I recently announced a project to study how the late antique Peutinger Diagram was made. This reverse engineering project is comparable to lifting the hood/bonnet of a sleek car in the hope of understanding the mechanical principles by which it was built and operates.
The first step is to create a digital version of the Peutinger Diagram on which we can overlayer the findings as we accumulate them. My starting point is the digital projection of the Diagram created by Professor Richard J. A. Talbert’s team for the 2010 book Rome’s World: The Peutinger Map Reconsidered (Map A).
This projection is a panorama photograph after images of the 12th-century parchment pieces of the sole surviving copy had been stitched together digitally and slightly skewed so that everything matches up.
The result was a banana-shaped image that is not very practicable in full-screen view, so I have straightened the Talbert projection, inserting a single hinge about one third of the way from the left. The left and right tips of the panorama were raised a total of 2.85 degrees with respect to one another.
The pivot point is located at Cesena, Italy and roads and rivers in the vicinity have been adjusted accordingly but the slight shifts are in no way egregious, being well below the diagram's threshold of geographical accuracy.
The second step was to create a scalable vector graphic (SVG) file based on this projection. I began by merging a selection of SVG files which are stored online at the Ancient World Mapping Center in and employed in the Talbert Map Viewer and pivoted these in the same way. I soon found however that they are not very satisfactory from a SVG-design point of view, being full of transforms, unsuitable data objects, data cruft, broken lines and many tracing errors.
I have almost entirely retraced by hand the photographic image with a great many simplifications. This adaptation will provide us a compact, interactive, fast-loading data-file similar to that I have published for the Great Stemma. I have retained the Talbert colour coding system and some of his data objects. Acknowledgement to the Talbert team's work will appear on the new file.
The third step is to match this new data view of the Tabula with the past scholarship, whereby Konrad Miller's 1916 book, Itineraria Romana, is the great monument. Miller, a German citizen-scholar who died in 1933, analysed the diagram into its key routes, effectively recasting its data into list form. What I am now doing is mapping Miller's routes as an over-layer onto the SVG file.
The results will be uploaded as I go to the project page on ResearchGate. Keep visiting the project page to see the progress. Collaborators and followers are very welcome.
2017-03-16
2017-03-11
Capua
The Evangelion of Capua is a celebrated lectionary in Greek that was penned by a monk, Kyriakos the Wretched, in 991 in the town of Capua, southern Italy. Vat. gr. 2138 at the Vatican Library has just come online and you can now admire the colourful tempera patterns of its illumination.
The plaited headbands and initials chiefly served to help celebrants find their places when using this codex as a lectionary. It dates from the period when Greek was still the common language in Calabria and other parts of the Italian south. Pressed by Arab incursions and economic instability, a religious leader, Neilos of Rossano, relocated north by stages to Grottaferrata near Rome.
This is perhaps the most magnificent of a series of books made by the band of monks he trained. It is precisely datable to 991 during their stay in Capua, as the Met guide explains, and to the hand of Kyriakos, monk and presbyter. Why he was styled the Wretched I do not know, but he was on form while doing this work.
Here is my list of items brought online by the Digi Vat Lib digitization project in the week ending March 10, 2017:
The plaited headbands and initials chiefly served to help celebrants find their places when using this codex as a lectionary. It dates from the period when Greek was still the common language in Calabria and other parts of the Italian south. Pressed by Arab incursions and economic instability, a religious leader, Neilos of Rossano, relocated north by stages to Grottaferrata near Rome.
This is perhaps the most magnificent of a series of books made by the band of monks he trained. It is precisely datable to 991 during their stay in Capua, as the Met guide explains, and to the hand of Kyriakos, monk and presbyter. Why he was styled the Wretched I do not know, but he was on form while doing this work.
Here is my list of items brought online by the Digi Vat Lib digitization project in the week ending March 10, 2017:
- Reg.lat.24
- Reg.lat.81
- Reg.lat.90
- Reg.lat.210
- Reg.lat.223
- Reg.lat.276
- Reg.lat.357
- Reg.lat.364
- Reg.lat.418
- Urb.lat.388
- Urb.lat.524
- Urb.lat.865
- Urb.lat.1073
- Urb.lat.1078.pt.1
- Urb.lat.1078.pt.2
- Urb.lat.1078.pt.3
- Urb.lat.1081
- Urb.lat.1083
- Urb.lat.1504
- Urb.lat.1567
- Urb.lat.1632
- Urb.lat.1639
- Urb.lat.1640
- Urb.lat.1642
- Urb.lat.1644
- Urb.lat.1645
- Urb.lat.1664
- Urb.lat.1675
- Urb.lat.1676
- Urb.lat.1677
- Urb.lat.1709
- Urb.lat.1713
- Urb.lat.1721
- Urb.lat.1744
- Urb.lat.1773
- Vat.gr.2138, the Evangelion of Capua (above). Gregory-Aland number: l 562. See a detailed study of folio 29v by Bruce Metzger ...
- Vat.lat.1276
- Vat.lat.1476
2017-03-05
Fake Book
Did you ever hide money in books? I used to as a boy, until I returned a library book with a banknote left inside it as a forgotten bookmark. I frantically rushed to the Epsom Branch of the Auckland Public Library system, found the book on its shelf and opened it to find the cash still there.
