Florilegium in Montecassino MS 372: Difference between revisions
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The | The florilegium in [[Montecassino, Archivio dell’Abbazia, 372]], pp. 149-160 ({{Coll|FM}}) was compiled in the early eleventh century at San Nicola della Cicogna, a priory of Montecassino, or at Montecassino; it is only known from this manuscript. It draws on the ''[[Collectio Hibernensis]]'' and the [[Collectio IX librorum in Vat. lat. 1349|Vatican ''Collection in Nine Books'']], and the [[Pseudoisidore, False Decretals|False Decretals]]; it has parallels to the [[Collectio V librorum|Collection in Five Books]] which according to {{author|Reynolds}} go back to a shared source. | ||
== | The short dossier contains is clearly monastic in content. It begins with a cleverly selected series of patristic excerpts which address the question of "holy implicity"; read together, they heavily imply that even Saint Jerome approved of monks studying canon law. It was edited by {{author|Reynolds}}; his edition was the basis for the addition of the florilegium to the database in 2019. | ||
== Literature == | |||
Roger E. {{author|Reynolds}}, Further evidence for the influence of the ''Hibernensis'' in southern Italy: an early eleventh-century canonistic florilegium at Montecassino (Cod. 372), in: Peritia 19 (2005); {{author|Rolker}}, Canon Law pp. 119-121. | |||
[[Category:New Collection]] | |||
[[Category:Canonical Collection]] | |||
[[Category:Collection Key is FM]] | |||
[[Category:Clavis entries based on modern edition]] |
Latest revision as of 01:41, 13 October 2024
Title | Florilegium in Montecassino MS 372 |
---|---|
Key | FM |
Century | ? |
Main author | Christof Rolker |
The florilegium in Montecassino, Archivio dell’Abbazia, 372, pp. 149-160 (FM) was compiled in the early eleventh century at San Nicola della Cicogna, a priory of Montecassino, or at Montecassino; it is only known from this manuscript. It draws on the Collectio Hibernensis and the Vatican Collection in Nine Books, and the False Decretals; it has parallels to the Collection in Five Books which according to Reynolds go back to a shared source.
The short dossier contains is clearly monastic in content. It begins with a cleverly selected series of patristic excerpts which address the question of "holy implicity"; read together, they heavily imply that even Saint Jerome approved of monks studying canon law. It was edited by Reynolds; his edition was the basis for the addition of the florilegium to the database in 2019.
Literature
Roger E. Reynolds, Further evidence for the influence of the Hibernensis in southern Italy: an early eleventh-century canonistic florilegium at Montecassino (Cod. 372), in: Peritia 19 (2005); Rolker, Canon Law pp. 119-121.