{ link: "//www.loc.gov/pictures/item/agc1996015588/PP/", thumbnail:{ url :"//cdn.loc.gov/service/pnp/agc/7a04000/7a04600/7a04639_150px.jpg", alt:'Image from Prints and Photographs Online Catalog -- The Library of Congress' } }
The Library of Congress >> Especially for Librarians and Archivists >> Standards HOME >> MARC Development >> Discussion Paper List MARC DISCUSSION PAPER NO. 2017-DP03 DATE: December 13, 2016 REVISED: NAME: Defining New Fields to Record Accessibility Content in the MARC 21 Bibliographic Format SOURCE: Canadian Committee on Metadata Exchange (CCM) SUMMARY: This paper presents options for recording t
Letter from Leonard Bernstein to Helen Coates, n.d. Location: Box/Folder 13. Excerpt: "The recording takes place on Thursday afternoon -- so that's out." From: Leonard Bernstein Collection, Music Division, Library of Congress. Correspondence Series. For information about this resource, refer to finding aid available at https://hdl.loc.gov/loc.music/eadmus.mu998001 Record created through migration
Collection Overview The Leonard Bernstein Collection, ca. 1920-1989, contains more than 400,000 items documenting the life and career of one of 20th-century America's most important musical figures. This online collection makes available 85 photographs, 177 scripts from the Young People's Concerts, 74 scripts from the Thursday Evening Previews, and over 1,100 pieces of correspondence. Special Feat
Part 2: Code Sequence A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | Discontinued codes are identified by a hyphen preceding the first letter in the code string. code country
April 16, 2018 Library of Congress Digitizes Unique Japanese Censorship Collection Cover image of the censored copy of “Kanikōsen,” a pessimistic novel written in 1929 by Takiji Kobayashi (1903–1933). The story ends when a workers’ strike against the manager of their ship is suppressed by the Imperial Navy. As a result of Kobayashi’s involvement with Communist groups, he was arrested by undercover
README The AjglCsv component allows you to read and write CSV files. There are currently two different implementations for the reader and writer classes: An implementation using the native fgetcsv and fputcsv functions An implementation compatible with the RFC 4180 Installation To install the latest stable version of this component, open a console and execute the following command: $ composer requ
PREMIS is based on a data model that defines the entities that are described (Objects, Events, Agents and Rights), the properties of those entities (semantic units), and relationships between them. The PREMIS OWL ontology provides an RDF encoding reflecting that model. This revised version replaces the earlier PREMIS OWL ontology, which was based on version 2.2. The PREMIS OWL Ontology Revision W
All images are digitized | All jpegs/tiffs display outside Library of Congress | View All About This Collection This monumental collection portrays the Ottoman Empire during the reign of one of its last sultans, Abdul-Hamid II. The 1,819 photographs in 51 large-format albums date from about 1880 to 1893. They highlight the modernization of numerous aspects of the Ottoman Empire, featuring images o
© ISO 2016 – All rights reserved Document type: International Standard Document subtype: Document stage: (20) PreparatoryStage Document language: E Documents:MyDocuments:Work:ISO-TC154:WG5:N-Documents:ISO-TC154- WG5_N0039_ISO_WD_8601-2_2016-02-16.docx STD Version 2.7f ISO/TC 154 N0039 Date: 2016-02-16 ISO/WD 8601-2 ISO/TC 154/WG 5 Secretariat: SAC Data elements and interchange formats — Informatio
EAD Application Guidelines for Version 1.0 Chapter 3. Creating Finding Aids in EAD: Continued 3.5.3. Controlled Vocabulary Terms <controlaccess> Many archivists have become accustomed to assigning authority-controlled access terms in MARC catalog records describing their holdings. Use of controlled terms provides standardized, authoritative versions of personal, corporate, and geographic names, su
Encoded Archival Description (EAD) is the international metadata transmission standard for hierarchical descriptions of archival records. Developed by the EAD Working Group of the Society of American Archivists and first published in 1998, EAD is an Extensible Markup Language (XML) format used by archivists around the globe. A second version with greater international alignment, EAD 2002, was rele
Prepared and Maintained by the Encoded Archival Description Working Group of the Society of American Archivists and the Network Development and MARC Standards Office of the Library of Congress Print Edition Available from: The Society of American Archivists 527 S. Wells Street, 5th floor Chicago, IL 60607-3922 USA 312/922-0140 Fax: 312/347-1452 [email protected] www.archivists.org © The Society of
Encoded Archival Description Tag Library, Version 2002 The following finding aids were originally encoded in EAD Version 1.0 and modified to conform to EAD 2002. One displays a minimal level of markup, while the other makes extensive use of attributes. Neither should be considered normative, as the archival community continues to experiment with the "optimal" level of markup. Example 1: Guide to t
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