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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Collectio canonum'' in Torino, BNU, E. V. 44, fol. 71v–86v}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Collectio canonum'' in Torino, BNU, E. V. 44, fol. 71v–86v}}
{{Infobox collection
    | key          = DA
    | size          = Small (100 to 500 canons)
    | century      = saec. XII
    | normregion    = Northern Italy
    | generalregion = Southern Europe and Mediterranean
    | mss          = one
    | title        = Collectio canonum in Torino, BNU, E. V. 44, fol. 71v–86v
    | alttitle1    = Collectio Taurinensis
    | alttitle2    = Turiner Sammlung
    | author1      = [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linda_Fowler-Magerl Linda Fowler-Magerl]
}}
== The Manuscript ==


== Title ==
=== Shelfmark ===
Note that the manuscript, and hence the collection, is sometimes referred to by an old catalogue number ("903"); in the 2005 handbook, it is called "Collectio canonum in the Ms Turin, BNU 903 (E. V. 44), fol. 71v–86v". It should not be confused with the more (in)famous ''[[Collectio Taurinensis]]'' found in the same manuscript.
Note that the manuscript, and hence the collection, is sometimes referred to by an old catalogue number ("903"); in the 2005 handbook, it is called "Collectio canonum in the Ms Turin, BNU 903 (E. V. 44), fol. 71v–86v". See the description of [[Torino, Biblioteca Nazionale Universitaria, E.V.44|Torino, BNU, E. V. 44]] for further reference.


== The collection ==
=== Contents ===
The manuscript [https://beta.mgh.de/databases/clavis/wiki/index.php/Torino,_Biblioteca_nazionale_universitaria,_E.V.44 Torino, BNU E. V. 44] contains a mixture of patristic material and canon law copied by several different scribes. Liberties were taken with the texts. Excerpts from the collection of Deusdedit are found at the beginning of the manuscript together with excerpts from the much earlier ''Herovalliana'' and ''Hibernensis''. The most recent text in the manuscript is the excerpt from a letter of pope Paschal II, ''Testimonium est sermo'' (JL 6612), found on fol. 57v.  {{FM|173}} Giuseppe Motta argues that the manuscript was copied in northern Italy because the treatise ''De corpore et sanguine'' of Gezone, excerpts of which are found on fol. 40r–43r, circulated principally at the foot of the Alps. Use of a form of the collection of Anselm of Lucca close to that of A Ven and B substantiates this supposition.
The manuscript Torino, BNU, E. V. 44 contains a mixture of patristic material and canon law copied by several different scribes. Liberties were taken with the texts. Excerpts from the collection of Deusdedit are found at the beginning of the manuscript together with excerpts from the much earlier ''Herovalliana'' and ''Hibernensis''. The most recent text in the manuscript is the excerpt from a letter of pope Paschal II, ''Testimonium est sermo'' (JL 6612), found on fol. 57v.  [{{FM|173}}] Giuseppe Motta argues that the manuscript was copied in northern Italy because the treatise ''De corpore et sanguine'' of Gezone, excerpts of which are found on fol. 40r–43r, circulated principally at the foot of the Alps. Use of a form of the collection of Anselm of Lucca close to that of A Ven and B substantiates this supposition.


A collection of 150 canons on fol. 71v–86v is preceded by a capitulation which contains rubrics for the first 91 canons. The canons in the collection have rubrics ''in textu'', sometimes differing slightly from those in the capitulation. Giuseppe Motta has described the contents of the manuscript as a whole and analysed this particular collection. The present analysis of this collection ({{Coll|DA}}) makes use of his analysis and ignores the rest of the manuscript. The most recent text in this part of the manuscript is the letter of pope Gregory VII to Hermann of Metz on March 15, 1081 (Reg. 8. 21, JL 5201). The collection also contains the letter of Gregory VII to Manasses of Reims in 1078 (Reg. 6. 2, JL 5081), the 11th decree of the Roman council of November 19, 1078 (Reg. 6. 5b, JL ante 5084) and the 1st and 2nd decrees of the Roman council of March 7, 1080 (Reg. 7. 14a, JL post 5154).
== The collection fol. 71v–86v ==
Julius von Pflugk-Harttung and a number of mainly German scholars treated both parts of the manuscript as one work and called it the "Turiner Sammlung" or ''Collectio Taurinensis''. Following Fowler-Magerl, the collection on fol. 71v–86v is treated as a separate collection here.


