Wien, ÖNB, Cod. 522: Difference between revisions
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| coll = Collectio CCL capitulorum | | coll = Collectio CCL capitulorum | ||
| coll2 = Collectio CCCC capitulorum | | coll2 = Collectio CCCC capitulorum | ||
|digitalimages=[https://digital.onb.ac.at/RepViewer/viewer.faces?doc=DTL_3320833&order=1&view=SINGLE digital.onb.ac.at]| author1 = [[User:Bruno Schalekamp|Bruno Schalekamp]] | |digitalimages=[https://digital.onb.ac.at/RepViewer/viewer.faces?doc=DTL_3320833&order=1&view=SINGLE digital.onb.ac.at]| author1 = [[User:Bruno Schalekamp|Bruno Schalekamp]] | ||
| author2 = [[User:SMeeder|Sven Meeder]] | | author2 = [[User:SMeeder|Sven Meeder]] | ||
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}} | }} | ||
Wien, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Cod. lat. 522 is a middle ninth-century manuscript and, with 206 folios measuring approximately 228 x 160 mm (189 x 120 mm), a thick tome. The text is written on 20-21 lines, which have been drawn by drypoint from the centre of an opened quire. Vertical slits are found on the inner bifolia of the quires. There is no visible loss of leafs, resulting in a very regular collation: 1-8<sup>8</sup> 9<sup>8</sup> (2 folios numbered 70) 10-23<sup>8</sup> 24<sup>8</sup> (2 folios numbered 189) 24-26<sup>8</sup>. Throughout the manuscript, some | Wien, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Cod. lat. 522 is a middle ninth-century manuscript and, with 206 folios measuring approximately 228 x 160 mm (189 x 120 mm), a thick tome. The text is written on 20-21 lines, which have been drawn by drypoint from the centre of an opened quire. Vertical slits are found on the inner bifolia of the quires. There is no visible loss of leafs, resulting in a very regular collation: 1-8<sup>8</sup> 9<sup>8</sup> (2 folios numbered 70) 10-23<sup>8</sup> 24<sup>8</sup> (2 folios numbered 189) 24-26<sup>8</sup>. Throughout the manuscript, some verso sides of folios are blank (fols 3v, 7v, 45v, 118v, 138v, 205v, as well as 1r and 206r-v), apparently without loss of text. Some of the quires have quire signatures, i.c. ''I'' (fol. 8v), again, seemingly, ''I'' (fol. 79v), and ''XIII''(103v), ''XIIII'' (111v), ''XXI'' (167v). Traces of quire signatures are found on 95v, 119v, 127v, 151v, 175v. Modern foliation numbering in Arabic numerals and lead pencil. | ||
It was written by several, similar hands in Caroline minuscule, with red rubrics throughout as well as coloured-in letters in green, red, and yellow. The script belongs to saec. IX<sup>⅔</sup>, according to {{Author|Kéry}} and {{Author|Mordek}}, probably during the reign of archbishop Liuphram (836-859) according to {{Author|Bischoff}}. The manuscript's origin is from Salzburg, according to the abovementioned authors, and more specifically St. Peter’s Abbey according to its online catalogue. It probably remained there in the Domkapitelbibliothek until 1806 when it was transferred to the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek. | It was written by several, similar hands in Caroline minuscule, with red rubrics throughout as well as coloured-in letters in green, red, and yellow. The script belongs to saec. IX<sup>⅔</sup>, according to {{Author|Kéry}} and {{Author|Mordek}}, probably during the reign of archbishop Liuphram (836-859) according to {{Author|Bischoff}}. The manuscript's origin is from Salzburg, according to the abovementioned authors, and more specifically St. Peter’s Abbey according to its online catalogue. It probably remained there in the Domkapitelbibliothek until 1806 when it was transferred to the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek. | ||
==Contents== | ==Contents== | ||
The codex is a large-sized codex and contains mostly canonical material, dominated by both the ''[[Collectio CCL capitulorum]]'' | The codex is a large-sized codex and contains mostly canonical material, dominated by both the ''[[Collectio CCL capitulorum]]'' (a derivative of the ''Collectio Hibernensis'') and ''[[Collectio CCCC capitulorum]]''. The rest of the manuscript for the most part comprises either pope Gregory the Great's ''Concordia'' or Bede's ''De natura rerum'' and (a few chapters of) ''De ratione temporum''. An (Irish) text on gospel meditation and an unknown work titled ''Uersus de conditore templi'' conclude the last added textual witnesses in the manuscript. | ||