And did you ever beg as a child to be given an old book so you could cut out the core to use as a secret hiding place? The Vatican has at least one such fake book, but there are no banknotes in this one any more. Legat.Pal.lat.24 is a hollowed-out volume presumably used to secrete valuables or messages in libraries. It is held in the Fondo legature and the binding has been dated to 1869-1878.
Here is the full list of digitizations I have harvested in the past week:
What I did not previously know is that the eTK database can also be searched in a more aesthetically pleasing format via IndexCat at the US National Library of Medicine, which is also free.
This is Piggin's Unofficial List number 107. If you have corrections or additions, please use the comments box below. Follow me on Twitter (@JBPiggin) for news of more additions to DigiVatLib.
And did you ever beg as a child to be given an old book so you could cut out the core to use as a secret hiding place? The Vatican has at least one such fake book, but there are no banknotes in this one any more. Legat.Pal.lat.24 is a hollowed-out volume presumably used to secrete valuables or messages in libraries. It is held in the Fondo legature and the binding has been dated to 1869-1878.
Here is the full list of digitizations I have harvested in the past week:
- Arch.Cap.S.Pietro.F.4, evangeliary?
- Legat.Pal.lat.24, hollowed-out fake book (above)
- Reg.lat.6, Glosae Super Iohannem
- Reg.lat.7, a mid 9th-century Bible from St Denis in Carolingian script, unusual because the copyist wrote out Tb 1- 6,12 in the Vetus Latina instead of the Vulgate text of Jerome (fols. 44 ff). Beuron number 143
- Reg.lat.17, Augustine
- Reg.lat.18
- Reg.lat.32, Ambrose of Milan on Psalms
- Reg.lat.38, Augustine and Ambrose
- Reg.lat.68, Ivo of Chartres, Richard of St Victor and others
- Reg.lat.73
- Reg.lat.111
- Reg.lat.113, Rabanus Maurus with this wonderful initial
- Reg.lat.114, Vegetius? Boethius?
- Reg.lat.138, John Chrysostom and some Ambrose
- Reg.lat.139
- Reg.lat.145, Bernard on sin
- Reg.lat.159, autograph(?) Theologia Christiana of Peter Abelard, the best witness of the work as Abelard conceived it. Dated to 1122-1125 by Constant Mews
- Reg.lat.166, Boethius
- Reg.lat.177, John of God, Liber poenitentiarius
- Reg.lat.178, John of Tambaco
- Reg.lat.200, Claudius of Turin
- Reg.lat.206, Prosper of Aquitaine
- Reg.lat.245, Faustus of Riez
- Reg.lat.246
- Reg.lat.269, Iohannes Sarisberiensis
- Urb.lat.352, miscellany, Alanis de Insulis and others
- Urb.lat.429, a Renaissance copy of Lorenzo Valla's translation of Thucydides. See History of Information.
- Urb.lat.430, Herodotus in Latin translation
- Urb.lat.474, the flyleaves are taken from a vanished Vetus Latina bible of the 9th or 10th century and contain fragments from 2 Mcc; Beuron Number 199
- Urb.lat.607
- Urb.lat.821.pt.A, paper manuscript relating to Spanish Kingdom of Naples
- Urb.lat.821.pt.B.1
- Urb.lat.821.pt.B.2
- Urb.lat.821.pt.B.3
- Urb.lat.1278
- Urb.lat.1389
- Urb.lat.1503
- Urb.lat.1513
- Urb.lat.1525
- Urb.lat.1542
- Urb.lat.1552
- Urb.lat.1630, conclave Gregory XV
- Vat.gr.155
- Vat.gr.503
- Vat.gr.920.pt.1
- Vat.gr.1635
- Vat.lat.1128
- Vat.lat.1260
- Vat.lat.1274
- Vat.lat.1275
- Vat.lat.1278
- Vat.lat.1283
- Vat.lat.1285
- Vat.lat.1309
- Pal. lat. 572 Sammelhandschrift (15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1122 Avicenna; Arnoldus ; Franco de Polonia; Petrus ; Ptolemaeus, Claudius: Medizinisch-naturwissenschaftlicher Sammelband (2. Hälfte 13. Jh. ; 1. Hälfte 14. Jh.), including an Alkindi text with the incipit: In medicinis per artem compositis considerans (Alkindi cum comm. Arnaldi de Villanova). Ptolemy text begins Scientia astrorum dividitur in duo. See eTK
- Pal. lat. 1126 Gentilis : De febribus vel expositio super primam fen quarti canonis Avicennae (Italien, Mitte 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1127 Gentilis : De febribus vel Expositio super primam fen quarti canonis Avicennae (Padua, 1462), Excusati ab his que in librorum principiis; Febris est calor extraneus innaturalis. Gentilis of Foligno was a commentator on Avicenna. See eTK
- Pal. lat. 1131 Avicenna; Ludovicus de Florentia; Mundinus : Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Heidelberg, 15. Jh. (1476)), Quoniam nihil carius et amabilius; .a Mundinus de Foro Iulio eTK
- Pal. lat. 1134 Petrus ; Bartholomaeus de Sancta Sophia; Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-; Gerardus : Medizinische Sammelhandschirft (Deutschland, 1454 ; 1400), a text by Peter of Tussignano here was compiled at the University of Bologna in 1385: incipit: In dispositione medicinarum seu receptarum convenientium. See eTK
- Pal. lat. 1137 Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-; Ps.-Hippocrates; Jacobus : Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Amberg, um 1560)
- Pal. lat. 1141 Isrāʾīlī, Isḥāq Ibn-Sulaimān /al-; Knab, Erhardus: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Heidelberg, letztes Viertel 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1142 Isrāʾīlī, Isḥāq Ibn-Sulaimān /al-; Paulus : Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (um 1500), a main text here is on fevers, with the incipit: Amice carissime fili Iohannes lacrima. See eTK
- Pal. lat. 1768 Ps.-Aristoteles ; Thomas ; Petrus ; Johannes ; Knab, Erhardus: Sammelhandschrift (Südwestdeutschland, 2. Hälfte 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1817 Avicenna: Canonis libris tres (II., IV., V.) (Italien, 13./ 14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1828 Luther, Martin: Bericht über den Augsburger Reichstag von 1530 (Weimar (?), Mitte 16. Jh.)
