Why are the books in the Game of Thrones citadel library shelved spine inwards?Game of Thrones Title...
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Why are the books in the Game of Thrones citadel library shelved spine inwards?
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Why are the books in the Game of Thrones citadel library shelved spine inwards?
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How do they know the title of each book in the citadel library in Game of Thrones if the book's back faces the wall?
game-of-thrones
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How do they know the title of each book in the citadel library in Game of Thrones if the book's back faces the wall?
game-of-thrones
New contributor
2
I’m seeing a wall of book spines... admittedly without visible titles, but they’re not stored ‘backwards ‘
– Tetsujin
23 hours ago
3
I suspect, you can take the book off the otherside of the shelf...
– morbo
22 hours ago
5
@Tetsujin I'm seeing a wall of book covers, both front and back, with sunken spaces in between them that presumably show the edges of the books' pages. It's especially visible if you look at the second shelf on the left, and look at the tops of the books.
– BrettFromLA
18 hours ago
2
hmmm... I'm now seeing the equivalent of old woman/young girl... candlestick/lovers. Every time I glance at it the spines invert.
– Tetsujin
13 hours ago
3
That's the spine of the book facing the back of the shelf, not the cover.
– Nuclear Wang
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
How do they know the title of each book in the citadel library in Game of Thrones if the book's back faces the wall?
game-of-thrones
New contributor
How do they know the title of each book in the citadel library in Game of Thrones if the book's back faces the wall?
game-of-thrones
game-of-thrones
New contributor
New contributor
edited 37 mins ago
TRiG
468310
468310
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asked yesterday
Юра БутЮра Бут
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New contributor
2
I’m seeing a wall of book spines... admittedly without visible titles, but they’re not stored ‘backwards ‘
– Tetsujin
23 hours ago
3
I suspect, you can take the book off the otherside of the shelf...
– morbo
22 hours ago
5
@Tetsujin I'm seeing a wall of book covers, both front and back, with sunken spaces in between them that presumably show the edges of the books' pages. It's especially visible if you look at the second shelf on the left, and look at the tops of the books.
– BrettFromLA
18 hours ago
2
hmmm... I'm now seeing the equivalent of old woman/young girl... candlestick/lovers. Every time I glance at it the spines invert.
– Tetsujin
13 hours ago
3
That's the spine of the book facing the back of the shelf, not the cover.
– Nuclear Wang
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
2
I’m seeing a wall of book spines... admittedly without visible titles, but they’re not stored ‘backwards ‘
– Tetsujin
23 hours ago
3
I suspect, you can take the book off the otherside of the shelf...
– morbo
22 hours ago
5
@Tetsujin I'm seeing a wall of book covers, both front and back, with sunken spaces in between them that presumably show the edges of the books' pages. It's especially visible if you look at the second shelf on the left, and look at the tops of the books.
– BrettFromLA
18 hours ago
2
hmmm... I'm now seeing the equivalent of old woman/young girl... candlestick/lovers. Every time I glance at it the spines invert.
– Tetsujin
13 hours ago
3
That's the spine of the book facing the back of the shelf, not the cover.
– Nuclear Wang
6 hours ago
2
2
I’m seeing a wall of book spines... admittedly without visible titles, but they’re not stored ‘backwards ‘
– Tetsujin
23 hours ago
I’m seeing a wall of book spines... admittedly without visible titles, but they’re not stored ‘backwards ‘
– Tetsujin
23 hours ago
3
3
I suspect, you can take the book off the otherside of the shelf...
– morbo
22 hours ago
I suspect, you can take the book off the otherside of the shelf...
– morbo
22 hours ago
5
5
@Tetsujin I'm seeing a wall of book covers, both front and back, with sunken spaces in between them that presumably show the edges of the books' pages. It's especially visible if you look at the second shelf on the left, and look at the tops of the books.
– BrettFromLA
18 hours ago
@Tetsujin I'm seeing a wall of book covers, both front and back, with sunken spaces in between them that presumably show the edges of the books' pages. It's especially visible if you look at the second shelf on the left, and look at the tops of the books.
– BrettFromLA
18 hours ago
2
2
hmmm... I'm now seeing the equivalent of old woman/young girl... candlestick/lovers. Every time I glance at it the spines invert.
