Petrus Aureoli, Compendium sacre scripture (DS10001) (Q44007)

From DS 2.0 Catalog
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens (.b18622343, 103317a, https://catalog.huntington.org/record=b1862234)
  • Compendium sensus litteralis totius sacrae Scripturae
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Petrus Aureoli, Compendium sacre scripture (DS10001)
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens (.b18622343, 103317a, https://catalog.huntington.org/record=b1862234)
  • Compendium sensus litteralis totius sacrae Scripturae

Statements

Petrus Aureoli, Compendium sacre scripture
0 references
Compendium sensus litteralis totius sacrae Scripturae
0 references
Aureolus, Petrus, approximately 1280-1322
0 references
0 references
0 references
Bible--Criticism, interpretation, etc
0 references
0 references
between 1450 and 1499].
0 references
0 references
Extent: ff. 93 ; 205 x 285 mm
0 references
Petrus Aureolus' Compendium sacre scripture written in Germany in the second half of the fifteenth century. Bound after Rolevinck, Werner. Fasciculus temporum. [Strassburg: Johann PrĂ¼ss, after 6 April 1490] (RB 103317).
0 references
ff. 1-93. Paper. Layout: 1-712 810(-10). 2 columns of 43-46 lines, frame ruled in ink. Watermark(s): Letter Y surmounted by a cross; not in Briquet. Written in a littera currens. Corrections added in the margins in the hand of the scribe. In upper margin of f. 1, a 16th century biographical note on Petrus Aureoli.
0 references
Other Decoration: 2-line spaces reserved for initials.
0 references
Input into Digital Scriptorium by: C. W. Dutschke, 8/26/2012.
0 references
Belonged to the Carthusian house in Dulmen, Westphalia (founded 1476); on f. i, "Liber Carthusiensium prope dulmaniam" and a pressmark, "i 67," which also occurs on the spine. Also on f. i, a contemporary note, "Pro d. tynan. gre[?]hoff sig." and the signature, 18th-19th century, "Arthur Douglas Wagner." Belonged to Sir Charles Thomas-Stanford; his bookplate tipped in before the flyleaf.
0 references
22 July 2024
0 references
22 July 2024
0 references