Cambridge, Gonville and Caius College, 455 (393): Difference between revisions

From Clavis Canonum
m (Set default sortkey.)
mNo edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Cambridge, Gonville & Caius College 455(393) is a copy of the first version of the [[Collectio Tripartita]] (to Trip. B 28.10, where it ends incomplete at the end of a quire); in two columns. A text full of idiosyncratic readings,
Cambridge, Gonville & Caius College 455(393) is a copy of the first version of the [[Collectio Tripartita]] (to Trip. B 28.10, where it ends incomplete at the end of a quire); it is manuscript G in the {{author|Brett/Nowak}} edition. Written in two columns. A text full of idiosyncratic readings,
not easily related to any other. It is in an Anglo-Norman, and probably English, hand of s.xii med. (1120 x 1160 sugg. Dr Tessa Webber, July 2007), with good and unusual coloured initials. It shows few signs of use, but a second and slightly later hand made some marginal additions in Part B. Early on, some rubrics are in marginal panels, which occupy some of the main writing space. Afterwards they are in the text. The binding is of c. 1914. Formerly belonged to John Banister, who acquired it from his uncle, Joshua Lambert, in 1608. It passed later to William Moore, who gave a collection of 150 manuscripts from various sources to the College in 1659 (Prof. C.N.L. Brooke, pers. comm. to Martin Brett, identifying the book as Bernard, CMA no. 1117, which a concordance in the College copy makes the present 455/393. See too Szuromi (2010) 116-9, 151-4.
not easily related to any other. It is in an Anglo-Norman, and probably English, hand of s.xii med. (1120 x 1160 sugg. Dr Tessa Webber, July 2007), with good and unusual coloured initials. It shows few signs of use, but a second and slightly later hand made some marginal additions in Part B. Early on, some rubrics are in marginal panels, which occupy some of the main writing space. Afterwards they are in the text. The binding is of c. 1914. Formerly belonged to John Banister, who acquired it from his uncle, Joshua Lambert, in 1608. It passed later to William Moore, who gave a collection of 150 manuscripts from various sources to the College in 1659 (Prof. C.N.L. Brooke, pers. comm. to Martin Brett, identifying the book as Bernard, CMA no. 1117, which a concordance in the College copy makes the present 455/393. See too Szuromi (2010) 116-9, 151-4.


== Links ==
* {{author|Brett/Nowak}} edition of ''Tripartita'': http://ivo-of-chartres.github.io/tripartita.html
== Literature ==
{{Author|Kéry}}, Collections p. {{Kéry|244}}


== Categories ==
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cambridge, Gonville and Caius College, 00455 (00393)}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cambridge, Gonville and Caius College, 00455 (00393)}}
* Manuscript [[Category:Manuscript]]
[[Category:Manuscript]]
* Manuscript [[Category:Manuscript from England]]
[[Category:Manuscript from England]]
* saec XII med [[Category:Manuscript saec XII]]  
[[Category:Manuscript saec XII]]  
* not digitized [[Category:Manuscript not digitized]]
[[Category:Manuscript not digitized]]
* copy of Tripartita [[Category:Manuscript of IT]]
[[Category:Manuscript of IT]]

Latest revision as of 21:18, 15 September 2024

Cambridge, Gonville & Caius College 455(393) is a copy of the first version of the Collectio Tripartita (to Trip. B 28.10, where it ends incomplete at the end of a quire); it is manuscript G in the Brett/Nowak edition. Written in two columns. A text full of idiosyncratic readings, not easily related to any other. It is in an Anglo-Norman, and probably English, hand of s.xii med. (1120 x 1160 sugg. Dr Tessa Webber, July 2007), with good and unusual coloured initials. It shows few signs of use, but a second and slightly later hand made some marginal additions in Part B. Early on, some rubrics are in marginal panels, which occupy some of the main writing space. Afterwards they are in the text. The binding is of c. 1914. Formerly belonged to John Banister, who acquired it from his uncle, Joshua Lambert, in 1608. It passed later to William Moore, who gave a collection of 150 manuscripts from various sources to the College in 1659 (Prof. C.N.L. Brooke, pers. comm. to Martin Brett, identifying the book as Bernard, CMA no. 1117, which a concordance in the College copy makes the present 455/393. See too Szuromi (2010) 116-9, 151-4.

Links

Literature

Kéry, Collections p. 244