– Tetsujin
13 hours ago
hmmm... I'm now seeing the equivalent of old woman/young girl... candlestick/lovers. Every time I glance at it the spines invert.
– Tetsujin
13 hours ago
3
3
That's the spine of the book facing the back of the shelf, not the cover.
– Nuclear Wang
6 hours ago
That's the spine of the book facing the back of the shelf, not the cover.
– Nuclear Wang
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Having books with the spine facing out is a relatively recent innovation.
For the record, when you tuck a book away with the title-bearing spine pointing out, you’re carrying on a tradition that began roughly 480 years ago. “The first spine with printing dates from 1535, and it was then that books began to spin into the position we’re familiar with,” says Mari.
But before book, there were scrolls, and that’s where Mari’s story starts.
- Libraries Used to Chain Their Books to Shelves, With the Spines Hidden Away
- Smithsonian
Since Game of thrones is a fantasy and seems to be (comparatively) set in what would have been something close to Earth's "Middle Ages" with knights and kings all warring constantly this seems to be a pretty accurate depiction of a library.
As scrolls gave way to books, new shelves and a new organizational system were in order.
For the next fourteen hundred or so years, books, as Henry Petroski, a professor of civic engineering and history at Duke, writes in The Book on the Bookshelf, were shelved every which way but straight up, spine out. Engravings of private studies show books piled horizontally, standing on the edge opposite their spine (their fore edge), as well as turned fore edge out.
Before the printing press books were ornate constructions, and in comparison to what came after they were both highly valuable and in short supply.
In the Middle Ages, when monasteries were the closest equivalent to a public library, monks kept works in their carrels. To increase circulation, these works were eventually chained to inclined desks, or lecterns, thus giving ownership of a work to a particular lectern rather than a particular monk.
When space got tight the monks moved their books to shelves, but they stacked them with the spines hidden. Which, as you can imagine, would have been quite confusing. The solution, Mari says: “Sometimes an identifying design was drawn across the thick of the pages.”
- Libraries Used to Chain Their Books to Shelves, With the Spines Hidden Away
- Smithsonian
So, to answer your question about how they were identified: there were sometimes identifying markings on "The thick of the pages".
1
Also noteworthy is that since they're chained to the shelf, they cannot easily be reshelved in the wrong order because the chain tells you where it goes, so you can tell which is which based solely on its location.
– Darrel Hoffman
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Originally the shelf marks and titling of a book was written on its fore-edge, the paper part of the book, not on the back (the spine) the way they are today.
The GOT library is modelled after the chained library of Hereford Cathedral. In that library the books have only shelf marks and they are written on the fore-edge, so the fore-edge is the part of the book facing outwards.
Image shared by Hereford Cathedral's official Twitter account to mark
Book Week 2018
The chaining of books was the most widespread and effective security system in European libraries from the Middle Ages to the 18th century, and Hereford Cathedral’s 17th-century Chained Library is the largest to survive with all its chains, rods and locks intact.
A chain is attached at one end to the front cover of each book; the other end is slotted on to a rod running along the bottom of each shelf. The system allows a book to be taken from the shelf and read at the desk, but not to be removed from the bookcase.
The books are shelved with their foredges, rather than their spines, facing the reader (the wrong way round to us); this allows the book to be lifted down and opened without needing to be turned around – thus avoiding tangling the chain.
Quote from the official Hereford Cathedral's page on the Chained Library
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Having books with the spine facing out is a relatively recent innovation.
For the record, when you tuck a book away with the title-bearing spine pointing out, you’re carrying on a tradition that began roughly 480 years ago. “The first spine with printing dates from 1535, and it was then that books began to spin into the position we’re familiar with,” says Mari.
But before book, there were scrolls, and that’s where Mari’s story starts.
- Libraries Used to Chain Their Books to Shelves, With the Spines Hidden Away
- Smithsonian
Since Game of thrones is a fantasy and seems to be (comparatively) set in what would have been something close to Earth's "Middle Ages" with knights and kings all warring constantly this seems to be a pretty accurate depiction of a library.
As scrolls gave way to books, new shelves and a new organizational system were in order.
