Statuta ecclesiae antiqua: Difference between revisions
Selected Canon Law Collections, ca. 500–1234
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Several | {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Statuta ecclesiae antiqua''}} | ||
{{Infobox collection | |||
| size = Small (100 to 500 canons) | |||
| century = saec. V | |||
| normregion = Southern France | |||
| generalregion = Southern Europe and Mediterranean | |||
|wikidata=Q1684290|mss=none| title = Statuta ecclesiae antiqua | |||
| author1 = [[User:Linda Fowler-Magerl|Linda Fowler-Magerl]] | |||
}} | |||
Several collections contain mainly conciliar material they seem to have taken from a collection they refer to as the ''Stauta ecclesiae antiqua''. This apparently was a small systematic collection compiled in Gaul in the mid-fifth century. It is not extant and can only be reconstructed from its use by later compilers. | |||
Munier, who edited the collection (CCSL 148 pp. 166–185), attributed it to Gennadius of Marseille. | Munier, who edited the collection (CCSL 148 pp. 166–185), attributed it to Gennadius of Marseille. | ||
[[Category:Collection not in Clavis database]] [[Category:Canonical Collection]] | |||
[[Category:Pre-Gratian Collection]] | |||
[[Category:Pre-Gratian Collection containing papal letters]] | |||
[[Category:small (100 to 500 canons) collection]] | |||
[[Category:Collection from Southern France]] | |||
[[Category:Collection saec V]] | |||
[[Category:Stub]] | |||
Latest revision as of 15:39, 31 October 2025
| Title | Statuta ecclesiae antiqua |
|---|---|
| Key | ? |
| Wikidata Item no. | Q1684290 |
| Size | Small (100 to 500 canons) |
| Century | saec. V |
| European region of origin | Southern France |
| General region of origin | Southern Europe and Mediterranean |
| Author | Linda Fowler-Magerl |
| No. of manuscripts | none |
Several collections contain mainly conciliar material they seem to have taken from a collection they refer to as the Stauta ecclesiae antiqua. This apparently was a small systematic collection compiled in Gaul in the mid-fifth century. It is not extant and can only be reconstructed from its use by later compilers.
Munier, who edited the collection (CCSL 148 pp. 166–185), attributed it to Gennadius of Marseille.