Use this field for notes concerning the physical description of the item in regards to form, material, geographic location, and date/duration. This field is also used for notes concerning derivation of title, date, or other source information supplied by the cataloger. This is not a description of the intellectual content (see 520). Displays as “Notes”.
indicators: no indicators, leave blank
subfields: $$a - General note (NR)
punctuation: This may begin with a phrase or a complete sentence, followed by a period. After this first period, further information should be in complete sentences. This field ends with a full point.
Make separate notes for the following information, in this order.
Note on form, material, location, and or duration.
This field accommodates information that cannot fit in the 245, such as date and place of writing, if it is considered necessary to describe these more fully. If place of publication has been coded in the 008, it should be spelled out here. Also include here any notes on the style of hand (e.g., gothic, rotund), color of ink, inclusion of illustrations or decorated initials, etc.).
examples:
500 __ Diary.
500__ Autograph manuscript, signed, with annotations in the hand of Charles Sumner.
500__ Photocopies, some negative.
500 __ Written in an unidentified hand, dated on flyleaf 1897 August 3.
500 __ Written by Sh. Mateyos bar Paulos in Mosul in Šbat 2199 (February 1888); copied from a manuscript dated 1520/1 from the monastery of Mar Hnania which was written by Q. Mbarak (f. 316r).
Source of title.
If the 245 records a supplied title (except in cases when the item is a letter or collection of correspondence), then the note should read as follows:
500 __ Title supplied by cataloger.
Correspondence collections do not need a note that the title was created by the cataloger.
If the 245 is a title taken from a place in the manuscript other than the title page, then it should be specified here.
examples:
500 __ Title derived from colophon (f. 312r).
500 __ Title from published edition (London: 1885).
If taken from a published version or reference work, cite when possible. When title is taken verbatim from the manuscript use “Title from…”; when title is an extraction or elision use “Title derived…”
Also include a note, if necessary, for any 246 “Other title”.
Additional statements of responsibility.
Make notes on authorship or on others involved as necessary for identification. Provide reasoning and/or citation when possible.
examples:
500 __ Goodman is the probable author.
500 __ Addressed to “L.S.”.
500 __ Marginalia by Robert Graves.
Additional physical details.
Separate notes may be give in this order for:
(a) incipit (if this would help with identification or research)
(b) dimensions of page and/or the written area on the page (height by width)
(c) further extent description (e.g., missing leaves, gaps in foliation)
(d) binding (describe the binding beginning if possible with “Bound…”)
examples:
500 __ Bound in contemporary vellum over paper boards.
500 __ Bound by F. Bedford in full red morocco, gilt.
(e) housing (this information is useful for purposes of retrieval)
example:
500 __ In two boxes.
500 __ In a red morocco pull-off case, 18 cm.
Houghton uses the following terms for cases:
pull-off case : 2-piece box, bottom and lid (note that this is not the same as a “box” provided by end-processing
tray case : one piece, hinged unit, usually with two trays, one closing over the other, e.g., clamshell box.
slipcase : close-fitting box with one side open
protective case : pre-fab case used in end-processing
"Bound with" note.
This note is needed if the manuscript consists of two or more originally separate manuscripts bound together, and if a separate record is made for each of them. Following Houghton’s printed-book convention, if three or fewer items are bound together, provide a “Bound with” note that lists the titles of the other item). If more than three items are bound together, construct a note containing the following: each item’s position in the volume; the total number of items bound together; some description of the volume’s content.
examples:
500 __ Bound with Religious stories and Stories of the saints.
500__ Number 6 in a bound volume of 27 parliamentary records.
Note: Technical terms relating to binding and other physical aspects of manuscripts can be found in Etherington and Roberts Dictionary of Descriptive Terminology.