The collection begins with the rubric: ''De excellentia apostolice sedis'' (A Ven in the Ms Mantua, BCom 318: ''De primatu et excellentia Romane ecclesie'') and proceeds to the goods of the church and its privileges. Imperial intervention and lay investiture are the chief evils rather than simony. The rubric of canon 82 is: ''De excommunicatione imperatoris et absolutione suorum iuratorum''. There are texts regulating the life of canons regular, two of which (canons 97 and 98) are taken from the B version of Anselm of Lucca (canons 7. 1 and 3). Surprising is the wording of the rubric of canon 70: ''De invasoribus et iudiciorum ordine'' for the letter of pope Gregory I to Iohannes defensor, the first use of the Roman law expression ''iudiciorum ordine'' in a canon law collection.
This collection of 150 canons is preceded by a ''capitulatio'' which contains rubrics for the first 91 canons. The canons in the collection have rubrics ''in textu'', sometimes differing slightly from those in the ''capitulatio''. Giuseppe Motta has described the contents of the manuscript as a whole and analysed this particular collection. The present analysis of this collection ({{Coll|DA}}) makes use of his analysis and ignores the rest of the manuscript. The most recent text in this part of the manuscript is the letter of pope Gregory VII to Hermann of Metz on March 15, 1081 (Reg. 8. 21, JL 5201). The collection also contains the letter of Gregory VII to Manasses of Reims in 1078 (Reg. 6. 2, JL 5081), the 11th decree of the Roman council of November 19, 1078 (Reg. 6. 5b, JL ante 5084) and the 1st and 2nd decrees of the Roman council of March 7, 1080 (Reg. 7. 14a, JL post 5154).
 
The collection begins with the rubric ''De excellentia apostolice sedis'' (A Ven in the Ms Mantua, BCom 318: ''De primatu et excellentia Romane ecclesie'') and proceeds to the goods of the church and its privileges. Imperial intervention and lay investiture are the chief evils rather than simony. The rubric of canon 82 is: ''De excommunicatione imperatoris et absolutione suorum iuratorum''. There are texts regulating the life of canons regular, two of which (canons 97 and 98) are taken from the B version of Anselm of Lucca (canons 7. 1 and 3). Surprising is the wording of the rubric of canon 70: ''De invasoribus et iudiciorum ordine'' for the letter of pope Gregory I to Iohannes defensor, the first use of the Roman law expression ''iudiciorum ordine'' in a canon law collection.


== Literature ==
== Literature ==


For a description of the manuscript and an analysis of the canons on fol. 90r–110v see Giuseppe {{Author|Motta}}, Una silloge canonistica del sec. XII tra Deusdedit ed Anselmo di Lucca (Torino, Biblioteca Nazionale E.V.44), Studia Gratiana 27 (1996), pp. 413–442. – For a listing of the forgeries and the opinion that the forged texts are of interest in themselves see {{Author|Landau}}, Gefälschtes Recht, p. 42 and n. 130. – {{Author|Kéry}}, Canonical Collections, p. 284.  {{FM|174}}
For a description of the manuscript and an analysis see Giuseppe {{Author|Motta}}, Una silloge canonistica del sec. XII tra Deusdedit ed Anselmo di Lucca (Torino, Biblioteca Nazionale E.V.44), Studia Gratiana 27 (1996), pp. 413–442. – For a listing of the forgeries and the opinion that the forged texts are of interest in themselves see {{Author|Landau}}, Gefälschtes Recht, p. 42 and n. 130. – {{Author|Kéry}}, Collections p. {{Kery|284}}[{{FM|174}}]


== Categories ==
== Categories ==
* saec. XI/XII (Kéry) [[Category:Collections saec XII]]
* Early twelfth century (Motta) (Pflugk-Harttung: saec. XII/XIII; Kéry: saec. XI/XII) [[Category:Collection saec XII]]
* small [[Category:small (100 to 500 canons) collection]}
* Collection [[Category:Canonical Collection]] 
* Key is DA [[Category:Collection Key is DA]]
* small [[Category:small (100 to 500 canons) collection]]
* based on Motta's analysis [[Category:Clavis entries based on modern edition]]
* based on Motta's analysis [[Category:Clavis entries based on modern edition]]
* from northern Italy (Motta) [[Category:Collection from Northern Italy]]
* from northern Italy (Motta) [[Category:Collection from Northern Italy]]

