Studie Evy Myslivcové se zabývá korespondencí mezi hudebním skladatelem Antonínem Dvořákem a jeho blízkým přítelem Aloisem Göblem., This article introduces newly found photocopies of two letters from Antonín Dvořák to Alois Göbl with heretofore unknown and unpublished contents (newly discovered facts about Dvořák’s life and about period reception of his masterpieces – e.g. the Symphony No. 9 in E Minor “From the New World”, op. 95, and the Cello Concerto in B Minor, op. 104) and places them within the context of Dvořák’s correspondence addressed to his friend Göbl in Sychrov that has already been published in several different editions., Eva Myslivcová., Rubrika: Studie, and Německé resumé na s. 299, anglický abstrakt na s. 289.
Tomus quintus, ab annis 1294-1306, opus posthumum Antonii Bozcek ; edidit Josefus Chytil., KČSN, and Obsahuje přívazek: Index in omnes quinque hucusque editos tomos Codicis diplomatici et epistolaris Moraviae / Antonius Boček ; Josefus Chytil
Zehnter Band, vom Jahre 1367-bis 12. November 1375, herausgegeben von Vincenz Brandl., KČSN., Obsahuje bibliografické odkazy a rejstříky., and Obsahuje přívazek: Codex diplomaticus et epistolaris Moraviae : Urkunden-Sammlung zur Geschichte Mährens, im Auftrage des mährischen Landes-Ausschusses. Elfter Band, vom 13. November 1375 bis 1390.
Sechster Band, vom Jahre 1307-1333, herausgegeben von P. Ritter v. Chlumecky, und redigirt von Joseph Chytil., KČSN., Obsahuje bibliografické odkazy a rejstříky., and Část. německý text
7. Band, 1334-1349, herausgegeben von P. Ritter v. Chlumecky, und redigirt von Joseph Chytil., KČSN., Obsahuje bibliografické odkazy., and Část. německý text
Correspondence was the “information superhighway” for s scholars and researchers during the early modern world. The Department of Comenius Studies of the Institute of Philosophy AS CR is one of the closest partners in a project based at the University of Oxford titled Cultures of Knowledge. Between 1550 and 1750, regular exchanges of letters encouraged the formation of virtual communities of people worldwide with shared interests in various kinds of knowledge. Included were classical scholars, philologists, antiquaries, patristic scholars, orientalists, theologians, astronomers, botanists, experimental natural philosophers, emissaries’, ‘free-thinkers,’ and many other denizens of the “Republic of Letters.” Since 2009, the Cultures of Knowledge project at Oxford University has been using a variety of research methods to reassemble and understand these networks. Supporting this effort is the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. As well as co-organizing the inaugural series of workshops in Prague, Cracow and Budapest, and the 2010 Universal Reformation conference in Oxford, both Institutes have also been active throughout the project in preparing the Comenius catalogue for Early Modern Letters Online (EMLO). and Vladimír Urbánek.