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  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511330_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    Medieval narrow streets at night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511329_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    Medieval narrow streets at night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511328_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    Medieval narrow streets at night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511327_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    Medieval narrow streets at night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511318_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    The castle of Ortona, Castello Aragonese, is largely destroyed by explosions during the Battle of Ortona in 1943 and by a landslide in 1946. At night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511317_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    The castle of Ortona, Castello Aragonese, is largely destroyed by explosions during the Battle of Ortona in 1943 and by a landslide in 1946. At night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511316_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    The castle of Ortona, Castello Aragonese, is largely destroyed by explosions during the Battle of Ortona in 1943 and by a landslide in 1946. At night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511315_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    Medieval narrow streets at night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511305_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    Medieval narrow streets at night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511303_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    Medieval narrow streets at night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511282_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    Medieval narrow streets at night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511281_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    Medieval narrow streets at night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    DUKAS_191511280_NUR
    Night View Of Ortona, Italy
    Medieval narrow streets at night in Ortona, Italy, on November 17, 2025. (Photo by Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurPhoto)

     

  • Senior Man Smoking And Drinking Wine In Outdoor Cafe
    DUKAS_191319576_NUR
    Senior Man Smoking And Drinking Wine In Outdoor Cafe
    An elegantly dressed senior man sits alone at a small outdoor table, drinks red wine, looks down at his smartphone, and smokes near the front of a ''Panineria'' cafe in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 21, 2025. A couple sits inside the cafe, a woman walks away on the right side of the cobblestone street, and several bicycles are parked nearby. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Daily Life In Rzeszow
    DUKAS_191314442_NUR
    Daily Life In Rzeszow
    RZESZOW, POLAND – NOVEMBER 21:
    A winter view of Lubomirski Castle In Rzeszow, Poland, on November 21, 2025.
    The Institute of Meteorology and Water Management issued a Moderate Snow and Ice Warning for southeastern Poland (Podkarpackie Voivodeship), forecasting periods of moderate to heavy snowfall and snow cover increases of 20 to 30 centimeters in some areas. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto)

     

  • Daily Life In Rzeszow
    DUKAS_191314412_NUR
    Daily Life In Rzeszow
    RZESZOW, POLAND – NOVEMBER 21:
    A winter view of Lubomirski Castle In Rzeszow, Poland, on November 21, 2025.
    The Institute of Meteorology and Water Management issued a Moderate Snow and Ice Warning for southeastern Poland (Podkarpackie Voivodeship), forecasting periods of moderate to heavy snowfall and snow cover increases of 20 to 30 centimeters in some areas. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto)

     

  • Daily Life In Rzeszow
    DUKAS_191314410_NUR
    Daily Life In Rzeszow
    RZESZOW, POLAND – NOVEMBER 21:
    A winter view of Lubomirski Castle In Rzeszow, Poland, on November 21, 2025.
    The Institute of Meteorology and Water Management issued a Moderate Snow and Ice Warning for southeastern Poland (Podkarpackie Voivodeship), forecasting periods of moderate to heavy snowfall and snow cover increases of 20 to 30 centimeters in some areas. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto)

     

  • Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    DUKAS_191312428_NUR
    Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    A view on Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, France on November 12th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto)

     

  • Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    DUKAS_191312320_NUR
    Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    Interior of Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, France on November 12th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto)

     

  • Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    DUKAS_191312318_NUR
    Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    A view on Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, France on November 12th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto)

     

  • Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    DUKAS_191312315_NUR
    Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    A view on Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, France on November 12th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto)

     

  • Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    DUKAS_191312211_NUR
    Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    A view on Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, France on November 12th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto)

     

  • Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    DUKAS_191312207_NUR
    Notre-Dame De Paris Cathedral
    A view on Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, France on November 12th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto)

     

  • Daily Life In Valencia
    DUKAS_191307195_NUR
    Daily Life In Valencia
    Two young men with suitcases stand at the Portal de la Valldigna. This gate separates the Christian city from the Moorish city in the 11th century and is located in the El Carmen neighborhood in the Ciutat Vella district in Valencia, Spain. (Photo by Joaquin Gomez Sastre/NurPhoto)

     

  • Daily Life In Valencia
    DUKAS_191307194_NUR
    Daily Life In Valencia
    The interior of the Church of San Martin, built in the 14th century in Valencia, Spain, features Valencian Gothic and Baroque styles. (Photo by Joaquin Gomez Sastre/NurPhoto)

     