For the next fourteen hundred or so years, books, as Henry Petroski, a professor of civic engineering and history at Duke, writes in The Book on the Bookshelf, were shelved every which way but straight up, spine out. Engravings of private studies show books piled horizontally, standing on the edge opposite their spine (their fore edge), as well as turned fore edge out.
Before the printing press books were ornate constructions, and in comparison to what came after they were both highly valuable and in short supply.
In the Middle Ages, when monasteries were the closest equivalent to a public library, monks kept works in their carrels. To increase circulation, these works were eventually chained to inclined desks, or lecterns, thus giving ownership of a work to a particular lectern rather than a particular monk.
When space got tight the monks moved their books to shelves, but they stacked them with the spines hidden. Which, as you can imagine, would have been quite confusing. The solution, Mari says: “Sometimes an identifying design was drawn across the thick of the pages.”
- Libraries Used to Chain Their Books to Shelves, With the Spines Hidden Away
- Smithsonian
So, to answer your question about how they were identified: there were sometimes identifying markings on "The thick of the pages".
1
Also noteworthy is that since they're chained to the shelf, they cannot easily be reshelved in the wrong order because the chain tells you where it goes, so you can tell which is which based solely on its location.
– Darrel Hoffman
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Having books with the spine facing out is a relatively recent innovation.
For the record, when you tuck a book away with the title-bearing spine pointing out, you’re carrying on a tradition that began roughly 480 years ago. “The first spine with printing dates from 1535, and it was then that books began to spin into the position we’re familiar with,” says Mari.
But before book, there were scrolls, and that’s where Mari’s story starts.
- Libraries Used to Chain Their Books to Shelves, With the Spines Hidden Away
- Smithsonian
Since Game of thrones is a fantasy and seems to be (comparatively) set in what would have been something close to Earth's "Middle Ages" with knights and kings all warring constantly this seems to be a pretty accurate depiction of a library.
As scrolls gave way to books, new shelves and a new organizational system were in order.
For the next fourteen hundred or so years, books, as Henry Petroski, a professor of civic engineering and history at Duke, writes in The Book on the Bookshelf, were shelved every which way but straight up, spine out. Engravings of private studies show books piled horizontally, standing on the edge opposite their spine (their fore edge), as well as turned fore edge out.
Before the printing press books were ornate constructions, and in comparison to what came after they were both highly valuable and in short supply.
In the Middle Ages, when monasteries were the closest equivalent to a public library, monks kept works in their carrels. To increase circulation, these works were eventually chained to inclined desks, or lecterns, thus giving ownership of a work to a particular lectern rather than a particular monk.
When space got tight the monks moved their books to shelves, but they stacked them with the spines hidden. Which, as you can imagine, would have been quite confusing. The solution, Mari says: “Sometimes an identifying design was drawn across the thick of the pages.”
- Libraries Used to Chain Their Books to Shelves, With the Spines Hidden Away
- Smithsonian
So, to answer your question about how they were identified: there were sometimes identifying markings on "The thick of the pages".
1
Also noteworthy is that since they're chained to the shelf, they cannot easily be reshelved in the wrong order because the chain tells you where it goes, so you can tell which is which based solely on its location.
– Darrel Hoffman
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Having books with the spine facing out is a relatively recent innovation.
For the record, when you tuck a book away with the title-bearing spine pointing out, you’re carrying on a tradition that began roughly 480 years ago. “The first spine with printing dates from 1535, and it was then that books began to spin into the position we’re familiar with,” says Mari.
But before book, there were scrolls, and that’s where Mari’s story starts.
- Libraries Used to Chain Their Books to Shelves, With the Spines Hidden Away
- Smithsonian
Since Game of thrones is a fantasy and seems to be (comparatively) set in what would have been something close to Earth's "Middle Ages" with knights and kings all warring constantly this seems to be a pretty accurate depiction of a library.
As scrolls gave way to books, new shelves and a new organizational system were in order.
For the next fourteen hundred or so years, books, as Henry Petroski, a professor of civic engineering and history at Duke, writes in The Book on the Bookshelf, were shelved every which way but straight up, spine out. Engravings of private studies show books piled horizontally, standing on the edge opposite their spine (their fore edge), as well as turned fore edge out.
Before the printing press books were ornate constructions, and in comparison to what came after they were both highly valuable and in short supply.
