Property:Has Note

From The Seven Sages of Rome

This is a property of type Text.

Showing 20 pages using this property.
I
Unconfirmed - this copy is listed in the USTC (https://www.ustc.ac.uk/editions/340496 ) but is not found in Aranda García (2021a) or Cañizares Ferriz.  +
Bound as 8th piece together with 1. Johannes von Hildesheim: Historia beatissimorum trium regum; 2. Vita Adae et Evae; 3. De vita et origine Pilate De Caipha, Juda et Anna; 4. De raptu anime Tundali et eius visione; 5. Salomonis et Marcolphi dialogus; 6. same as 5. but a different print; 7. Mirabilia urbis Romae; 9. Historia septem sapientum i.e. Historia septem sapientum Romae. Lyon: Guillaume Balsarin, 1487 to 1490  +
9th piece of the same book as the Bibliothèque Mazarine print of [[Historia septem sapientum Romae. Köln: Printer of pseudo-Augustinus, De fide (Johann Schilling), 1473]]  +
L
Regarded by [[Wikeley (1983)]] to be the 'prototype' of [[Erasto]].  +
All of the manuscripts are from the 15th century (see Roth 2004, p. 95). Only "Wiesbaden Hessische Landesbibliothek Hs. 243 (lost)" (will be added soon) can be assigned to a Group (see Roth, p. 99 and p.64-65). Due to the lack of detailed descriptions, the others cannot be assigned to one of the Groups with certainty (see Roth 2004, p. 95), but Roth provides suggestions for each of the manuscripts (see Roth 2004, pp.95-98).  +
M
Note: Spelling of sage's names taken from MS Ashburnham 52, using Runte's 1974 edition of that text.  +
https://search.onb.ac.at/primo-explore/fulldisplay?docid=ONB_alma21324821190003338&context=L&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&vid=ONB&lang=de_DE&search_scope=ONB_gesamtbestand&tab=default_tab&query=addsrcrid,exact,AC10112962  +
The story order (below) reflects the tales as they appear in all manuscripts but F ([[Cambridge University Library MS Ff. 2, 38]]).  +
The story-order given below reflects Epstein's 1967 edition, which combines the story-order given in several Group A texts with the additional storymatter found in the anomalous Group B texts (namely [[Jusjurandum]], [[Fur et Luna]], and [[Ingenia]]). However, Epstein titles the fifth story 'Catula', but other scholarship refers to this narrative as '[[Canicula]]'; the title given here reflects broader scholarly consensus and (in particular) Nishimura's references to the narrative.  +
N