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To: radiohead
When it comes to autograph collecting or other historical items, it is important to be able to discuss the lineage of just how something got to your hands. This shows that it was not stolen and provides for verification of authenticity (maybe some other document references that xxx has had possession of item abc for a long time, or maybe your source xxx is a well respected and trusted source).

Also, sometimes the lineage of how the item passed from hand to hand is an interesting story in its own right.

I think that the term may have entered more common usage through Antiques Roadshow (although I don't watch it very often).
1,306 posted on 09/11/2004 11:15:01 AM PDT by weegee (What's the provenance, Kenneth? Where did the forged SeeBS memo come from?)
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To: weegee
Also, sometimes the lineage of how the item passed from hand to hand is an interesting story in its own right.

True.

I think that the term may have entered more common usage through Antiques Roadshow

Ah. I know of the show, tho I don't watch it. It makes sense that it would popularize the word, tho. Hope I didn't come off sounding too much like Terayza, I just don't hear 'provenance' outside of my academic discipline and thought I had run into another one of the initiated.

1,307 posted on 09/11/2004 11:21:18 AM PDT by radiohead (Burn in hell, Kerry.)
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