In the Middle Ages, when monasteries were the closest equivalent to a public library, monks kept works in their carrels. To increase circulation, these works were eventually chained to inclined desks, or lecterns, thus giving ownership of a work to a particular lectern rather than a particular monk.
When space got tight the monks moved their books to shelves, but they stacked them with the spines hidden. Which, as you can imagine, would have been quite confusing. The solution, Mari says: “Sometimes an identifying design was drawn across the thick of the pages.”
- Libraries Used to Chain Their Books to Shelves, With the Spines Hidden Away
- Smithsonian
So, to answer your question about how they were identified: there were sometimes identifying markings on "The thick of the pages".
Having books with the spine facing out is a relatively recent innovation.
For the record, when you tuck a book away with the title-bearing spine pointing out, you’re carrying on a tradition that began roughly 480 years ago. “The first spine with printing dates from 1535, and it was then that books began to spin into the position we’re familiar with,” says Mari.
But before book, there were scrolls, and that’s where Mari’s story starts.
- Libraries Used to Chain Their Books to Shelves, With the Spines Hidden Away
- Smithsonian
Since Game of thrones is a fantasy and seems to be (comparatively) set in what would have been something close to Earth's "Middle Ages" with knights and kings all warring constantly this seems to be a pretty accurate depiction of a library.
As scrolls gave way to books, new shelves and a new organizational system were in order.
For the next fourteen hundred or so years, books, as Henry Petroski, a professor of civic engineering and history at Duke, writes in The Book on the Bookshelf, were shelved every which way but straight up, spine out. Engravings of private studies show books piled horizontally, standing on the edge opposite their spine (their fore edge), as well as turned fore edge out.
Before the printing press books were ornate constructions, and in comparison to what came after they were both highly valuable and in short supply.
In the Middle Ages, when monasteries were the closest equivalent to a public library, monks kept works in their carrels. To increase circulation, these works were eventually chained to inclined desks, or lecterns, thus giving ownership of a work to a particular lectern rather than a particular monk.
When space got tight the monks moved their books to shelves, but they stacked them with the spines hidden. Which, as you can imagine, would have been quite confusing. The solution, Mari says: “Sometimes an identifying design was drawn across the thick of the pages.”
- Libraries Used to Chain Their Books to Shelves, With the Spines Hidden Away
- Smithsonian
So, to answer your question about how they were identified: there were sometimes identifying markings on "The thick of the pages".
answered 21 hours ago
NifflerNiffler
1,702222
1,702222
1
Also noteworthy is that since they're chained to the shelf, they cannot easily be reshelved in the wrong order because the chain tells you where it goes, so you can tell which is which based solely on its location.
– Darrel Hoffman
6 hours ago
add a comment |
1
Also noteworthy is that since they're chained to the shelf, they cannot easily be reshelved in the wrong order because the chain tells you where it goes, so you can tell which is which based solely on its location.
– Darrel Hoffman
6 hours ago
1
1
Also noteworthy is that since they're chained to the shelf, they cannot easily be reshelved in the wrong order because the chain tells you where it goes, so you can tell which is which based solely on its location.
– Darrel Hoffman
6 hours ago
Also noteworthy is that since they're chained to the shelf, they cannot easily be reshelved in the wrong order because the chain tells you where it goes, so you can tell which is which based solely on its location.
– Darrel Hoffman
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Originally the shelf marks and titling of a book was written on its fore-edge, the paper part of the book, not on the back (the spine) the way they are today.
The GOT library is modelled after the chained library of Hereford Cathedral. In that library the books have only shelf marks and they are written on the fore-edge, so the fore-edge is the part of the book facing outwards.
Image shared by Hereford Cathedral's official Twitter account to mark
Book Week 2018
The chaining of books was the most widespread and effective security system in European libraries from the Middle Ages to the 18th century, and Hereford Cathedral’s 17th-century Chained Library is the largest to survive with all its chains, rods and locks intact.
A chain is attached at one end to the front cover of each book; the other end is slotted on to a rod running along the bottom of each shelf. The system allows a book to be taken from the shelf and read at the desk, but not to be removed from the bookcase.
