This summarizes the meeting about coverage of Medieval Studies held 11/15/06, and proposes the following replacement text in the Medieval Studies CD Statement

II. Coordination & Cooperative Information

A cooperative initiative was begun by the selector under the auspices of the Research Library Cooperative Program. No formal agreements have resulted. Nevertheless, the fact is that libraries at the University of California at Berkeley have rich collections for medieval and reformation studies which will never be duplicated at Stanford and on which Stanford users frequently rely. The Robbins Canon Law Collection, for example, is a world center for that topic, and has microfilm of all canon law manuscripts from the Vatican Archives. In the seventies and eighties there was coordination of expensive microforms through the UC/Stanford Shared Purchase Program. The collections SUL purchased through that program are listed at http://library.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/medieval/mssfilm.html. (B.L. Cotton on this list has been recently acquired). Today, medievalists routinely rely on Berkeley for material published in Catalan, Dutch, Greek (modern), and Nordic languages, and for in-depth research-level collections in such subject/geographical areas as Byzantium, Iberia, Low Countries, and Scandinavia.

At Stanford:

I will continue to purchase the primary source standing orders for Medieval (mainly Droz: Textes litteraires francais; Travaux d'humanisme et renaissance; Biblioth`eque de l'Ecole des hautes etudes, IVe section, Sciences historiques et philologiques; Hautes etudes medievales et modernes; Histoire des idees et critique litteraire; Biblioth`eque de l'Ecole des chartes; Memoires et documents de l'Ecole des chartes; Cahiers Saussure)."