(Q12939)

Revision as of 15:38, 8 November 2023 by DigScrAdmin (talk | contribs) (‎Created a new Item)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Statements

Expositio super novem lectiones mortuorum /
0 references
Rolle, Richard, 1290?-1349
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
Bible. Gospels--Commentaries--Early works to 1800
0 references
Bible. Job--Commentaries--Early works to 1800
0 references
Manuscripts, Latin (Medieval and modern)--England
0 references
Manuscripts, Latin (Medieval and modern)--New Jersey--Princeton
0 references
between 1300 and 1400
0 references
Extent: iv, 23, iv : parchment ; 369 x 239 (266 x 180) mm bound to 383 x 252 mm.
0 references
Incipit: “Parce mihi domine nihil enim sunt dies mei Job 7:16. Exprimitur autem in hiis verbis humane condicionis instabilis que non habet in hac miserabili valle manentem mansionem…”
0 references
Explicit: “Quem queris in iubilum tu christe corona Ricardum. Explicit tractatus Ricardi heremite de hampole super iob.”
0 references
Ms. codex.
0 references
Title from printed catalog.
0 references
A few marginal notes. On spine: "Rich. Rolle Paroum Job. Engl. XIV cent." Anonymous sermon notes and brief commentaries on Gospel texts (Matt. 8:1, 8:23; Luke 2:1, 2:15; John 1:1, 1:9–13, 2:1) on folios 17v-23r. On fol. 18r is an extract from Peter Comestor (d. ca. 1178), Historia scolastica. In evangelia cap. 141 (De signis quindecim dierum ante judicium), which begins “Ieronimus in annalibus...
0 references
Collation: Parchment ; fols. iv (modern French handmade paper) + 23 + iv (same paper) ; catchwords at end of quires ; modern foliation in pencil.
0 references
Layout: 41-42 long lines per page.
0 references
Description: One 14th-century scribe, probably in Oxford, was responsible for the main text. An early 15th-century scribe was responsible for the marginal annotations and second text.
0 references
Decoration: Chapters open with 2- to 3-line blue initials with red pen flourishes (fols. 1r-17v); guide letters were left for unexecuted 2-line initials at the beginning of brief notes or commentaries (fols. 17v-22v).
0 references
Origin: The manuscript was produced in England in the 14th century.
0 references
Intermediate provenance is unknown. Robert Garrett purchased the manuscript on 10 June 1926 from the New York antiquarian bookseller Wilfrid M. Voynich. Owner's or dealer's marks “M6145” and “H10749” (flyleaf, pencil). Garrett's gift to the Princeton University Library, 1942.
0 references
8 November 2023
0 references
8 November 2023
0 references