History, asked by manasviishita, 10 months ago

features of inscriptions​

Answers

Answered by amarnathq1
0

Answer:

Explanation:

A precise transcription or a prose description of the inscription is important to provide clarity and explain unusual features of the inscription. The information in this transcription should then be indexed in other subcategories; this makes it possible to formulate queries about types of inscriptions and their authors, as well as their locations, dates, and scripts.

When an inscription or mark is documented, the following characteristics are important: who made it, the way it was made (materials and technique), its location on the object, and an indication of what the inscription says or what the mark looks like. This may include a transcription, transliteration (if it is not in the Roman alphabet), description, or translation. Remarks about the significance of an inscription or mark, and citations to any sources used to identify or describe an inscription or mark, can also be recorded.

Inscriptions and marks are important aids in authenticating a work or object. They also assist in interpretation and dating, and provide information about a work's history. This category is also used to record works that are primarily textual.

Note that the information found in an inscription is not always accurate. Often "signatures," such as many of those on Rembrandt paintings, were added later, and inscribed dates, such as those on Corot's prints, may not reflect the actual date of the printing. Inscriptions may also be difficult to decipher: Joseph Hecht's "1:2" means something different from the normal "1/2" found on a print. The location of an inscription may give it meaning, as is the case of the Gray collection at Harvard. The colophon in a manuscript may be copied in later editions without regard for its accuracy. Inscriptions may have been added to works at sales, such as the Degas estate sale, or by dealers, as stock numbers or coded prices.

When one is transcribing an inscription, care must be taken to respect the inscription as it is written. While inscriptions, stamps, marks, labels, annotations, graffito, and other texts found on a work may provide information that may improve understanding of a work, their interpretation is often disputed. An accurate transcription or description is critical to the use of an inscription as evidence. All explanatory text that accompanies the inscription (e.g., the location or medium) should be clearly distinguished from the transcription. For example, signed lower right, below the image: A Kertész; inscribed by the artist lower right

Answered by TheMist
57

Explanation:

Both Manuscripts and Inscriptions are two forms of documents. The main difference between manuscript and inscription ...

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