Persii opera. (DS1604) (Q9222)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from University of Pennsylvania (9914691693503681, Ms. Codex 6)
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Persii opera. (DS1604) |
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from University of Pennsylvania (9914691693503681, Ms. Codex 6) |
Statements
Bergin, Thomas Goddard, 1904-1987
0 references
Persius--Criticism and interpretation
0 references
[between 1450 and 1499?]
15. century
1450Gregorian
1499Gregorian
0 references
Extent: 33 leaves : parchment and paper ; 225 x 132 mm bound to 232 x 135 mm
0 references
Ms. codex.
0 references
This manuscript was examined in December 1990 by Professor Georg N. Knauer of the University of Pennsylvania, who prepared a three-page typewritten description of it. This is on file in the Library, together with a photocopy of a five-page article (by Rosario Pintaudi and Mario Tesi) discussing Laurentius Valla's translation of Thucydides.
0 references
Title from caption title in a later hand (f. 1r).
0 references
Title of 2nd work given in colophon (f. 27r).
0 references
Incipit: (commentary, f. 1r) Labra non solum hominum sed animalium sunt...; (text, f. 1r) Nec fonte labra prolui caballino...
0 references
Explicit of first work: (text, f. 14v) inventus Chrysippe tui finitor acervi; (commentary, f. 14v) ... et hoc vult Persius dicere quod sicut ipse Chrysippus finivit illud opus adeo grande. sic doceat eum ponere finem et modum avaritie hominum. Acervi tuorum tumulorum argumentorum.
0 references
Collation: Parchment and paper, 33; 1¹⁰, 2⁴, 3¹⁰, 4¹⁰( -1); [i], [1-32]; modern foliation in pencil, lower right recto. The back pastedown leaf appears to be part of the fourth quire, which also appears to be missing a leaf.
0 references
Script: First work written in a humanistic script by a single hand, with some contemporary glosses in a different hand (f. 11r); second work written in a humanistic script by a second, possibly slightly later hand than the first work. Notes on flyleaves and inside covers written in various later hands.
0 references
Decoration: Space has been left at the beginning of each Persius satire and at the beginning of the Ibis for large initials. Only at the beginning of the Prologue to Persius (f. 1r) has the first initial been filled in, in what appears to be the same hand as the text. Several manicules drawn in the margins (for example, f. 6v, 10r).
0 references
Binding: Late 15th-century Italian stamped leather with remains of two metal clasps. Some writing in ink on front cover, very difficult to read; upside down, towards the bottom of the front cover, is the word "Persius."
0 references
Origin: Written in Italy[?] in the second half of the 15th century.
0 references
The parchment leaves are wearing slightly and splitting at the edges. Some of the writing, especially on the Persius commentary, is fading. Some stains and smudges. Cover is worn and scraped, and is splitting at the spine. Some wormholes in the cover and in the paper folios.
0 references
The front flyleaf and the first two quires are parchment (f. 1-14); the last two quires are paper (f. 15-32).
0 references
There may be a quire missing before f.1, which might possibly have contained prolegomena to the Persius text and commentary.
0 references
The note to Satire 4 (f. 7v) refers to Laurentius Valla's translation of Thucydides into Latin, which he completed in 1452; therefore the commentary must have been written after that date.
0 references
Signature: Antonio (inside upper cover).
0 references
Formerly owned by Thomas G. Bergin (Yale University); probably bought in Italy (Naples?) in the 1920s (Knauer).
0 references
Sold by George Allen (Philadelphia, Pa.), 1991.
0 references
19 September 2023
0 references
19 September 2023
0 references