The Nuremberg Chronicle (1493)
We are inaugurating a new series of dissemination of its bibliographic treasures, presenting a documentary on the Liber chronicarum, also known as the Nuremberg Chronicle, an incunabulum printed in the German city of Nuremberg in 1493 and illustrated with more than 1,200 wood engravings. It is one of the best-known titles in the history of printed books. The documentary, which is a brief presentation of the work and a description of the restoration process to which it has been subjected in the Restoration Workshop, inaugurates a new series of dissemination of the Historical Bibliographic Heritage of the BUS, joining other projects, such as EXPOBUS, with which we try to reach all our users, offering them the possibility of getting to know and enjoying, through its most emblematic pieces, one of the greatest treasures of the University of Seville.

The City as Signifier: Nuremberg in the Nuremberg Chronicle

The Nuremberg Chronicle - Bookworm History

The Nuremberg Chronicle by Kylee Bolinger

John Cleese’s Brillian Take on Religion & 'Life of Brian' | The Dick Cavett Show

Why Returning From Mars Is Impossible: Feynman's Warning

Western Esotericism Family Tree

The French Do Not Care About Work

You Know This Song (but the Orchestra Doesn’t) | Jacob Collier & VSO School of Music Orchestra | TED

1986: How to Spot the Upper Class | That's Life! | BBC Archive

The Dream of Poliphilus (1592)

Britain Sold Palestine to Pay Its WWI Debt. The Balfour Declaration Was a Banking Deal!

Untouched 1710 Built Queen Anne House For Sale In London

Behind the scenes at York Minster Library - The Nuremberg Chronicle

Antonio de Ulloa: Adventures of an enlightened man

Binding a Book From Scratch!

Why Peter Scholze is once in a Generation Mathematician

Hartmann Shedel, The Nuremberg Chronicle, 1493. Peter Harrington Rare Books.

Growing Up With My Serial Killer Cousin, Ted Bundy

SOCIALISM: An In-Depth Explanation

