Bible leaf, Deuteronomy (DS6425) (Q28612): Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
DigScrAdmin (talk | contribs) (Created a new Item) |
(Created claim: dated (P26): Non-dated (Q15), #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1710791529583) |
||
Property / dated | |||
Property / dated: Non-dated / rank | |||
Normal rank |
Revision as of 21:27, 18 March 2024
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from Western Michigan University (99509926534202436, WMU MS 153)
- Bible
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Bible leaf, Deuteronomy (DS6425) |
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from Western Michigan University (99509926534202436, WMU MS 153) |
|
Statements
Bible
0 references
Manuscripts, Latin (Medieval and modern)--Michigan--Kalamazoo
0 references
Bible. Deuteronomy--Manuscripts
0 references
Manuscripts, Medieval--Belgium
0 references
Manuscripts, Latin--Belgium
0 references
1250-1299
13. century
1250Gregorian
1299Gregorian
0 references
Extent: 1 leaf : parchment ; 500 x 356 mm.
0 references
Ms. leaf.
0 references
Title supplied by cataloger.
0 references
Single leaf, Parchment, 500 x 356 mm (330mm x 210mm), double columns, 33 lines, ruled in plummet. Written in Littera Gothica Textualis Formata, or a high grade Textura.
0 references
Decoration: In the middle of column B there is a single five-line initial h in blue with red penwork details infilled with blue squiggles, and red and blue decorations trailing up and down the column. Above the initial, the sixth book of Deuteronomy is indicated by Roman numerals in red and blue. The abbreviation DEV (Deuteronomy) appears at the top of the page. Larger versal initials are...
0 references
Deuteronomy 5:22-6:25.
0 references
Flanders or Southnetherlands, possibly Tournai. For other leaves from the same manuscript (all with text between Leviticus 14 and Judges 16) see Manion, Vines and de Hamel, Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in New Zealand Collections, 1989, p. 93. Probably broken by Erich von Scherling (Scherling, 102; History of Western Script, 55). Von Sherling's source seems to have been a bound fragment...
0 references
2 February 2024
0 references
2 February 2024
0 references