What I did not previously know is that the eTK database can also be searched in a more aesthetically pleasing format via IndexCat at the US National Library of Medicine, which is also free.
This is Piggin's Unofficial List number 107. If you have corrections or additions, please use the comments box below. Follow me on Twitter (@JBPiggin) for news of more additions to DigiVatLib.
2017-02-23
Isocrates Incomplete
The discovery of missing bits of the classics in overlooked manuscripts is one of the more exciting targets of the mass availability of codices through digital portals. This week Roger Pearse wrote up the discovery of a lost book of Apuleius after it was mentioned on this blog.
The opposite situation is that of imperfect manuscripts which dominate reception for hundreds of years. One of these interesting cases, the Orations of Isocrates, has just appeared online at the Vatican Library portal (full list below). Vat.gr.65.pt.1 is an 11th-century manuscript of the speeches of the ancient Greek rhetorician Isocrates, exactly datable to 1063.
I learn from a review by Pasquale Pinto that its text of the Antidosis, a long oration on morality, Athenian customs and Isocrates' own life looking back aged 82, is in fact incomplete, but was relied on for the early printed editions:
For a list of the main Isocrates manuscripts, see Roger Pearse. For a thesis in Italian by Stefano Tempesta closely examining the Panegyricus in the same manuscript, see Academia.edu.
Here is my list of novelties from the past few days. These bring the full harvest to 13,331 codices.
By the way, read as well Roger Pearse's appeal today for users of the Vatican Library site to make donations, Let's not shout at the Vatican Library for Digitising Microfilms. The library is rich in capital but poor in income, and I can entirely support what Roger has to say.
The opposite situation is that of imperfect manuscripts which dominate reception for hundreds of years. One of these interesting cases, the Orations of Isocrates, has just appeared online at the Vatican Library portal (full list below). Vat.gr.65.pt.1 is an 11th-century manuscript of the speeches of the ancient Greek rhetorician Isocrates, exactly datable to 1063.
I learn from a review by Pasquale Pinto that its text of the Antidosis, a long oration on morality, Athenian customs and Isocrates' own life looking back aged 82, is in fact incomplete, but was relied on for the early printed editions:
A complete text was rediscovered only at the beginning of the 19th century in four Mss.: the Vat. Urb. Gr. 111 (Γ) with its two close descendants (Vat. Gr. 936 [Δ] and Ambros. O 144 sup. [Ε]) and the Laur. plut. 87.14 (Θ). The remaining extant Mss. (the Vat. Gr. 65 [Λ] and 12 other Mss. ultimately deriving from it) all display a vast lacuna between § 72 and § 310, which affected nearly 3/4 of the text. The Ant. was therefore known in this shorter form for centuries, from when it was first printed in Milan in 1493, in the editio princeps of Is.’ works from a mutilated Ms. Only in 1811–1812, did a Greek scholar living in Italy, Andreas Mustoxydis, find Θ and Ε and publish the first complete edition of the speech (Milan 1812).Pinto notes that this was "one of the last great discoveries of ancient texts before the age of papyri".
For a list of the main Isocrates manuscripts, see Roger Pearse. For a thesis in Italian by Stefano Tempesta closely examining the Panegyricus in the same manuscript, see Academia.edu.
Here is my list of novelties from the past few days. These bring the full harvest to 13,331 codices.
- Vat.ebr.573
- Vat.gr.65.pt.1 (above), an 11th-century manuscript of the speeches of the ancient Greek rhetorician Isocrates
- Vat.gr.588
- Vat.iber.1, the four Gospels in Old Georgian (not Iberian as the shelfmark might suggest)
- Vat.lat.1060
- Vat.lat.1061
- Vat.lat.1079
- Vat.lat.1080
- Vat.lat.1099
- Vat.lat.1102
- Vat.lat.1105
- Vat.lat.1135
- Vat.lat.1153
- Vat.lat.1181
- Vat.lat.1184
- Vat.lat.1199, Life of Anthony, by Athanasius, Evagrius Latin translation. See the 2005 edition by Pascal Bertrand (PDF); 15th century:
- Vat.lat.1201
- Vat.lat.1204, John the Deacon on Gregory the Great
- Vat.lat.1206
- Vat.lat.1220
- Vat.lat.1223
- Vat.lat.1227
- Vat.lat.1228
- Vat.lat.1229
- Vat.lat.1235
- Vat.lat.1238
- Vat.lat.1239
- Vat.lat.1241
- Vat.lat.1244
- Vat.lat.1247
- Vat.lat.1251
- Vat.lat.1254
- Vat.lat.1255
- Vat.lat.1279
- Vat.lat.1282
- Vat.lat.1291, 14th and 15th century theological, including on Cathars
- Vat.lat.1293
- Vat.lat.1320
- Vat.lat.1323
- Vat.lat.1331, translation to Latin of documents of Council of Nicea by famed 9th-century papal staff scholar Anastasius Bibliothecarius (HT to @LatinAristotle )
- Vat.lat.1335
- Vat.lat.1336
- Vat.lat.1351
- Vat.lat.1354
- Vat.lat.1373
- Vat.lat.1394
- Vat.lat.1395
- Vat.lat.1396
- Vat.lat.1600, Ovid
- Vat.lat.2063 Plato: dialogues Timaeus and Phaedo, in translations by the Chalcidius of antiquity and 12th-century Henricus Aristippus. This is a manuscript owned by the Florentine Renaissance humanist Coluccio Salutati (HT to @LatinAristotle).
