Città del Vaticano, BAV, Vat. lat. 8487

From Clavis Canonum

Liber gemniagraphus sive clęronomialis ecclesiae Pharphensis, a cartulary of the imperial abbey of Farfa (com. Fara Sabina, prov. Rieti, reg. Lazio, Italy), bound in two volumes (I–II).

Cartulary texts edited by Giorgi & Balzani, "Il Regesto di Farfa" (1883–1914).

Single manuscript witness of Collectio Farfensis (ff. 59r–84v), described and edited by Theo Kölzer (1982).

Compiled and copied at the abbey of Farfa by monks Gregory of Catino (ff. 1–449r, c. 1092–1099) and Todinus (ff. 449r–517, post 1125). On palaeography, see Supino Martini (1987).

Bound into vol. II as ff. 521–522, a two-leaf fragment of Collectio V librorum (Vat. lat. 1339), containing Coll. 5L, 2.106.1–3 and 2.109:1–110 (Fornasari 1970, 254.24–256.10), probably representing the Narni recension (V, Vat. lat. 1339), identified by Ahokas (2020).

Digitized: https://digi.vatlib.it/view/MSS_Vat.lat.8487.pt.1 (pt. I, ff. 1–259) and https://digi.vatlib.it/view/MSS_Vat.lat.8487.pt.2 (pt. II, ff. 260–522)

Bibliography

Collectio canonum Regesto Farfensi inserta. Edidit Theo Kölzer. Monumenta Iuris Canonici, series B, Corpus Collectionum, 5. Città del Vaticano: Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, 1982.

Collectio canonum in V libris, libri I–III. Ed. Mario Fornasari. Corpus Christianorum, Continuatio Mediaevalis, 6. Turnhout: Brepols, 1970.

Il Regesto di Farfa: Compilato da Gregorio di Catino. A cura di Ignazio Giorgi e Ugo Balzani. Roma: Reale Società romana di storia patria, vol. I, 1914; vol. II, 1889; vol. III, 1883; vol. IV, 1888; vol. V, 1892.

Supino Martini, Paola: Roma e l’area grafica romanesca (secoli X–XII). Biblioteca di Scrittura e civiltà, 1. Alessandria: Edizioni dell’Orso, 1987.

Ahokas, Lari: "Chronicon Farfense": Kontekstualistinen käsikirjoitustutkimus. [The "Chronicon Farfense": A Contextual Manuscript Study.] M.A. Thesis, University of Helsinki, 2020. Abstract [in Finnish]: http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:hulib-202012185420

Categories

  • Manuscript of FA (and FU)
  • partly saec. XI, partly saec. XII
  • digitized
  • from Farfa (Central Italy)