Latest revision as of 23:15, 8 August 2024

Title Collectio canonum in Torino, BNU, E. V. 44, fol. 71v–86v
Key DA
Alternative title Collectio Taurinensis
Alternative title Turiner Sammlung
Size Small (100 to 500 canons)
Century saec. XII
European region of origin Northern Italy
General region of origin Southern Europe and Mediterranean
Main author Linda Fowler-Magerl
No. of manuscripts one

The Manuscript

Shelfmark

Note that the manuscript, and hence the collection, is sometimes referred to by an old catalogue number ("903"); in the 2005 handbook, it is called "Collectio canonum in the Ms Turin, BNU 903 (E. V. 44), fol. 71v–86v". See the description of Torino, BNU, E. V. 44 for further reference.

Contents

The manuscript Torino, BNU, E. V. 44 contains a mixture of patristic material and canon law copied by several different scribes. Liberties were taken with the texts. Excerpts from the collection of Deusdedit are found at the beginning of the manuscript together with excerpts from the much earlier Herovalliana and Hibernensis. The most recent text in the manuscript is the excerpt from a letter of pope Paschal II, Testimonium est sermo (JL 6612), found on fol. 57v. [173] Giuseppe Motta argues that the manuscript was copied in northern Italy because the treatise De corpore et sanguine of Gezone, excerpts of which are found on fol. 40r–43r, circulated principally at the foot of the Alps. Use of a form of the collection of Anselm of Lucca close to that of A Ven and B substantiates this supposition.

The collection fol. 71v–86v

Julius von Pflugk-Harttung and a number of mainly German scholars treated both parts of the manuscript as one work and called it the "Turiner Sammlung" or Collectio Taurinensis. Following Fowler-Magerl, the collection on fol. 71v–86v is treated as a separate collection here.

This collection of 150 canons is preceded by a capitulatio which contains rubrics for the first 91 canons. The canons in the collection have rubrics in textu, sometimes differing slightly from those in the capitulatio. Giuseppe Motta has described the contents of the manuscript as a whole and analysed this particular collection. The present analysis of this collection (DA) makes use of his analysis and ignores the rest of the manuscript. The most recent text in this part of the manuscript is the letter of pope Gregory VII to Hermann of Metz on March 15, 1081 (Reg. 8. 21, JL 5201). The collection also contains the letter of Gregory VII to Manasses of Reims in 1078 (Reg. 6. 2, JL 5081), the 11th decree of the Roman council of November 19, 1078 (Reg. 6. 5b, JL ante 5084) and the 1st and 2nd decrees of the Roman council of March 7, 1080 (Reg. 7. 14a, JL post 5154).

The collection begins with the rubric De excellentia apostolice sedis (A Ven in the Ms Mantua, BCom 318: De primatu et excellentia Romane ecclesie) and proceeds to the goods of the church and its privileges. Imperial intervention and lay investiture are the chief evils rather than simony. The rubric of canon 82 is: De excommunicatione imperatoris et absolutione suorum iuratorum. There are texts regulating the life of canons regular, two of which (canons 97 and 98) are taken from the B version of Anselm of Lucca (canons 7. 1 and 3). Surprising is the wording of the rubric of canon 70: De invasoribus et iudiciorum ordine for the letter of pope Gregory I to Iohannes defensor, the first use of the Roman law expression iudiciorum ordine in a canon law collection.

Literature

For a description of the manuscript and an analysis see Giuseppe Motta, Una silloge canonistica del sec. XII tra Deusdedit ed Anselmo di Lucca (Torino, Biblioteca Nazionale E.V.44), Studia Gratiana 27 (1996), pp. 413–442. – For a listing of the forgeries and the opinion that the forged texts are of interest in themselves see Landau, Gefälschtes Recht, p. 42 and n. 130. – Kéry, Collections p. 284. [174]

Categories

  • Early twelfth century (Motta) (Pflugk-Harttung: saec. XII/XIII; Kéry: saec. XI/XII)
  • Collection
  • Key is DA
  • small
  • based on Motta's analysis
  • from northern Italy (Motta)