[[File:Wien.Cod.lat.522.fol.90v.png|thumb|Fol. 90v of the manuscript, showing the first few chapters of ''[[Collectio XXX capitulorum (De ratione matrimonii)]]'']] See the digitized version: https://digital.onb.ac.at/RepViewer/viewer.faces?doc=DTL_3320833&order=1&view=SINGLE. | [[File:Wien.Cod.lat.522.fol.90v.png|thumb|Fol. 90v of the manuscript, showing the first few chapters of ''[[Collectio XXX capitulorum (De ratione matrimonii)]]'']] See the digitized version: https://digital.onb.ac.at/RepViewer/viewer.faces?doc=DTL_3320833&order=1&view=SINGLE. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|57r-113v | |57r-113v | ||
|''[[Collectio CCL capitulorum]]'' | |''[[Collectio CCL capitulorum]]'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
|113v-192v | |113v-192v | ||
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Bischoff, ‘An Hiberno-Latin Introduction’ (1979), p. 234-236; Bischoff, ''Schreibschulen'' Vol. 2 (1980), p. 82 and 159-160; Fransen, ‘Trente-quatre questions sur Saint Paul’ (1963), p. 244-276; Kéry, ''Canonical Collections'' (1999), p. 77, 83, and 163; Kendall, Wallis, ''Bede On the Nature of Things'' (2010), p. 55 n. 135; Lhotsky, ''Quellenkunde'' (1963), p. 150; Mazal, ‘Die Salzburger Dom- und Klosterbibliothek’ (1997), p. 44-64; {{Author|Meeder}}, [https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/resources-of-the-past-in-early-medieval-europe/biblical-past-and-canonical-present-the-case-of-thecollectio-400-capitulorum/06808C151CFDA8DBE5AC086BF753D91E?utm_campaign=shareaholic&utm_medium=copy_link&utm_source=bookmark 'Biblical past and canonical present: the case of the Collectio 400 capitulorum']; {{Author|Mordek}}, [https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110831900 Kirchenrecht und Reform] p. 258-259; Reynolds, ‘Canon law collections’ (1980), p. 15-34; Reynolds, ‘Unity and Diversity’ (1983), p. 99-135; ''Tabulae Codicum'' (1864), p. 88-89; Unterkircher, ‘Die karolingischen Salzburger Einbände’ (1955), p. 41-53; Vezin, ‘Les plus anciennes reliures de cuir’ (1988), p. 391-408. | Bischoff, ‘An Hiberno-Latin Introduction’ (1979), p. 234-236; Bischoff, ''Schreibschulen'' Vol. 2 (1980), p. 82 and 159-160; Fransen, ‘Trente-quatre questions sur Saint Paul’ (1963), p. 244-276; Kéry, ''Canonical Collections'' (1999), p. 77, 83, and 163; Kendall, Wallis, ''Bede On the Nature of Things'' (2010), p. 55 n. 135; Lhotsky, ''Quellenkunde'' (1963), p. 150; Mazal, ‘Die Salzburger Dom- und Klosterbibliothek’ (1997), p. 44-64; {{Author|Meeder}}, [https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/resources-of-the-past-in-early-medieval-europe/biblical-past-and-canonical-present-the-case-of-thecollectio-400-capitulorum/06808C151CFDA8DBE5AC086BF753D91E?utm_campaign=shareaholic&utm_medium=copy_link&utm_source=bookmark 'Biblical past and canonical present: the case of the Collectio 400 capitulorum']; {{Author|Mordek}}, [https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110831900 Kirchenrecht und Reform] p. 258-259; Reynolds, ‘Canon law collections’ (1980), p. 15-34; Reynolds, ‘Unity and Diversity’ (1983), p. 99-135; ''Tabulae Codicum'' (1864), p. 88-89; Unterkircher, ‘Die karolingischen Salzburger Einbände’ (1955), p. 41-53; Vezin, ‘Les plus anciennes reliures de cuir’ (1988), p. 391-408. | ||
The edition of the ''[[Collectio CCCC capitulorum]]'' by Sven Meeder will soon be in print | The edition of the ''[[Collectio CCCC capitulorum]]'' by Sven Meeder will soon be in print. | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wien, ÖNB, Cod. 00522}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Wien, ÖNB, Cod. 00522}} | ||
Revision as of 22:10, 2 September 2025
| Library | Wien, ÖNB |
|---|---|
| Shelfmark | Cod. 522 |
| Century | s. IX⅔ |
| Provenance | ? |
| Place of origin | Salzburg, St. Peter’s Abbey |
