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BACH research portal. Innovative documentation of the lives and work of the Bach family of musicians from the beginning up to 1810. Field research – Online edition – Digital archive


Links to the project

Over a period of 25 years, the BACH Research Portal will for the first time index all the available archive sources on the entire Bach family of musicians in digital form and make them publicly accessible. This will be done using the latest digital humanities methods. This project of the Saxon Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Leipzig is based at the Leipzig Bach Archive.

From the family’s progenitor, Veit Bach, to the last composing grandson of Johann Sebastian Bach, and from the 16th to the early 19th century – starting in January 2023, all the surviving documents about the most influential musical dynasty in the history of music will be made available in an innovative digital portal. Be it letters, employment certificates, wage receipts or discussions with contemporaries, for the first time in the history of Bach research the entire body of material that has been handed down and is scattered across libraries, archives and private collections will be compiled, digitally recorded, indexed according to scholarly criteria, annotated, and bundled together for access in an online portal.

[Translate to English:] Johann Sebastian Bach, Ölgemälde von Elias Gottlob Haußmann, Bild: Bach-Archiv Leipzig; Veit-Bach-Obermühle in Wechmar, Foto: Claus Thoemmes; Bild: SAW

BACH research portal. Innovative documentation of the lives and work of the Bach family of musicians from the beginning up to 1810. Field research – Online edition – Digital archive

Host Academy
Saxon Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Leipzig

Location and federal state
Leipzig, Sachsen

Type
Music editions

Project number
II.G.30

The work will make use of the latest digital humanities methods; in particular, automatic text recognition for old manuscripts will be used and continuously developed during the project, while new findings about watermarks and types of paper, as well as writer recognition, may help clearly assign surviving Bach works. The correspondence to be indexed under the project spans all Europe. Besides facsimiles of the original sources, comments and summaries, contextual documents will also be digitally indexed. The BACH Research Portal thus offers academics and an interested public a unique collection of sources about the cultural and social history of the different centuries, ranging, for example, from the living conditions of the town musicians in the 17th and 18th centuries through to the aesthetic discourse of the period of the Enlightenment.

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