- Vat.lat.9490, a codex purpureus prayer-book by Bartolomeo Sanvito, a Renaissance scribe. (HTto @gumdormr who points out it is a book of hours made about 1469 for one Diomede Carafa, according to C. de la Mere, pp 210-211).
- Vat.lat.9535
- Vat.lat.15416, Pietro Combi, collection of stone inscriptions
By the way, read as well Roger Pearse's appeal today for users of the Vatican Library site to make donations, Let's not shout at the Vatican Library for Digitising Microfilms. The library is rich in capital but poor in income, and I can entirely support what Roger has to say.
2017-02-15
Extreme Fasting
Extremism is generally a disapproving word, but adepts are always ready to cheer an enticement they can follow to its most gruesome extreme. Some time ago I edited a health story about extreme anorexics (Motto: It's impossible to be too thin) and I had to think of them when I saw the image below of monks in a threadbare, emaciated state, presumably from long self-deprivation.
The image is found in a newly digitized penitential canon, Vat.lat.1347, from the Vatican Greek collection. This depicts extreme self-mortification associated with the eastern monastic tradition.
The second illumination below shows monks being encouraged by the Blessed Virgin in heaven (the female figure in the window at top right).
Here are 21 new items recently placed on the BAV digital portal:
This is Piggin's Unofficial List number 105. If you have corrections or additions, please use the comments box below. Follow me on Twitter (@JBPiggin) for news of more additions to DigiVatLib.
The image is found in a newly digitized penitential canon, Vat.lat.1347, from the Vatican Greek collection. This depicts extreme self-mortification associated with the eastern monastic tradition.
The second illumination below shows monks being encouraged by the Blessed Virgin in heaven (the female figure in the window at top right).
Here are 21 new items recently placed on the BAV digital portal:
- Reg.lat.337, a major Gregorian sacramentary from the first half of the 9th century
- Urb.lat.432
- Urb.lat.531
- Urb.lat.1495
- Urb.lat.1576
- Urb.lat.1579
- Urb.lat.1587
- Vat.lat.507
- Vat.lat.510
- Vat.lat.1264
- Vat.lat.1270
- Vat.lat.1280
- Vat.lat.1284
- Vat.lat.1287
- Vat.lat.1344
- Vat.lat.1346, legal text, containing a most unusual arbor juris diagram with two men stacked on top of one another at folio 128r
- Vat.lat.1347 This is a manuscript written between ca 850 and 875 near Rheims containing one of the main penitential handbooks, the Collectio canonum quadripartita (Wikipedia), an elaborate codification of sins. The Collectio is a main foundation for medieval canon law, and this manuscript, though incomplete, is the oldest. The manuscript was written when the compilation (by an unidentified author) was still fresh.
