Bamberg, Staatsbibliothek, Msc.Can.4: Difference between revisions
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The composite manuscript contains the Constitum Constantini in part I (Italian, ca. 1000) and [[Pseudoisidore, False Decretals|Pseudoisidore]] in part II (Italian, early eleventh century); later hands (saec. XI2/4 or XI3/4) have made additions on fol. 146v-149r. If these additions are Italian too, the codex cannot have been gifted to Bamberg by Henry II as is commonly assumed. | The composite manuscript contains the Constitum Constantini in part I (Italian, ca. 1000) and [[Pseudoisidore, False Decretals|Pseudoisidore]] in part II (Italian, early eleventh century); later hands (saec. XI2/4 or XI3/4) have made additions on fol. 146v-149r. If these additions are Italian too, the codex cannot have been gifted to Bamberg by Henry II as is commonly assumed. | ||
According to a marginal note fol. 17r (saec. XI, partly damaged), the Pseudoisidore part was bought by a bishop named Anselm: ''Istum librum sibi adquisiuit Anselmus episcopus''. Hoffmann tought it possible that this referred to Anselm I or II of Lucca or Anselm II of Aosta. | |||
{{Author|Hoffmann}}, Bamberger Handschriften pp. 121-122. - {{Author|Kéry}}, Collections p. {{Kéry|100}}. | {{Author|Hoffmann}}, Bamberger Handschriften pp. 121-122. - {{Author|Kéry}}, Collections p. {{Kéry|100}}. | ||
Revision as of 13:50, 1 April 2026
| Library | Bamberg, Staatsbibliothek |
|---|---|
| Shelfmark | Msc.Can.4 |
| Olim shelfmark | P.I.8 |
| Century | saec. XI |
| Provenance | Bamberg cathedral |
| European region of origin | Not at present in one of our Categories for manuscripts by region |
| Biblissima QID | Q252631 |
| Collection | Pseudoisidore A2 |
| Digital Images | zendsbb.digitale-sammlungen.de |
| Author | Christof Rolker |
This article on Bamberg, Staatsbibliothek, Msc.Can.4 is a stub.
The composite manuscript contains the Constitum Constantini in part I (Italian, ca. 1000) and Pseudoisidore in part II (Italian, early eleventh century); later hands (saec. XI2/4 or XI3/4) have made additions on fol. 146v-149r. If these additions are Italian too, the codex cannot have been gifted to Bamberg by Henry II as is commonly assumed.
According to a marginal note fol. 17r (saec. XI, partly damaged), the Pseudoisidore part was bought by a bishop named Anselm: Istum librum sibi adquisiuit Anselmus episcopus. Hoffmann tought it possible that this referred to Anselm I or II of Lucca or Anselm II of Aosta.
Hoffmann, Bamberger Handschriften pp. 121-122. - Kéry, Collections p. 100.