Warszawa Biblioteka uniwersytecka F. XV.13 (lost)
From The Seven Sages of Rome
Manuscript Identification | |
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Reference Number | Latin71 |
Location | No longer extant |
Siglum/Shelfmark | F. XV.13 |
Page/Folio range |
Textual Content and Tradition | |
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Standardised title of narrative | Historia Septem Sapientum |
Incipit or textual title | De regina qui (!) filium regis volebat occidere |
Version (siglum) | H (Historia Septem Sapientum) |
└ Language Group within Version | Latin Version H |
└ Narrative/Scholarly Group within Version | Lost Manuscripts |
└ Further scholarly subgroup (1) | |
└ Further scholarly subgroup (2) | Text Wa |
Translated/adapted from (Version/Text) | |
Source for information on textual relationship to broader tradition |
Languages | |
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Language of text | |
Regional or specific Language of text | |
Source for regional or specific Language of text |
Digitisation and Editions | |
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Digitisation | |
Modern Editions | Roth, Historia Septem Sapientum (2004) |
Note |
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destroyed during the Second World War |
Authorship and Production | |
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Scribe | |
Author | |
Place of Manuscript Production | Prämonstratenserkloster Witów, Poland |
Date of Manuscript Production | 1462 |
Source of Date of Manuscript Production | Roth (2004) |
Physical Description | |
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Material | |
Total pages/folios in Manuscript | |
Height | |
Width | |
Script style/form | |
Prose or verse | |
Illustrations | No |
Contents and Additional Texts | |
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Other texts in the Manuscript | 31v sqq. : Histroia septem sapientum; followed by: Gesta Romanorum |
Catalogues and Research Literature | |
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Catalogue | |
Modern Research Literature | Roth (2004), Murko (1890), Fischer (1902) |
Pattern of embedded stories in this manuscript | |
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