- Vat.lat.3249
- Vat.lat.3595
- Vat.lat.13442.pt.2
- Vat.gr.1754 - an important penitential canon (above)
- Pal. lat. 1121 Avicenna; Ludovicus de Florentia: Fen quarta libri Canonis quarti (Heidelberg, 1476)
- Pal. lat. 1123 Avicenna; Angelus ; Bernardus ; Poll, Nicolaus; Arnoldus ; Ibn-al-Ǧazzār, Aḥmad Ibn-Ibrāhīm; Konrad Weigand: Medizinischer Sammelband (Ongolstadt , Freising, 1514-1539)
- Pal. lat. 1125 Avicenna: Canonis Libri tertius et quarti fen prima et secunda (Italien (?), 13./14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1128 Gentilis : Expositio super libri tertii canonis Avicennae (Deutschland, Anfang 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1129 Gentilis ; Jacobus ; Gerardus ; Avicenna: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Heidelberg, 1452-1455)
- Pal. lat. 1130 Gentilis : Expositio super primam et tertiam fen libri tertii Canonis Avicennae (Italien, 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1133 Jacobus : Expositio primi libri Canonis Avicennae (Italien (Padua?), 1441)
- Pal. lat. 1139 Johannes : Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Ingolstadt, 1532-1544)
- Pal. lat. 1143 Isrāʾīlī, Isḥāq Ibn-Sulaimān /al-; Bartholomaeus de Vallone; Constantinus ; Richardus de Montepessulano; Baron, Roger: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Frankreich, 13./14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1144 Isidorius; Johannes de Sancto Paulo; Archimatthaeus; Arnoldus ; Ps.-Albertus; Magister Salernus; Thomas ; Petrus ; Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Heidelberg (I), 2. Hälfte 15. Jh. (I) ; 14. Jh. (II))
- Pal. lat. 1145 Antidotarium Nicolai (Nordwestdeutschland, 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1147 Maimonides, Moses; Marcus Johannes Senensis; Gentilis ; Saladinus ; Christophorus : Medizinischer Sammelband (Handschrift mit Inkunabeldrucken) (Heidelberg, Letztes Drittel 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1148 Mesue Minor: Libri de consolatione medicinarum simplicium solutivarum (Anfang 14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1149 Mesue Minor; Arnoldus ; Constantinus ; Gerardus Bituricensis: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Paris, 1. Hälfte 14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1150 Mesue Minor; Matthaeus : Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1151 Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-: Continens, Vol. I, libri I-IX (Italien, 13./14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1152 Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-: Continens, Vol. III, libri XVIIIb-XXV (Heidelberg, 2. Drittel 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1153 Gerardus ; Arnoldus ; Dinus de Florentia; Ibn-Ǧazla, Yaḥyā Ibn-ʿ'Īsā; Zahrāwī, Ḫalaf Ibn-Abbās /az-; Albertus : Medizinische und naturphilosophische Sammelhandschrift (Paris, 14. Jh. (1358))
- Pal. lat. 1154 Gerardus ; Jacoby, Johann: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Montpellier, 1365)
- Pal. lat. 1155 Gerardus ; Arnoldus ; Dinus de Florentia; Montagna, Bartolomeo: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (2. Hälfte 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1156 Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-; Bernardus : Medizinischkanonistische Sammelhandschrift (13./14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1164 Constantinus ; Mattaeus Platearius; Aegidius Corbolensis; Richardus ; Trotula: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Frankreich, 13./14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1165 Constantinus ; Gerardus Bituricensis; Gerardus de Montepessulano; Richardus ; Maurus ; Johannes ; Armengaudus ; Lanfrancus : Medizinischer Sammelband (13.Jh. ; 14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1166 Johannes : Medizinischer Sammelhandschrift (Südfrankreich, 13./ 14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1527 Cicero, Marcus Tullius; Aristoteles: De officiis ; Politica (Deutschland, 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1528 Cicero, Marcus Tullius: Opera (Italien, 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1532 Cicero, Marcus Tullius: De officiis (Italien, 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1533 Cicero, Marcus Tullius: De officiis (Italien, 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1535 Cicero, Marcus Tullius: De officiis (Italien (Venedig?), 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1536 Cicero, Marcus Tullius: Opera (Italien, 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1539 Seneca, Lucius Annaeus : Sammelhandschrift (Italien, 14. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1544 Seneca, Lucius Annaeus : Excerpta controuersarium (Italien, 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1545 Seneca, Lucius Annaeus : Sammelhandschrift (Deutschland, 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1559 Plinius Secundus, Gaius: Naturalis historia (Italien (Florenz), 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1742 Notae et excerpta (Heidelberg, um 1525-27)
- Pal. lat. 1743 Brucioli, Antonio: Parabole, proverbi et sententie (Italien, 3. Viertel 16. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1766 Alexander : Doctrinale pueorumcum commento (Süddeutschland (Augsburg ?), 1486)
- Pal. lat. 1767 Johannes ; Petrus Dresdensis : Sammelhandschrift (Tschechien (?), 1419)
- Pal. lat. 1777 Hugutio: Liber dervationum (Deutschland, 1394)
