Uppsala Universitetsbiblioteket Cod. C 695
From Seven Sages of Rome
Manuscript | |||
---|---|---|---|
Reference Number | Latin61 | ||
Location | Uppsala, Universitetsbiblioteket | ||
Siglum/Shelfmark | Cod. C 695 | ||
Page/Folio range | 41v-69v | ||
Standardised title of narrative | Historia Septem Sapientum Moralizata | ||
Incipit or textual title | Sequitur de septem magistris DJoclesianus regnauit in ciuitate romana diues 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 U2 | ||
Translated/adapted from (Version/Text) | |||
Source for information on textual relationship to broader tradition | Roth (2004) | ||
Scribe | |||
Author | |||
Place of Manuscript Production | Northern Germany | ||
Date of Manuscript Production | 1450/1500 | ||
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 | 1r-85r : Gesta Romanorum moralizata; within: 41v-69v: Historia septem sapientum (moralizata)
85v-93r : Canticum canticorum, Matthaeus 93v-94v : blank 95r-99v : Passio Christi, niederdeutsch | ||
Total pages/folios in Manuscript | 104 | ||
Height | 210 | ||
Width | 145 | ||
Illustrations | No | ||
Digitisation | |||
Modern Editions | Roth, Historia Septem Sapientum (2004) | ||
Catalogue | |||
Modern Research Literature | Roth (2004), Andersson-Schmitt / Hedlund (1993) | ||
General Notes (Internal) | completed by Elisabeth Böttcher |
Note
The "Historia" is only marked as an independent text from the "Gesta Romanorum" by an initial running over six lines. The text contains (similar to Wien Österreichische Nationalbibliothek Cod. 12449) heavily abridged moralisations on >Canis<, >Aper<, >Puteus< and >Virgilius<, the wording of which is taken from a manuscript of the "Gesta Romanorum". There are numerous unusual spellings (Roth suspects dictation as the reason), and Roth only highlights the form "-rat" instead of "-ret" for verbs. (See Roth 2004, p.90).