Schoenberg Institute

Guided by the vision of its founder, Lawrence J. Schoenberg, the mission of SIMS at Penn is to bring manuscript culture, modern technology and people together to bring access to and understanding of our cultural heritage locally and around the world.

We advance the mission of SIMS by:
  • developing our own projects,
  • supporting the scholarly work of others both at Penn and elsewhere, and
  • collaborating with and contributing to other manuscript-related initiatives around the world.

Locally, we manage the Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts, which enables scholars to trace the provenance of manuscripts from origin up to today, and we provide space for the meetings of the UPenn graduate student paleography seminar.

Farther afield we collaborate with T-PEN, a web-based tool for working with images of manuscripts (t-pen.org), and the Shared Canvas initiative at Stanford University (www.shared-canvas.org). SIMS is active in the local rare books and manuscripts community, and welcomes manuscript-minded scholars and students to join our conversations.


A Legacy Inscribed: The Lawrence J. Schoenberg Collection of Manuscripts in the Goldstein Family Gallery. (March 11–August 16, 2013)

The Lawrence J. Schoenberg Collection of Manuscripts, donated to the Penn Libraries by Libraries Board members Barbara Brizdle Schoenberg and Lawrence J. Schoenberg (C53, WG56), embodies the great scientific and philosophical traditions of the ancient and medieval world.

The manuscripts in the current exhibition document the extraordinary achievements of European, Arabic, and Jewish scholars, philosophers, and the practitioners of science, medicine, and law.