Collectio Burdegalensis analysis: Difference between revisions

Selected Canon Law Collections, ca. 500–1234
Created page with "== The Burchard version used == The compiler of the ''Burdegalensis'' used an Italian, though not a Milan, version of Burchard ({{author|Schneider}}). Namely, Book 1 contains an addition typical of the Italian Burchard (''Burdegalensis'' 1.24 = Burchard 1.23A) and Burchard 2.23 is displaced as in the Italian tradition (''Burdegalensis'' 2.7-9 = Burchard 2.18, 23, 19)."
 
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
The ''[[Collectio Burdegalensis]]'' is a collection compiled in the late eleventh century or not much later in Aquitaine extant in two manuscripts. Its main formal source is [[Burchard]], supplemented from ''[[74T]]''. Compared to Burchard's ''Liber decretorum'', the ''Burdegalensis'' has a clear focus on monks and their privileges.
The Burdegalensis is divided into sixteen books. Two books on monastic liberty (one on monks, a shorter one on nuns) have no model in Burchard; here, the compiler drew on 74T.
== The Burchard version used ==
== The Burchard version used ==
The compiler of the ''Burdegalensis'' used an Italian, though not a Milan, version of Burchard ({{author|Schneider}}). Namely, Book 1 contains an addition typical of the Italian Burchard (''Burdegalensis'' 1.24 = Burchard 1.23A) and Burchard 2.23 is displaced as in the Italian tradition (''Burdegalensis'' 2.7-9 = Burchard 2.18, 23, 19).
The compiler of the ''Burdegalensis'' used an Italian, though not a Milan, version of Burchard ({{author|Schneider}}). Namely, Book 1 contains an addition typical of the Italian Burchard (''Burdegalensis'' 1.24 = Burchard 1.23A) and Burchard 2.23 is displaced as in the Italian tradition (''Burdegalensis'' 2.7-9 = Burchard 2.18, 23, 19).
For details, see https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1vcOdtstjR2pQpne7DzD-Mu-v8PenoiYZG2CqHxwhJtY/edit?gid=0#gid=0

Latest revision as of 21:38, 22 April 2025

The Collectio Burdegalensis is a collection compiled in the late eleventh century or not much later in Aquitaine extant in two manuscripts. Its main formal source is Burchard, supplemented from 74T. Compared to Burchard's Liber decretorum, the Burdegalensis has a clear focus on monks and their privileges.

The Burdegalensis is divided into sixteen books. Two books on monastic liberty (one on monks, a shorter one on nuns) have no model in Burchard; here, the compiler drew on 74T.

The Burchard version used

The compiler of the Burdegalensis used an Italian, though not a Milan, version of Burchard (Schneider). Namely, Book 1 contains an addition typical of the Italian Burchard (Burdegalensis 1.24 = Burchard 1.23A) and Burchard 2.23 is displaced as in the Italian tradition (Burdegalensis 2.7-9 = Burchard 2.18, 23, 19).


For details, see https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1vcOdtstjR2pQpne7DzD-Mu-v8PenoiYZG2CqHxwhJtY/edit?gid=0#gid=0