- Pal. lat. 1778 Twinger von Königshofen, Jakob: Vocabularius brevilogus (Deutschland (?), 1474)
- Pal. lat. 1780 Heinricus Ratisbonensis (?); Engelhusius, Theodoricus: Vocabularius brevilogus (Süddeutschland, 1456)
- Pal. lat. 1781 Closener, Fritsche: Vocabularius Ex quo ; Ars dictandi (Südwestdeutschland (Rheinpfalz ?), 1446/ um 1536)
- Pal. lat. 1782 Vocabularius Ex quo (Süddeutschland, Mitte 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1784 Vocabularius optimus (Südwestdeutschland, Mitte 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1786 Guarino ; Gasparinus Barzizius ; Fliscus, Stephanus: Sammelhandschrift (Italien, 2. Hälfte 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1788 Johannes : Synonyma ; Aequivoca (Süddeutschland (?), 1. Hälfte 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1790 Vocabularius Ex quo (Oberelsaß (?), 1415)
- Pal. lat. 1791 Cicero, Marcus Tullius; Ovidius Naso, Publius; Johannes Fabri de Werdea; Venantius ; Matheolus Perusinus; Caccialupus, Johannes Baptista: Humanistische Sammelhandschrift (Süddeutschland, 2. Hälfte 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1792 Vincentius Gruner: Compendiusm rhetoricae scientiae (Hildesheim (?), 1454)
- Pal. lat. 1793 Sammelhandschrift (Südwestdeutschland, um 1420-1430 (III), um 1450-1460 (II), 2. Hälfte 15. Jh. (IV, V), 1475 (I))
- Pal. lat. 1795 Poggio Bracciolini, Gian Francesco: Facetiae (Italien, 1. Hälfte 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1796 Griffolini, Francesco; Rinucius : Sammelhandschrift (Italien, 1463)
- Pal. lat. 1797 Distributio virtutum iuxta decalogum (Rheinpfalz, 1585)
- Pal. lat. 1798 Luder, Peter: Exempla epistolarum (Heidelberg, um 1459)
- Pal. lat. 1799 Flavius Guillelmus Ramundus; Johannes Zacharias ; Rolandinus ; Perger, Bernhard; Johannes ; Sixtus : Sammelhandschrift (Heidelberg (?), Konstanz (?), Ende 15. Jh., 1517)
- Pal. lat. 1800 Virulus, Carolus; Fliscus, Stephanus; Ugolinus Parmensis: Humanistische Sammelhandschrift (Süddeutschland (?), 1463, nach 1482)
- Pal. lat. 1802 Sententiae ; Colloquia ad usum puerorum (Bayern, um 1530)
- Pal. lat. 1803 Johannes Sebastianus Aquila: Collectanea (München, 1554-1557)
- Pal. lat. 1804 David Felix Reuter: Oratio votiva (Heidelberg, 1611)
- Pal. lat. 1807 Nikolaus : Sermones (Augsburg (?), 1446)
- Pal. lat. 1808 Nikolaus : Sermones (Süddeutschland (Franken ?), um 1435-1445)
- Pal. lat. 1810 Contrasto della ipocrisia et della sapienza (Italien, 3. Viertel 16. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1813 Gottfried : Liber pantheon (Süddeutschand (?), 1. Hälfte 15. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1816 Nicolaus Caesareus: Prognostica (Wittenberg, 1557)
- Pal. lat. 1839 Bèze, Théodore ¬de¬: Dictata in sextum et septimum caput epistolae I ad corinthios (Süddeutschland (?), 2. Hälfte 16. Jh.)
- Pal. lat. 1841 Peucer, Kaspar: De coena domini (Deutschland, 3. Drittel 16. Jh.)
This is Piggin's Unofficial List number 105. If you have corrections or additions, please use the comments box below. Follow me on Twitter (@JBPiggin) for news of more additions to DigiVatLib.
2017-02-09
Codex Purpureus
In New Testament criticism, a Byzantine Gospels made in the 6th century plays a celebrated role in debate because its texts do not always fit well with other ancient Greek text traditions. Codex N or the Codex Purpureus (sometimes also called the Codex Caesariensis) has been hacked apart (apparently by the Crusaders) with the sections now in many libraries.
The biggest section of the 231 extant folios is in St Petersburg, while the Vatican holds six folios, shelfmarked Vat.gr.2305, which have just arrived online. They contain Matthew 19:6-13; 20:6-22; 20:29-21:19. The parchment was formerly dyed purple, but the dye has faded. See Robert B Waltz and Wikipedia.
Additions this week bring the Vatican manuscripts portal up to 13,258 items. Here is a selection from the major collections:
This is Piggin's Unofficial List number 104. If you have corrections or additions, please use the comments box below. Follow me on Twitter (@JBPiggin) for news of more additions to DigiVatLib.
The biggest section of the 231 extant folios is in St Petersburg, while the Vatican holds six folios, shelfmarked Vat.gr.2305, which have just arrived online. They contain Matthew 19:6-13; 20:6-22; 20:29-21:19. The parchment was formerly dyed purple, but the dye has faded. See Robert B Waltz and Wikipedia.
Additions this week bring the Vatican manuscripts portal up to 13,258 items. Here is a selection from the major collections:
- Arch.Cap.S.Pietro.I.4
- Barb.lat.307
- Borg.copt.109.cass.XXIX.fasc.164
- Borg.copt.109.cass.XXVIII.fasc.158
- Ott.gr.426
- Ott.lat.2911
- Reg.lat.20
- Ross.694
- Urb.gr.154
- Urb.lat.451
- Urb.lat.467
- Urb.lat.937
- Urb.lat.975
- Urb.lat.1740
- Urb.lat.1759
- Urb.lat.1775
- Vat.ar.17.pt.1
- Vat.ar.17.pt.2
- Vat.ebr.5
- Vat.ebr.48
- Vat.ebr.258
- Vat.gr.19
- Vat.gr.157
- Vat.gr.2305 Codex Purpureus N (above)
- Vat.gr.2659
- Vat.lat.192 - Details
- Vat.lat.240 - Details
- Vat.lat.582 - Details
- Vat.lat.815 - Details
- Vat.lat.966 - Details
- Vat.lat.997 - Details
- Vat.lat.998 - Details
- Vat.lat.1003 - Details
- Vat.lat.1007 - Details
- Vat.lat.1030 - Details
- Vat.lat.1046 - Details
- Vat.lat.1047 - Details
- Vat.lat.1049 - Details
- Vat.lat.1050 - Details
- Vat.lat.1052 - Details
- Vat.lat.1062 - Details
- Vat.lat.1064 - Details
- Vat.lat.1065 - Details
- Vat.lat.1069 - Details
- Vat.lat.1075 - Details
