Collectio Sanblasiana: Difference between revisions

From Clavis Canonum
(Structure, content, date: added information based on Wirbelauer and Maassen)
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* [[Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, lat. 3836]]
* [[Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, lat. 3836]]
* Malibu,  
* Malibu,  
* [[Sankt Paul im Lavanttal, Stiftsbibliothek, 7 1]]
* [[Sankt Paul im Lavanttal, Stiftsbibliothek, 7 1]] (= Maassen's "Cod. Sanblasianus 6", apparently)
* [[Lucca, Biblioteca Capitolare Feliniana, 490]]
* [[Lucca, Biblioteca Capitolare Feliniana, 490]]
and three later ones:
and three later ones:
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== Date ==
== Date ==
The terminus ante quem is that of the earliest known manuscript, which is dated to the sixth century.


== Content and Structure ==
== Content and Structure ==
The collection is chronologically arranged. Wirbelauer (p. 123) divides the material into five sections (A-E):
# Conciliar canons (Nicaea to Antiochia)
# Symmachian Documenta (his "SD I")
# Papal letters "in chronologischer Abfolge von Siricius bis Leo"
# Creeds
# Appendices: Serdica to Julius and two letters of Gelasius I (JK 636 and 675)


== Literature ==
== Literature ==

Revision as of 14:47, 29 April 2024


Title Collectio Italica
Key ?
Century saec. VI
Main author Christof Rolker


Title

The title Collectio Italica goes back to Wirbelauer; in the older literature including Kéry, it is known as Sanblasiana.

Manuscripts

According to Wirbelauer, Zwei Päpste, p. 122, the Italica is an important pre-Carolingian collection extant in five pre-Carolingian manuscripts:

and three later ones:

Kéry, Collections p. 30 lists only six manuscripts (Cologne, Lucca, Sankt Paul, and the three Paris mss) and additionally refers to a "large fragment" in a private collection: "Cheltenham, Phillipps Collection, 17849, saec. VIII™ Italy; cf. CLA 27, no. 143, pp. 8, 49, 57. After World War IT it was acquired by Dr. M. Bodmer (Cologny near Geneva)."

Date

The terminus ante quem is that of the earliest known manuscript, which is dated to the sixth century.

Content and Structure

The collection is chronologically arranged. Wirbelauer (p. 123) divides the material into five sections (A-E):

  1. Conciliar canons (Nicaea to Antiochia)
  2. Symmachian Documenta (his "SD I")
  3. Papal letters "in chronologischer Abfolge von Siricius bis Leo"
  4. Creeds
  5. Appendices: Serdica to Julius and two letters of Gelasius I (JK 636 and 675)

Literature

  • Kéry, Collections p. 29-31.
  • Maassen, Geschichte p. 504-512 ("Sammlung der Handschrift von Sanct Blasien").
  • Wirbelauer, Zwei Päpste, 122-125.

Categories

  • not in Clavis
  • saec. VI
  • Collection
  • Italian
  • this article is a stub