| European region of origin | Southern Germany |
| General region of origin | Germany |
| Specific region of origin | Salzburg |
| Collection | Collectio CCL capitulorum |
| Collection 2 | Collectio CCCC capitulorum |
| Digital Images | digital.onb.ac.at |
| Author | Bruno Schalekamp |
| Author | Sven Meeder |
Wien, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Cod. lat. 522 is a middle ninth-century manuscript and, with 206 folios measuring approximately 228 x 160 mm (189 x 120 mm), a thick tome. The text is written on 20-21 lines, which have been drawn by drypoint from the centre of an opened quire. Vertical slits are found on the inner bifolia of the quires. There is no visible loss of leafs, resulting in a very regular collation: 1-88 98 (2 folios numbered 70) 10-238 248 (2 folios numbered 189) 24-268. Throughout the manuscript, some verso sides of folios are blank (fols 3v, 7v, 45v, 118v, 138v, 205v, as well as 1r and 206r-v), apparently without loss of text. Some of the quires have quire signatures, i.c. I (fol. 8v), again, seemingly, I (fol. 79v), and XIII(103v), XIIII (111v), XXI (167v). Traces of quire signatures are found on 95v, 119v, 127v, 151v, 175v. Modern foliation numbering in Arabic numerals and lead pencil.
It was written by several, similar hands in Caroline minuscule, with red rubrics throughout as well as coloured-in letters in green, red, and yellow. The script belongs to saec. IX⅔, according to Kéry and Mordek, probably during the reign of archbishop Liuphram (836-859) according to Bischoff. The manuscript's origin is from Salzburg, according to the abovementioned authors, and more specifically St. Peter’s Abbey according to its online catalogue. It probably remained there in the Domkapitelbibliothek until 1806 when it was transferred to the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek.
Contents
The codex is a large-sized codex and contains mostly canonical material, dominated by both the Collectio CCL capitulorum (a derivative of the Collectio Hibernensis) and Collectio CCCC capitulorum. The rest of the manuscript for the most part comprises either pope Gregory the Great's Concordia or Bede's De natura rerum and (a few chapters of) De ratione temporum. An (Irish) text on gospel meditation and an unknown work titled Uersus de conditore templi conclude the last added textual witnesses in the manuscript.

See the digitized version: https://digital.onb.ac.at/RepViewer/viewer.faces?doc=DTL_3320833&order=1&view=SINGLE.
| folios | content |
|---|---|
| Front cover | |
| 1r | Blank page |
| 1v-2v | An ‘Irish’ interpretation of gospel meditation, according to Bischoff. Categorized as Scholastica de evangeliis in its catalogue. |
| 2v-3r | Uersus de conditore templi |
| 3r and 4r-29r | Bede's De natura rerum, a complete witness. Fol. 3v is a blank page |
| 29r-57r | Pope Gregory the Great's Concordia quorumdam testimoniorum sacrae Scripturae, a complete witness |
| 57r-113v | Collectio CCL capitulorum |
| 113v-192v | Collectio CCCC capitulorum. Fols. 118v and 138v are blank pages |
| 192v-205r | Bede's De ratione temporum, chapters 67-71 |
| 205v-206v | Blank pages |
| Back cover |
Literature
Bischoff, ‘An Hiberno-Latin Introduction’ (1979), p. 234-236; Bischoff, Schreibschulen Vol. 2 (1980), p. 82 and 159-160; Fransen, ‘Trente-quatre questions sur Saint Paul’ (1963), p. 244-276; Kéry, Canonical Collections (1999), p. 77, 83, and 163; Kendall, Wallis, Bede On the Nature of Things (2010), p. 55 n. 135; Lhotsky, Quellenkunde (1963), p. 150; Mazal, ‘Die Salzburger Dom- und Klosterbibliothek’ (1997), p. 44-64; Meeder, 'Biblical past and canonical present: the case of the Collectio 400 capitulorum'; Mordek, Kirchenrecht und Reform p. 258-259; Reynolds, ‘Canon law collections’ (1980), p. 15-34; Reynolds, ‘Unity and Diversity’ (1983), p. 99-135; Tabulae Codicum (1864), p. 88-89; Unterkircher, ‘Die karolingischen Salzburger Einbände’ (1955), p. 41-53; Vezin, ‘Les plus anciennes reliures de cuir’ (1988), p. 391-408.
The edition of the Collectio CCCC capitulorum by Sven Meeder will soon be in print.