of two worlds: A. G. van Hamel, celticist and germanist, Utrecht: Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies, 2023. 92–102.
Internet Archive: <link>
Jaski, Bart, Lars B. Nooij, Sanne Nooij-Jongeleen, and Nike Stam (eds), Man of two worlds: A. G. van Hamel, celticist and germanist, Utrecht: Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies, 2023.  

English-language version of a collection of biographical articles about A. G. van Hamel, published on the special occasion of the centenary of Celtic studies in the Netherlands and made possible with the support of the Maartje Draakfonds and the Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen (KNAW). In addition to the articles listed, it also includes a poem by Van Hamel, a preface by Peter Schrijver, an introduction by the editors, biographical information about the authors, and a list of abbreviations.

Internet Archive: <link>
Jaski, Bart, “‘That mad ambition of mine’: A. G. van Hamel in Bonn during the First World War”, in: Bart Jaski, Lars B. Nooij, Sanne Nooij-Jongeleen, and Nike Stam (eds), Man of two worlds: A. G. van Hamel, celticist and germanist, Utrecht: Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies, 2023. 26–34.
Internet Archive: <link>
Jaski, Bart, “Dianchride and the Book of Dimma”, Peritia 32 (2021): 115–132.  
abstract:

The Book of Dimma is an Irish pocket gospel book dated to the (late) eighth century. Recent scholarly views are that the first three gospels were commissioned by Dianchride of the Múscraige near Roscrea (or even written by him); that the name of the scribe Dimma that was written over erasures was a fraud inspired by a hagiographical tale in the Life of St Crónán of Roscrea; and that it is unknown when the Gospel of John was added to the other three gospels. These and other views are challenged and alternative explanations are proposed.

