Straßburg Seminarbibliothek Cod. A. IV. 18 (lost): Difference between revisions

From Seven Sages of Rome
m (Text replacement - "Has Content" to "Has Standardised Title Of Narrative")
m (Text replacement - "Prose Version H" to "Prosafassung / Prose Version")
Line 6: Line 6:
|Has Siglum Of The Version Of The Seven Sages=H (Historia Septem Sapientum)
|Has Siglum Of The Version Of The Seven Sages=H (Historia Septem Sapientum)
|Has Language Group Within Version=German Version H
|Has Language Group Within Version=German Version H
|Has Narrative Or Scholarly Group Within Version=Prose Version H
|Has Narrative Or Scholarly Group Within Version=Prosafassung / Prose Version
|Has Further Primary Scholarly Subgroup=Redaction B
|Has Further Primary Scholarly Subgroup=Redaction B
|Has Further Secondary Scholarly Subgroup=Text S1
|Has Further Secondary Scholarly Subgroup=Text S1

Revision as of 16:36, 15 March 2024

Manuscript
Reference Number Ger10
Location No longer extant
Siglum/Shelfmark Straßburg, Seminarbibl., Cod. A. IV. 18
Page/Folio range
Standardised title of narrative Sieben weise Meister
Incipit or textual title
Version (siglum) H (Historia Septem Sapientum)
Language Group within Version German Version H
Narrative/Scholarly Group within Version Prosafassung / Prose Version
Further scholarly subgroup (1) Redaction B
Further scholarly subgroup (2) Text S1
Translated/adapted from (Version/Text)
Source for information on textual relationship to broader tradition Roth (2003)
Scribe
Author
Place of Manuscript Production
Date of Manuscript Production
Source of date Manuscript Production Roth (2003)
Material
Language of Manuscript German (High and Low German)
Regional or specific Language of Manuscript
Source for regional or specific Language of Manuscript
Prose or Verse Prose
Other texts in the Manuscript
Total pages/folios in Manuscript
Height
Width
Illustrations No
Digitisation
Modern Editions
Catalogue
Modern Research Literature Roth (2003)
General Notes (Internal)


The Handschriftencensus website entry 22316 notes that this text was burned [verbrannt], and very little information about it exists. Existing information comes from Roth (2003), p. 364.