- Vat.lat.1078 - Details
- Vat.lat.1088 - Details
- Vat.lat.1092 - Details
- Vat.lat.1097 - Details
- Vat.lat.1100 - Details
- Vat.lat.1104 - Details
- Vat.lat.1108 - Details
- Vat.lat.1109 - Details
- Vat.lat.1114 - Details
- Vat.lat.1115 - Details
- Vat.lat.1117 - Details
- Vat.lat.1123 - Details
- Vat.lat.1125 - Details
- Vat.lat.1127 - Details
- Vat.lat.1133 - Details
- Vat.lat.1144 - Details
- Vat.lat.1148 - Details
- Vat.lat.1149 - Details
- Vat.lat.1150 - Details
- Vat.lat.1151 - Details
- Vat.lat.1154 - Details
- Vat.lat.1157 - Details
- Vat.lat.1159 - Details
- Vat.lat.1161 - Details
- Vat.lat.1166 - Details
- Vat.lat.1167 - Details
- Vat.lat.1169 - Details
- Vat.lat.1172 - Details
- Vat.lat.1173 - Details
- Vat.lat.1176 - Details
- Vat.lat.1177 - Details
- Vat.lat.1179 - Details
- Vat.lat.1180 - Details
- Vat.lat.1189 - Details
- Vat.lat.1193 - Details
- Vat.lat.1197 - 11th-century Lives of Martyrs with the beautiful initial below and music manuscripts as endpapers. See Lowe, Beneventan, p. 76 - Details
- Vat.lat.1198 - Details
- Vat.lat.1208 - Details
- Vat.lat.1209 - Details
- Vat.lat.1210 - Details
- Vat.lat.1211 - Details
- Vat.lat.1214 - Details
- Vat.lat.1215 - Details
- Vat.lat.1216 - Details
- Vat.lat.1218 - Details
- Vat.lat.1219 - Details
- Vat.lat.1224 - Details
- Vat.lat.1225 - Details
- Vat.lat.1226 - Details
- Vat.lat.1231 - Details
- Vat.lat.1233 - Details
- Vat.lat.1234 - Details
- Vat.lat.1236 - Details
- Vat.lat.1240 - Details
- Vat.lat.1249 - Details
- Vat.lat.1257 - Details
- Vat.lat.1259 - Details
- Vat.lat.1263 - Details
- Vat.lat.1272 - Details
- Vat.lat.1273 - Details
- Vat.lat.1281 - Details
- Vat.lat.1290 - with a set of diagrams of prohibited marriages, including that below´covering widowed kin Details
- Vat.lat.1292 - Details
- Vat.lat.1295 - Details
- Vat.lat.1296 - Details
- Vat.lat.1318 - Details
- Vat.lat.1332 - fresh manuscript for Pope Nicholas V of council acts, copied from translation by Anastasius Bibliothecarius in 9th century. See my earlier post. HT to @LatinAristotle Details
- Vat.lat.1579 - Details
- Vat.lat.1592 - Details
- Vat.lat.1811 - Details
- Vat.lat.1821 - Details
- Vat.lat.1853 - Details
- Vat.lat.3110, a copy of the Notitia Dignitatum, the government handbook of the Roman Empire in late antiquity - Details
- Vat.lat.3715, Notitia Dignitatum, military establishment of the Roman Empire, this is a secondary copy from Oxford's - see Ingo Maier pages - Details
- Vat.lat.4437 - 14th century: the incipit at fol 40ra figures in Thorndik/Kibre's catalog of incipits, but I don't have that to look up Details
- Vat.lat.4480 - Details
- Vat.lat.10800 - single 7th-century uncial parchment folio containing Pelagius on the Epistles of Paul: TM 66154 = Lowe, CLA 1 58 Latin; Details
- Vat.lat.14722 worm-eaten 19th century transcription of a 5th century Latin papyrus - Details
- Vat.lat.15417 - Details
- Vat.lat.15418 - Details
- Vat.sam.2
- Vat.turc.142
This is Piggin's Unofficial List number 104. If you have corrections or additions, please use the comments box below. Follow me on Twitter (@JBPiggin) for news of more additions to DigiVatLib.
2017-02-08
Ounce of Gold
Of all medieval history records, the taxation and property lists are the least readable but the most productive. The greatest of all such compilations is the
Liber Censum, a financial database of the real-estate revenues owed to the papacy from 492 to 1192.
By an enormous web of grants and legacies, the Pope had acquired claims to revenue streams, but many payers did whatever they could to "forget" to pay or ensure that the documentation vanished. The Liber Censuum Romanæ Ecclesiæ (Latin for "Census Book of the Roman Church", also referred to as the Codex of Cencius) converted all the scattered records into one roll, which survives in the codex Vat.lat.8486. This has just been placed online by the Vatican Library.
The Wikipedia article notes:
By an enormous web of grants and legacies, the Pope had acquired claims to revenue streams, but many payers did whatever they could to "forget" to pay or ensure that the documentation vanished. The Liber Censuum Romanæ Ecclesiæ (Latin for "Census Book of the Roman Church", also referred to as the Codex of Cencius) converted all the scattered records into one roll, which survives in the codex Vat.lat.8486. This has just been placed online by the Vatican Library.
The Wikipedia article notes:
The earliest documentary evidence for the use of such a document of papal property rights goes back even earlier to an 1163/1164 letter from Pope Alexander III to the abbot of Lagny-sur-Marne requesting an annual payment of one ounce of gold, owed according to "a certain work among the books of the apostolic see". Although this specific claim dated to the time of Pope Urban II, the abbot rejected it and there is no evidence Alexander III pursued it further.... The Liber Censuum proper was assembled in 1192 by Cencius Camerarius (the future Pope Honorius III), papal chamberlain to Pope Clement III and Pope Celestine II, and his assistant, William Rofio ... [Tussles like that with Lagny-sur-Marne] are likely what Cencius refers to in the preface of the Liber Censuum as the "no little damage and loss" incurred by the church as a result of earlier records being "incomplete and neither written nor arranged authentically".This is the last of my seven briefings on a vast bloc of new Vat.lat. and Vat.gr. manuscripts digitized from mostly black and white microfilms.
