München, BSB, Clm 6242: Difference between revisions

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==Contents==
==Contents==
TO BE FINISHED München Clm 6242 is a large and bulky codex and contains a remarkable, unusual, and rather packed mix of late antique and early medieval textual material. One of Ansegisus's ''capitularia'' dominates its contents. Some other works are computistical, such as Bede's ''De temporibus'', a ''cosmographia'', ''De observatione quattuor temporum'', or medical (''Potio ad cauculum''), as well as geographical (a description of central Asian provinces), prognostic (a ''lunarium''), and kinship (''de consanguinitate''). Another large portion, put together of various snippets scattered throughout the manuscript, is biblical (including a sketch of Noah's Ark), canonical (including the ''[[Collectio XXX capitulorum (De ratione matrimonii)]]''), penitential (Benedict of Aniane), sermon, or patristic material. This includes various (excerpts of) epistles of Pseudo-Hormisdas, Pseudo-Gregory the Great, Jerome, and Caesarius of Arles, as well as some conciliar works. Lastly, Fortunatus's ''praefatio carminum'' was included.
TO BE FINISHED München Clm 6242 is a large and bulky codex <<<and contains a remarkable, unusual, and rather packed mix of late antique and early medieval textual material. One of Ansegisus's ''capitularia'' dominates its contents. Some other works are computistical, such as Bede's ''De temporibus'', a ''cosmographia'', ''De observatione quattuor temporum'', or medical (''Potio ad cauculum''), as well as geographical (a description of central Asian provinces), prognostic (a ''lunarium''), and kinship (''de consanguinitate''). Another large portion, put together of various snippets scattered throughout the manuscript, is biblical (including a sketch of Noah's Ark), canonical (including the ''[[Collectio XXX capitulorum (De ratione matrimonii)]]''), penitential (Benedict of Aniane), sermon, or patristic material. This includes various (excerpts of) epistles of Pseudo-Hormisdas, Pseudo-Gregory the Great, Jerome, and Caesarius of Arles, as well as some conciliar works. Lastly, Fortunatus's ''praefatio carminum'' was included.>>>


See the digitized version: https://www.digitale-sammlungen.de/view/bsb00036889?page=1.
See the digitized version: https://www.digitale-sammlungen.de/view/bsb00036889?page=1.

Revision as of 11:08, 16 September 2024

Place München
Library Bayerische Staatsbibliothek
Shelfmark Clm 6242
Century s. IX1/3, after 811
General region of origin Freising
ISIL no. unknown
Collection Collectio XXX capitulorum (De ratione matrimonii)
Collection 2 Collectio Dionysio-Hadriana
Main author Bruno Schalekamp


München, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Clm 6242 is an early ninth-century manuscript of 311 folios in 1 col. (315 x 210 mm). Its codicological composition reads as follows: 40 quires: IV8 + (V – 1)17 + (III – 1?)22 + (IV + 1?)31 + 18 x IV175 + III181 + 13 x IV285 + (IV – 2)292; restored quires: 2 x IV307 + (III – 2?)311, quire signatures in Roman numerals start at I31 until XX181, no signatures hereafter. Modern folio numbering in Arabic numerals are found on the recto side of each folio in a modern hand. It was written by numerous (but unknown amount of) hands in Caroline minuscule according to Bischoff and contains some additions from s. X according to its catalogue. The manuscript's origins can be traced to Freising and was probably penned down under the rule of bishop Hitto (811-835). The manuscript's provenance is from the Cathedral Chapter of Freising based on a signature on fol. 1r, which reads: Liber iste est sancte marie sanctique corbiniani frising[e] (by hand from s. XII).

Contents

TO BE FINISHED München Clm 6242 is a large and bulky codex <<<and contains a remarkable, unusual, and rather packed mix of late antique and early medieval textual material. One of Ansegisus's capitularia dominates its contents. Some other works are computistical, such as Bede's De temporibus, a cosmographia, De observatione quattuor temporum, or medical (Potio ad cauculum), as well as geographical (a description of central Asian provinces), prognostic (a lunarium), and kinship (de consanguinitate). Another large portion, put together of various snippets scattered throughout the manuscript, is biblical (including a sketch of Noah's Ark), canonical (including the Collectio XXX capitulorum (De ratione matrimonii)), penitential (Benedict of Aniane), sermon, or patristic material. This includes various (excerpts of) epistles of Pseudo-Hormisdas, Pseudo-Gregory the Great, Jerome, and Caesarius of Arles, as well as some conciliar works. Lastly, Fortunatus's praefatio carminum was included.>>>

See the digitized version: https://www.digitale-sammlungen.de/view/bsb00036889?page=1.

folios texts
Front cover and flyleaf
1r-2r Epistle of pope Nicholas I (no. 138) to Solomon I, bishop of Constance
2r Two versions of the first canon of the Council of Ancyra (314)
2v-289v Collectio Dionysio-Hadriana
289v-291v Decretal of pope Gregory the Great concerning the Council of Rome (595)
292r-299r St. Augustine's De haeresibus
299r-303r Isidore de Seville's Etymologiae, book 8, chapter 5
303r-308v Collectio XXX capitulorum (De ratione matrimonii)
308v-310r Excerpts of Pseudoisidore's False Decretals
310r Excerpt of canon 14 of the Council of Mainz (847)
310v Small collection of titulary excerpts of various councils, such as those at Ancyra, Neo-Caesarea and Carthage, and papal decretals, such as those of Gelasius, Innocent and Anastasius
311r Excerpt of the Council of Rome (743) organized by pope Zachary, canon 15
311v Excerpt of an epistle of pope Gregory III to St. Boniface
311v Pope Gregory II's In constitutis Gregorii papae
311v Excerpt of Isidore de Seville's Etymologiae, book 9, chapter 6
311v Some probationes pennae from the middle to the end of the verso side
Flyleaf and back cover

Literature

Bischoff, Schreibschulen Vol. 1 (1960), p. 100; Kéry, Canonical Collections (1999), p. 15, 76, and 81; Mordek, Kirchenrecht und Reform (1975), p. 259; Reynolds, Law and Liturgy (1994), p. 115 (IV); Sdralek, ‘Handschriftlich-kritische Untersuchungen’ (1882), p. 192.

An edition of the Collectio XXX capitulorum (De ratione matrimonii) is currently being prepared by Sven Meeder, Gideon de Jong, and Bruno Schalekamp.