The books are shelved with their foredges, rather than their spines, facing the reader (the wrong way round to us); this allows the book to be lifted down and opened without needing to be turned around – thus avoiding tangling the chain.
Quote from the official Hereford Cathedral's page on the Chained Library
add a comment |
Originally the shelf marks and titling of a book was written on its fore-edge, the paper part of the book, not on the back (the spine) the way they are today.
The GOT library is modelled after the chained library of Hereford Cathedral. In that library the books have only shelf marks and they are written on the fore-edge, so the fore-edge is the part of the book facing outwards.
Image shared by Hereford Cathedral's official Twitter account to mark
Book Week 2018
The chaining of books was the most widespread and effective security system in European libraries from the Middle Ages to the 18th century, and Hereford Cathedral’s 17th-century Chained Library is the largest to survive with all its chains, rods and locks intact.
A chain is attached at one end to the front cover of each book; the other end is slotted on to a rod running along the bottom of each shelf. The system allows a book to be taken from the shelf and read at the desk, but not to be removed from the bookcase.
The books are shelved with their foredges, rather than their spines, facing the reader (the wrong way round to us); this allows the book to be lifted down and opened without needing to be turned around – thus avoiding tangling the chain.
Quote from the official Hereford Cathedral's page on the Chained Library
add a comment |
Originally the shelf marks and titling of a book was written on its fore-edge, the paper part of the book, not on the back (the spine) the way they are today.
The GOT library is modelled after the chained library of Hereford Cathedral. In that library the books have only shelf marks and they are written on the fore-edge, so the fore-edge is the part of the book facing outwards.
Image shared by Hereford Cathedral's official Twitter account to mark
Book Week 2018
The chaining of books was the most widespread and effective security system in European libraries from the Middle Ages to the 18th century, and Hereford Cathedral’s 17th-century Chained Library is the largest to survive with all its chains, rods and locks intact.
A chain is attached at one end to the front cover of each book; the other end is slotted on to a rod running along the bottom of each shelf. The system allows a book to be taken from the shelf and read at the desk, but not to be removed from the bookcase.
The books are shelved with their foredges, rather than their spines, facing the reader (the wrong way round to us); this allows the book to be lifted down and opened without needing to be turned around – thus avoiding tangling the chain.
Quote from the official Hereford Cathedral's page on the Chained Library
Originally the shelf marks and titling of a book was written on its fore-edge, the paper part of the book, not on the back (the spine) the way they are today.
The GOT library is modelled after the chained library of Hereford Cathedral. In that library the books have only shelf marks and they are written on the fore-edge, so the fore-edge is the part of the book facing outwards.
Image shared by Hereford Cathedral's official Twitter account to mark
Book Week 2018
The chaining of books was the most widespread and effective security system in European libraries from the Middle Ages to the 18th century, and Hereford Cathedral’s 17th-century Chained Library is the largest to survive with all its chains, rods and locks intact.
A chain is attached at one end to the front cover of each book; the other end is slotted on to a rod running along the bottom of each shelf. The system allows a book to be taken from the shelf and read at the desk, but not to be removed from the bookcase.
The books are shelved with their foredges, rather than their spines, facing the reader (the wrong way round to us); this allows the book to be lifted down and opened without needing to be turned around – thus avoiding tangling the chain.
Quote from the official Hereford Cathedral's page on the Chained Library
edited 5 hours ago
user568458
8,2213059
8,2213059
answered 18 hours ago
Tyler DurdenTyler Durden
4,45852454
4,45852454
add a comment |
add a comment |
2
I’m seeing a wall of book spines... admittedly without visible titles, but they’re not stored ‘backwards ‘
– Tetsujin
23 hours ago
3
I suspect, you can take the book off the otherside of the shelf...
– morbo
22 hours ago
5
@Tetsujin I'm seeing a wall of book covers, both front and back, with sunken spaces in between them that presumably show the edges of the books' pages. It's especially visible if you look at the second shelf on the left, and look at the tops of the books.
– BrettFromLA
18 hours ago
2
hmmm... I'm now seeing the equivalent of old woman/young girl... candlestick/lovers. Every time I glance at it the spines invert.
– Tetsujin
13 hours ago
3
That's the spine of the book facing the back of the shelf, not the cover.
– Nuclear Wang
6 hours ago