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Scriptorium
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Open Science is an important development in the scientific community because it promotes transparency, reliability, accessibility and use of scientific knowledge. Therefore, scientists should be able to publish their work open access without publication costs for the authors. In doing so, the entire publication process should be in the hands of the academic community, so that only scientific quality counts. The Openjournals platform makes this possible.

Openjournals is part of a broad European movement in which national open access publishing infrastructures are developed and managed. In this way, we facilitate the scientific community to take the publication process into its own hands.

What we do
We give editors the tools to organize the editorial process of a journal and to self-publish articles online. Openjournals is hosted by the Humanities Cluster of the KNAW and is funded by NWO, a number of university libraries and by contributions from participating journals. Openjournals makes use of open source OJS software van PKP. Openjournals provides the following services:

Configuration of own website for journal.
Training and advice to editors on how to use Openjournals platform.
Possible migration of already published articles.
Application for DOI registration.
Assistance with registration with DOAJ, and possibly other indexing services.
Upgrades, maintenance and functional extensions of platform.
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We also provide regular webinars for editors and organize a user day every year.
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https://openjournals.nl/en/about-us/

About us | OpenJournals
openjournals.nl

About us | OpenJournals

Openjournals is an online platform and support team, for publishing scholarly, peer-reviewed journals according to the diamond open access publishing model.

From Bethlehem to the Vatican
A very basic introduction to Catholic tradition and theology
by
Frank G. Bosman
From Bethlehem to the Vatican is written for readers who sense that Christianity matters, yet find themselves without the basic tools to understand it. Religion, as this book argues, is neither a relic nor a simple force for good or evil. It has shaped lives, cultures, and entire civilizations, inspiring care and creativity while also justifying oppression and violence. To grasp Western society – its laws, ethics, art, politics, and stories – one must grasp the Christian narrative that has so profoundly informed it. This book offers a deliberately modest but ambitious response to widespread religious illiteracy in the secularized West. It does not presume prior knowledge, personal faith, or a desire for religious initiation. Instead, it provides an intellectual initiation: a clear, accessible, and academically responsible introduction for those who want to understand Christianity without being overwhelmed by theological jargon or massive scholarly tomes. It explains the Bible, Jesus Christ, Church structures, rituals, sacraments, ethics, and theology, while also addressing Christianity’s darker chapters and ongoing controversies. Written for students, journalists, curious readers, and all who feel they ‘know almost nothing but want to know everything’, From Bethlehem to the Vatican is small in scale but serious in intent. It aims not to convince, but to clarify, and to show why Christianity remains indispensable for understanding the world we inhabit today.

https://research.tilburguniver....sity.edu/en/publicat

From Bethlehem to the Vatican: A very basic introduction to Catholic tradition and theology - Tilburg University Research Portal

From Bethlehem to the Vatican is written for readers who sense that Christianity matters, yet find themselves without the basic tools to understand it. Religion, as this book argues, is neither a relic nor a simple force for good or evil. It has shaped lives, cultures, and entire civilizations, inspiring care and creativity while also justifying oppression and violence. To grasp Western society – its laws, ethics, art, politics, and stories – one must grasp the Christian narrative that has so profoundly informed it. This book offers a deliberately modest but ambitious response to widespread religious illiteracy in the secularized West. It does not presume prior knowledge, personal faith, or a desire for religious initiation. Instead, it provides an intellectual initiation: a clear, accessible, and academically responsible introduction for those who want to understand Christianity without being overwhelmed by theological jargon or massive scholarly tomes. It explains the Bible, Jesus Christ, Church structures, rituals, sacraments, ethics, and theology, while also addressing Christianity’s darker chapters and ongoing controversies. Written for students, journalists, curious readers, and all who feel they ‘know almost nothing but want to know everything’, From Bethlehem to the Vatican is small in scale but serious in intent. It aims not to convince, but to clarify, and to show why Christianity remains indispensable for understanding the world we inhabit today.
https://tiu.trialanderror.org/projects/930589bf-d2d7-47b8-941b-7721ee8899df

Welcome to the largest freely available archive of online books about religion, mythology, folklore and the esoteric on the Internet. The site is dedicated to religious tolerance and scholarship, and has the largest readership of any similar site on the web.

We need you to keep this site online. Help TODAY to ensure that these books are preserved by purchasing the new ISTA FLASH DRIVE 9.0 here...

https://sacred-texts.com/download.htm

#scriptorium
A scriptorium (/skrɪpˈtɔːriəm/) was a writing room in medieval European monasteries for the copying and illuminating of manuscripts by scribes.

Scriptorium
A scriptorium (/skrɪpˈtɔːriəm/) was a writing room in medieval European monasteries for the copying and illuminating of manuscripts by scribes.

The term has perhaps been over-used—only some monasteries had special rooms set aside for scribes. Often they worked in the monastery library or in their own rooms. Most medieval images of scribing show single figures in well-appointed studies, although these are generally author portraits of well-known authors or translators. Increasingly, lay scribes and illuminators from outside the monastery also assisted the clerical scribes.
By the later Middle Ages secular manuscript workshops were common, and many monasteries bought more books than they produced themselves.
https://wiki.knightserrant.lif....e/index.php/Scriptor

Scriptorium - Wiki Knights Errant Life
wiki.knightserrant.life

Scriptorium - Wiki Knights Errant Life

A scriptorium (/skrɪpˈtɔːriəm/) was a writing room in medieval European monasteries for the copying and illuminating of manuscripts by scribes.

The term has perhaps been over-used—only some monasteries had special rooms set aside for scribes. Often they worked in the monastery library or in their own rooms. Most medieval images of scribing show single figures in well-appointed studies, although these are generally author portraits of well-known authors or translators. Increasingly, lay scribes and illuminators from outside the monastery also assisted the clerical scribes.
By the later Middle Ages secular manuscript workshops were common, and many monasteries bought more books than they produced themselves.
About

Scriptorium Project.
Preservación y valorización del patrimonio material impreso, preservación para la historia y las generaciones futuras