  • Kufstein Fortress And Austrian Mountain Peaks Illuminated At Night
    DUKAS_190885164_NUR
    Kufstein Fortress And Austrian Mountain Peaks Illuminated At Night
    The Kufstein Fortress and surrounding walls are illuminated at night, set against the backdrop of the Brandenberg Alps with the Hausberg Mountain Pendling in Kufstein, Tyrol, Austria, on November 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Kufstein Fortress And Austrian Mountain Peaks Illuminated At Night
    DUKAS_190885116_NUR
    Kufstein Fortress And Austrian Mountain Peaks Illuminated At Night
    The Kufstein Fortress and surrounding walls are illuminated at night, set against the backdrop of the Brandenberg Alps with the Hausberg Mountain Pendling in Kufstein, Tyrol, Austria, on November 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Kufstein Fortress And Austrian Mountain Peaks Illuminated At Night
    DUKAS_190885115_NUR
    Kufstein Fortress And Austrian Mountain Peaks Illuminated At Night
    The Kufstein Fortress and surrounding walls are illuminated at night, set against the backdrop of the Brandenberg Alps with the Hausberg Mountain Pendling in Kufstein, Tyrol, Austria, on November 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Kufstein Fortress And Austrian Mountain Peaks Illuminated At Night
    DUKAS_190885165_NUR
    Kufstein Fortress And Austrian Mountain Peaks Illuminated At Night
    The Kufstein Fortress and surrounding walls are illuminated at night, set against the backdrop of the Brandenberg Alps with the Hausberg Mountain Pendling in Kufstein, Tyrol, Austria, on November 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Kufstein Fortress And Austrian Mountain Peaks Illuminated At Night
    DUKAS_190885163_NUR
    Kufstein Fortress And Austrian Mountain Peaks Illuminated At Night
    The Kufstein Fortress and surrounding walls are illuminated at night, set against the backdrop of the Brandenberg Alps with the Hausberg Mountain Pendling in Kufstein, Tyrol, Austria, on November 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_006
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_007
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_013
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_001
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_005
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_004
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_012
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_009
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_008
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_010
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_014
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_002
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_003
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -  Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    DUK10164708_011
    FEATURE - Auf Robben- und Kalbsfell: Das Hagenes-Manuskript gilt als ältestes Buch Norwegens
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    This medieval book, from Hagenes Farm in Bergen, may well be the oldest one surviving in Norway.
    Earlier this year, the farm's family, who passed it down through generations, entrusted it to the National Library of Norway, where every manuscript and ancient text undergoes meticulous examination.
    The little book was indeed in poor condition - but Palandri quickly realised it was unique.
    Stored in a controlled environment of high humidity, the manuscript is handled only by trained conservators. When Science Norway visited, Palandri carefully brought it out for inspection.
    The manuscript, now known as the Hagenes Manuscript, contains religious songs and is believed to date from the 13th century. Around the year 1200, Christianity was already deeply established in Norway.
    Documents and books from the Middle Ages are rare in Norway. When the country became Protestant in 1537, handwritten Catholic texts fell out of use. Old parchments were often recycled to bind new printed books.
    Later, under Danish rule, valuable manuscripts were sent abroad. Today, much of Norway’s medieval written heritage resides in Copenhagen and the Vatican. That makes the newly discovered book particularly valuable.
    The tome is believed to have been a working book, used in everyday church life. The manuscript’s parchment pages are made from calfskin, but the binding — fashioned from seal skin — is exceptionally rare.
    The songs — known as sequences — were hymns sung in church on feast days, often in honour of saints. The Hagenes manuscript includes songs for Mary and All Saints’ Day.
    Only two other Norwegian books of comparable age are known: the Kvikne Psalter, also from the 13th century and still in its original binding, and the Old Norwegian Homily Book, preserved in Copenhagen but missing its original cover.
    The book now has eight surviving pages, though evidence suggests several are missing. Samples have been sent for protein and DNA analysis to con **

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Man Trapped In Rubble After Tower Partially Collapses In Rome
    DUKAS_190712112_NUR
    Man Trapped In Rubble After Tower Partially Collapses In Rome
    The Colloseum, located near the recently, partially collapsed Torre dei Conti is seen in this file photo Rome, Italy on 27 April, 2025. The nearly 800 year old Torre dei Conti on November 3rd partially collapsed leaving a man buried under the rubble. A rescue operation is under way. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

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    DUKAS_190712110_NUR
    Man Trapped In Rubble After Tower Partially Collapses In Rome
    A monument is seen under renovation near the Forum Romanum in this file photo taken in Rome, Italy on 27 April, 2025. A building nearby, the nearly 800 year old Torre dei Conti on November 3rd partially collapsed leaving a man buried under the rubble. A rescue operation is under way. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • Man Trapped In Rubble After Tower Partially Collapses In Rome
    DUKAS_190712105_NUR
    Man Trapped In Rubble After Tower Partially Collapses In Rome
    The Colloseum, located near the recently, partially collapsed Torre dei Conti is seen in this file photo Rome, Italy on 27 April, 2025. The nearly 800 year old Torre dei Conti on November 3rd partially collapsed leaving a man buried under the rubble. A rescue operation is under way. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pedestrians Pass Through The Central Archway Of Sendlinger Tor City Gate In Munich On A Rainy Day
    DUKAS_190429561_NUR
    Pedestrians Pass Through The Central Archway Of Sendlinger Tor City Gate In Munich On A Rainy Day
    Crowds of pedestrians carrying bags and umbrellas walk on the wet pavement, passing through the large central brick archway of the historic Sendlinger Tor city gate, heading onto Sendlinger Strasse, Munich, Bavaria, Germany, October 25, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pedestrians Pass Through The Central Archway Of Sendlinger Tor City Gate In Munich On A Rainy Day
    DUKAS_190429557_NUR
    Pedestrians Pass Through The Central Archway Of Sendlinger Tor City Gate In Munich On A Rainy Day
    Crowds of pedestrians carrying bags and umbrellas walk on the wet pavement, passing through the large central brick archway of the historic Sendlinger Tor city gate, heading onto Sendlinger Strasse, Munich, Bavaria, Germany, October 25, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Historic Apotheke Pharmacy Sign On Half-Timbered Building
    DUKAS_190428760_NUR
    Historic Apotheke Pharmacy Sign On Half-Timbered Building
    A close-up view of the historic half-timbered facade of an Apotheke (Pharmacy) building features the traditional German pharmacy emblem (a red 'A' with the Bowl of Hygieia) and faded gold lettering on the stone ground floor in Roth, Middle Franconia, Bavaria, Germany, on October 18, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

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