Jaski, Bart, “The (legendary) rise of Dál Cais”, in: Seán Duffy (ed.), Medieval Dublin XVI: proceedings of Clontarf 1014–2014: national conference marking the millennium of the Battle of Clontarf, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2017. 15–61.
Jaski, Bart, “Christelijke kalligrafie?”, in: Micha Leeflang, and Kees van Schooten (eds), Heilig schrift: Tanach, Bijbel, Koran, Zwolle, Utrecht, 2016. 108–109.
Jaski, Bart, “Wederzijdse beïnvloeding”, in: Micha Leeflang, and Kees van Schooten (eds), Heilig schrift: Tanach, Bijbel, Koran, Zwolle, Utrecht, 2016. 133–140.
Jaski, Bart, “The oldest datings of the Utrecht psalter: rudimentary palaeography in the early seventeenth century”, Quaerendo 45:1–2 (2015): 125–143.  
abstract:
In the 1620s two attempts were made to date the Utrecht Psalter (c.830, in or around Reims): by its owner Robert Cotton and by the theologian James Ussher. Their results offer an insight into how a collector and a scholar practised palaeography before this became a modern study in the decades around 1700. The Utrecht Psalter, as well as the Cotton Genesis and other manuscripts, were dated in relation to their script, decoration and content. This case study underlines that the history of palaeography and codicology before Mabillon and Montfaucon is worth studying, not only in its own right, but also with regard to the development of humanism and its scholarly networks.
Jaski, Bart, “The strange case of Ailill mac Mágach and Cet mac Mátach”, in: Emer Purcell, Paul MacCotter, Julianne Nyhan, and John Sheehan (eds), Clerics, kings and vikings: essays on medieval Ireland in honour of Donnchadh Ó Corráin, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2015. 440–451.
Jaski, Bart, “Medieval Irish genealogies and genetics”, in: Seán Duffy (ed.), Princes, prelates and poets in medieval Ireland: essays in honour of Katharine Simms, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2013. 3–17.
Jaski, Bart, “Een nieuwe editie van de Annalen van Roscrea”, Kelten: Mededelingen van de Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies 55 (August, 2012): 5–8.
Jaski, Bart, and Daniel Mc Carthy, The Annals of Roscrea: a diplomatic edition, Roscrea: Roscrea People and Roscrea Heritage Society, 2012. xxxvi + 66 pp.
Jaski, Bart, “A supplement to the bibliography of Fergus Kelly, A guide to early Irish law”, Dennis Groenewegen [project director], CODECS: online database and e-resources for Celtic studies, Online: Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies, 2012–. URL: <https://codecs.vanhamel.nl/Supplement_to_GTEIL>. 
A supplement to the bibliography of Fergus Kelly, A guide to early Irish law (1988). The supplement supersedes an earlier version which was first published on the website of Utrecht University.
Jaski, Bart, “Gevierde meesters [Review of: Cunningham, Bernadette, The Annals of the Four Masters: Irish history, kingship and society in the early seventeenth century, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2010.]”, Kelten: Mededelingen van de Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies 49 (February, 2011): 11–12.
Jaski, Bart, and Daniel Mc Carthy, A facsimile edition of the Annals of Roscrea, Online: School of Computer Science and Statistics, Trinity College, 2011–. Word 97 document. URL: <http://www.scss.tcd.ie/misc/kronos/editions/AR_portal.htm>. 
abstract:
The Irish chronicle known to modern scholarship as the ‘Annals of Roscrea’ is found only in the manuscript Brussels, Bibliothèque Royale 5301-20 pp. 97−161. It was first registered in print in the comprehensive catalogue of the manuscripts in the Burgundian Library at Brussels published in 1842, and an edition was published by Dermot Gleeson and Seán Mac Airt in 1959. Recent research has shown that the principal scribe, the Franciscan friar Fr Brendan O’Conor, transcribed his source, ‘mutila Historia D. Cantwelij’, in two successive phases and then in a third phase it was annotated and indexed by his fellow Franciscan Fr Thomas O’Sheerin. This research has also shown that the edition of Gleeson and Mac Airt is incomplete, having omitted the pre-Patrician section of the chronicle. Hence this, the first full edition of the work, has been prepared in facsimile form so as to make clear the successive phases of compilation of the text, to provide an accurate account of its orthography, to identify the relationship of its entries to those of other chronicles, and to furnish an AD chronology consistent with the other Clonmacnoise group chronicles.
comments: 1. A 30-page introduction describing the only manuscript of the Annals of Roscrea, namely [[Brussels, Bibliothèque Royale de Belgique, MS 5301-5320

|Brussels, Bibliothèque Royale 5301-20]], followed by an account of the principles used in the compilation of the facsimile edition.

2. The facsimile edition formatted as a 65-page A4 document, representing a page-by-page facsimile of the 65 pages of MS Brussels, Bibliothèque Royale 5301-20, pp. 97-161.
Jaski, Bart, “King and household in early medieval Ireland”, in: Benjamin T. Hudson [ed.], Familia and household in the medieval Atlantic province, 3, Tempe, Arizona: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies Publications, 2011. 89–122.
Jaski, Bart, “Cogad Gáedel re Gallaib”, in: R. G. Dunphy [ed.], The encyclopedia of the medieval chronicle, 2 vols, Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2010. Vol. 1: 479.
Jaski, Bart, “[Various contributions]”, in: R. G. Dunphy [ed.], The encyclopedia of the medieval chronicle, 2 vols, Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2010. Vol. 1; 2: [Various].
Jaski, Bart, “Do fhlaithusaib Hérenn”, in: R. G. Dunphy [ed.], The encyclopedia of the medieval chronicle, 2 vols, Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2010. Vol. 1: 540–541.
Jaski, Bart, “Sex aetates mundi”, in: R. G. Dunphy [ed.], The encyclopedia of the medieval chronicle, 2 vols, Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2010. Vol. 2: 1353.


See also: Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies
Stichting A. G. van Hamel voor Keltische Studies
Dutch non-profit foundation, named in honour of A. G. van Hamel, first professor of Celtic studies in the Netherlands.

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Utrecht UniversityUtrecht University
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ORCID
‘Bart Jaski’ (id. 0000-0002-3731-4551)
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Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
March 2018, last updated: May 2022