- Vat.lat.8225.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8231 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8250.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8250.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8251.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8251.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8251.pt.3 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8252.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8252.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8252.pt.3 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8253.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8254.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8254.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8255 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8257 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8277 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8330 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8354 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8373.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8373.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8404 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8409 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8468.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8468.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8482 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8486 , LQ, Liber censuum (above)
- Vat.lat.8487.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8487.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8492 , LQ, with the record of the discovery of Emperor Augustus's sundial by A. Laelius Podager. See Rome Reborn. The Roman scholar gives a firsthand account of how the remains of Augustus's huge sundial were discovered early in the 16th century by a baker digging.
- Vat.lat.8493 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8519 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8565 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8566 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8570 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8619 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8652 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8677.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8677.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8677.pt.3 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8688 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8691 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8698 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8735 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8745 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8750 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8761 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8769 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8818 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8819 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8821 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8822 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8823 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8850 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8851 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8856 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8860 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8886 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8905 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8923 , LQ
- Vat.lat.8927 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9016 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9019 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9024 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9038 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9041 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9042 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9044 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9046 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9052 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9053 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9060 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9063 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9066 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9070 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9071 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9072 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9073 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9074 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9110 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9123 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9135 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9140 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9143 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9148 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9149 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9150 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9153 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9154 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9175 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9226 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9233.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9233.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9233.pt.3 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9239 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9247 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9248 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9249 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9250 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9251 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9252.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9252.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9263 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9265 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9276 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9278 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9285 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9292 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9305 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9306 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9313.pt.A , LQ
- Vat.lat.9344 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9371 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9372 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9374.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9374.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9380 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9390 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9430 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9456 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9466 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9468 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9480 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9518 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9519 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9520 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9647 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9662 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9668 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9672 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9673 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9680 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9683 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9684 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9712 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9727 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9728 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9729 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9752 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9781 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9802 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9803 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9815 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9869 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9877 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9880 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9881 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9882 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9893.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9893.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9893.pt.3 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9901 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9922 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9925 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9927 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9941 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9943 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9948 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9949 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9964 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9968 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9976 , LQ
- Vat.lat.9985 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10000.pt.A , LQ, Beuron Number 359, 14th century breviary used by Minorites
- Vat.lat.10000.pt.B , LQ
- Vat.lat.10001 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10038 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10067 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10081 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10130 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10132 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10151 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10153 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10157 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10190 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10192 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10200 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10205 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10206 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10228 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10244 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10247 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10275 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10290 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10301 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10303 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10307 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10308 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10350.pt.A , LQ
- Vat.lat.10372 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10382 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10419 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10420 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10423 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10424 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10437 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10445 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10446 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10478 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10479 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10486 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10497 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10511 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10529 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10545 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10546 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10554 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10555 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10556 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10557 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10558 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10559 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10560 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10561 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10562 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10563 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10565 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10567 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10568 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10572 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10627 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10652 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10656 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10661 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10666 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10672 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10680 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10681 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10687 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10688 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10690 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10700 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10702 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10726 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10734 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10742 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10750 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10771 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10785 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10786 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10803 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10804 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10812 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10826 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10829 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10830 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10833 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10900 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10902 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10923 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10936 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10951 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10975 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10976 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10977 , LQ
- Vat.lat.10992 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11006 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11152 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11173 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11255 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11266 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11268 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11269.pt.1 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11269.pt.2 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11270 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11271 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11272 , LQ. One volume from a detailed inquiry throughout the Italian peninsula by the Congregation of the Index of Prohibited Books into the state of the libraries of religious orders and their members. This volume covers Carmelites. The ink has come through the paper making it sometimes hard to read. Among the sections of especial interest is an inventory of the library of Paolo Antonio Foscarini, a Carmelite friar and theologian (c. 1562–1616), who was keenly interested in research at the interface between science and magic. See article by Andrew Campbell.
- Vat.lat.11273 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11274 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11276 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11278 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11279 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11280 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11281 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11282 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11283 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11284 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11285 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11286 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11287 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11288 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11289 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11290 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11291 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11292 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11294 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11295 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11296 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11297 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11298 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11300 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11301 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11302 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11303 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11304 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11305 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11308 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11310 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11312 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11313 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11314 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11319 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11322 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11323 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11324 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11325 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11326 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11359 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11416 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11429 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11433 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11444 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11455 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11457 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11466 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11493 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11505 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11507 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11517 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11518 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11524 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11525 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11536 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11548 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11550 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11562 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11563 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11575 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11579 , LQ
- Vat.lat.11582 , LQ
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-
Vat.lat.12959
, LQ, the Louvain Latin Bible of 1583, printed, with handwritten annotations
used to create the text of the Clementine-Sixtine Vulgate. I am not certain if
this is Pope Clement's copy or not. The first of 2 volumes. The other,
12960, is not yet
online. Here the editor has altered the name Abrahae to Abraham:
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