München Universitätsbibliothek 2° Cod. ms. 136: Difference between revisions
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|Has Modern Research Literature=Roth (2004); Daniel / Kornrumpf (1974) | |Has Modern Research Literature=Roth (2004); Daniel / Kornrumpf (1974) | ||
|Has Internal Notes=completed by Elisabeth Böttcher | |Has Internal Notes=completed by Elisabeth Böttcher | ||
|Has Note=Regarding place and date of manuscript production, Roth has the Franziskanerkloster Landshut as | |Has Note=Regarding place and date of manuscript production, Roth has the Franziskanerkloster Landshut as provenance but also suggests "Italien?" in his notes about the date of production (see Roth 2004, p.82-83). | ||
Apart from a title indication on the tail edge, the "Historia" does not clearly stand out as an independent text from the "Gesta Romanorum"; the text only survives up to the beginning of >Vaticinium< / >Amici<; the old foliatiion indicates that the manuscript was originally composed differently (see Roth 2004, p.83). | Apart from a title indication on the tail edge, the "Historia" does not clearly stand out as an independent text from the "Gesta Romanorum"; the text only survives up to the beginning of >Vaticinium< / >Amici<; the old foliatiion indicates that the manuscript was originally composed differently (see Roth 2004, p.83). | ||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 11:55, 22 August 2024
Manuscript | |||
---|---|---|---|
Reference Number | Latin56 | ||
Location | München, Universitätsbibliothek | ||
Siglum/Shelfmark | 2° Cod. ms. 136 | ||
Page/Folio range | 112vb-118vb | ||
Standardised title of narrative | Historia Septem Sapientum | ||
Incipit or textual title | De. vij. sapientibus. DYoclecianus regnavit in civitate Romana dives valde | ||
Version (siglum) | H (Historia Septem Sapientum) | ||
└ Language Group within Version | Latin Version H | ||
└ Narrative/Scholarly Group within Version | Group IV | ||
└ Further scholarly subgroup (1) | |||
└ Further scholarly subgroup (2) | Text M11 | ||
Translated/adapted from (Version/Text) | |||
Source for information on textual relationship to broader tradition | Roth (2004) | ||
Scribe | |||
Author | |||
Place of Manuscript Production | Franziskanerkloster Landshut, Germany | ||
Date of Manuscript Production | 1340/1376 | ||
Source of date Manuscript Production | Roth (2004) | ||
Material | Paper | ||
Language of Manuscript | Latin | ||
Regional or specific Language of Manuscript | |||
Source for regional or specific Language of Manuscript | |||
Prose or Verse | Prose | ||
Other texts in the Manuscript | Teil I:
1ra-8vb : Lumen animae Teil II: 9ra-89ra : Sermones de tempore (with supplements), mainly by Landulfus Caracciolus de Neapoli (9ra-44vb) and Philippus de Monte Calerio (45ra-77ra) 89ra-94rb : Gesta Romanorum moralizata, within: 90ra-94rb: Robert Holkot: Moralitates 94va-b : De corpore Christi 95ra-99ra : Legendae sanctorum 99ra-b : Vita et sententiae Secundi philosophi (from Vinzenz von Beauvais: Speculum historiale) 99rb-112vb : Gesta Romanorum moralizata 112vb-118vb : Historia septem sapientum, frgm. 119ra-127va : Sermones de sanctis et de festis 127va-128vb : (spiritual) Notae, dicta, versus etc. 128vb-129vb : Excerpts from Alexander von Hales: Summa theologica 130ra-134vb : Konrad von Brundelsheim: Sermones de tempore; within: 131vb-132vb: De septem virtutibus religiosorum Teil III: 135ra-245va : Franciscus von Meyronnes: Flores Augustini; within: 230va-231va: Quaestio de incarnatione Jesu Christi 245va-246vb : Richard von St. Viktor: Beniamin maior (De gratia contemplationis), excerpt | ||
Script style/form | |||
Total pages/folios in Manuscript | 251 | ||
Height | 275 | ||
Width | 200 | ||
Illustrations | No | ||
Digitisation | |||
Modern Editions | Roth, Historia Septem Sapientum (2004) | ||
Catalogue | |||
Modern Research Literature | Roth (2004), Daniel / Kornrumpf (1974) |
Note
Regarding place and date of manuscript production, Roth has the Franziskanerkloster Landshut as provenance but also suggests "Italien?" in his notes about the date of production (see Roth 2004, p.82-83).
Apart from a title indication on the tail edge, the "Historia" does not clearly stand out as an independent text from the "Gesta Romanorum"; the text only survives up to the beginning of >Vaticinium< / >Amici<; the old foliatiion indicates that the manuscript was originally composed differently (see Roth 2004, p.83).