Augsburg Universitätsbibliothek Cod. II. i. 4º 70

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Manuscript Identification
Reference Number Latin3
Location Augsburg, Universitätsbibliothek
Siglum/Shelfmark Cod. II. i. 4º 70
Page/Folio range 109r-110v , 114r-123r
Textual Content and Tradition
Standardised title of narrative Historia Septem Sapientum Moralizata
Incipit or textual title gauderem de te vnde tibi sine dubio denuncio ... hodie de ore tuo exemplum notabile habeamus per quod refocillati ... simus Ait ille Domine pater fac fieri silencium
Version (siglum) H (Historia Septem Sapientum)
Language Group within Version Latin Version H
Narrative/Scholarly Group within Version Group I
Further scholarly subgroup (1)
Further scholarly subgroup (2) Text A3
Translated/adapted from (Version/Text)
Source for information on textual relationship to broader tradition Roth (2004)
Languages
Language of text
Regional or specific Language of text
Source for regional or specific Language of text
Digitisation and Editions
Digitisation
Modern Editions Roth, Historia Septem Sapientum (2004)
Authorship and Production
Scribe
Author
Place of Manuscript Production Germany (southern Germany)
Date of Manuscript Production 1400 - 1425
Source of Date of Manuscript Production Roth (2004)
Physical Description
Material Paper
Total pages/folios in Manuscript 127
Height 220
Width 145
Script style/form
Prose or verse
Illustrations No
Contents and Additional Texts
Other texts in the Manuscript 1r-108v , 111r-113v : Gesta Romanorum moralizata (Oe XXXVII)

109r-110v , 114r-123r : Historia septem sapientum moralizata 123v , 125-126 : blank; fol. 124 is missing

Catalogues and Research Literature
Catalogue
Modern Research Literature Roth (2004)Oesterley (1872)Fischer (1902)
Pattern of embedded stories in this manuscript

The beginning is lost. The text starts at 0,173 (gauderem de societate tua...) and continues until 0,222 (... contingebat de pina et pinella), i.e. until shortly before the story >Arbor<; after that it immediately continues with the frame story following >Vidua< (14,172); from here on, the narrative is complete until the end (>Vaticinium< / >Amici<). (according to Roth 2004)