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Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards to cross live to Wellington Shire

Wellington Shire will host a live link between Sale Library and Melbourne, as part of this year’s Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards Presentation Dinner at Zinc, Federation Square on Monday, 17 October.

By Wellington Shire Council - 10th October 2005 - Back to News

The prestigious awards, hosted by actor William McInnes – star of Sea Change (ABC TV) and Australian feature film, Look Both Ways – celebrate the best in Australian literature.

In Melbourne, the Hon. Steve Bracks, Premier of Victoria, will name the shortlisted authors for the Young Adult Fiction Prize. The winner will then be announced from Sale Library by a Sale Secondary College student.

The live link from Melbourne coincides with a State Library of Victoria Travelling Treasures presentation at Sale Library on the same evening.

Travelling Treasures takes Library collection experts on the road with selected treasures, visiting regional public libraries and schools and providing first hand access to rare manuscripts, books and artefacts.

The Sale Library session of Travelling Treasures starts at 6pm, featuring a 40-minute presentation by Paul Bateman, Public Programs, State Library of Victoria. The session will be followed by wine and cheese and then the live cross at 7.45pm.

Wellington’s Acting Chief Executive Officer Steven Dickson says the treasures travelling to Sale Library include:

  • Cuneiform Clay Tablet - Dating from the reign of Mesopotamian King Shulgi this ancient clay tablet records the delivery of sheep and goats in 2050 B.C. The Sumerian method of writing required scribes to press wedge shaped marks into wet clay and the technique is one of the earliest known forms of writing.

  • The Nuremberg Chronicle - This Book of Chronicles from the beginning of the world is the most famous of German picture books from the 15th century. Printed in the free city of Nuremberg in 1493, the book is a pictorial history of the earth from creation to the 1490s. The Chronicle is an outstanding example of early printing.

  • Woodcut Block - This woodcut block from c.1562 is a fine example of the detail and workmanship required to produce the illustrations common in early books. Delicately carved from pear wood, this exquisite botanical woodcut is from a volume produced by the famous Venetian herbalist of the 16th century Pietro Andrea Mattioli.

  • Horn Books – a form of ‘ABC book’ – were common in England from the 16th to the 18th centuries. The alphabet and simple sentences were printed on a piece of paper which was then mounted on a tablet of wood with a projecting handle. In order to protect the lettering, a thick sheet of animal horn was fixed over the paper.

  • Peron (Baudin) Expedition papers - this amazing set of maps, illustrations and diagrams record the observations of French explorer Nicolas Baudin during his celebrated scientific voyages of the Australian coastline, 1801-03. A contemporary of Matthew Flinders, Baudin charted the southern Australian coastline in the period just prior to the Napoleonic Wars between England and France.

  • The Melbourne Advertiser - Melbourne’s first newspaper records the establishment and development of the fledgling township. This copy has been handwritten by John Pascoe Fawkner and provides excellent examples of commerce, transportation and entertainment in 1838. Fawkner, one of the first Europeans to settle in the district of Port Phillip, later become known as the ‘father of Melbourne’.

Mr Dickson said: "This is a rare opportunity for residents to see a diverse range of historic artefacts, and to be part of the presentation of the state’s most prestigious literary awards – all in the one evening! It promises to be a great night, and I urge people to book early so they don’t miss out."

The session is free but bookings are essential. For further details and bookings call: Cathy Carr 5142 3368 or Sale Library 5144 2258.

Source: www.gippsland.com

Published by: news@gippsland.com



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