New Testament in the translation of John Wycliffe. (DS1453) (Q8769)

From DS 2.0 Catalog
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from University of Pennsylvania (9915517833503681, Ms. Codex 201)
  • Bible.
Language Label Description Also known as
English
New Testament in the translation of John Wycliffe. (DS1453)
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from University of Pennsylvania (9915517833503681, Ms. Codex 201)
  • Bible.

Statements

New Testament in the translation of John Wycliffe.
0 references
Bible.
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
English literature--Middle English, 1100-1500
0 references
0 references
0 references
English poetry--Middle English, 1100-1500
0 references
Catholic Church--Discipline
0 references
Bible--English (Middle English)--Versions--Wycliffe
0 references
Christian poetry, English (Middle)
0 references
0 references
Devotional literature, English (Middle)
0 references
0 references
Middle English, 1100-1500
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
English literature--Middle English
0 references
0 references
0 references
Middle English; some works in Latin
0 references
[late 14th to early 15th century]
0 references
Extent: 239 leaves : parchment ; 185 x 113 (146 x 85) mm bound to 193 x 120 mm
0 references
Script: The text of the New Testament is written in a single hand. Many of the other portions are written in different hands, all varieties of Anglicana script.
0 references
Thirteenth folio before the end has been partly cut out; final four folios are badly torn with loss of text.
0 references
The autograph of Gilbert, Bishop of Bath and Wells, appears on f. 1r. This office was held by two men named Gilbert: Gilbert Bourne, in office 1554-1560; and Gilbert Berkeley, in office 1560-1581.
0 references
Collation: I², II-XXVIII⁴, XXIX⁴ (-1), XXX⁵, XXXI¹.
0 references
Pagination: Parchment, i (near contemporary parchment) + 239 + i (near contemporary parchment) leaves; [i-viii], 1-54, [55-470]. Individual books of the New Testament paginated independently in a later hand.
0 references
The traditional prologue to the Epistle of James has been transferred to the Epistles of Peter. Ross mistakenly concludes that this prologue "is not found in any of the manuscripts examined by Forshall and Madden" (A Catalogue of the T. Edward Ross Collection, p. 28).
0 references
Ms. codex.
0 references
Decoration: Extensive use of red for headings and filigree; blue for initials.
0 references
Binding: 16th-century calf, with a gilded design.
0 references
Origin: Written in England; late 14th to early 15th century.
0 references
Description taken from Josephine A. Koster's master's thesis on this manuscript (copy on file in the Library).
0 references
Marginal glosses in Old English and Latin on ff. 42v, 46v. and 212r.
0 references
The Middle English poem on f. 4r observes poetic lineation; T. Edward Ross erroneously concluded that it was "written in prose," possibly because of cropping that destroyed some line endings (A Catalogue of the T. Edward Ross Collection, pp. 27-28).
0 references
Layout: Written in two columns of 37 lines; frame-ruled in ink.
0 references
Gift of T. Edward Ross, 1947 (bookplate, inside upper cover).
0 references
Gilbert, Bishop of Bath and Wells (autograph, f. 1r).
0 references
19 September 2023
0 references
19 September 2023
0 references
0 references