Collectio Casinensis: Difference between revisions

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== Categories ==
== Categories ==
* key is RO [[Category:Collection Key is RO]] [[Category:Collection]]
* key is RO [[Category:Collection Key is RO]] [[Category:Canonical Collection]]
* small (100 to 500 canons) collection [[Category:small (100 to 500 canons) collection]]
* small (100 to 500 canons) collection [[Category:small (100 to 500 canons) collection]]
* from Central Italy [[Category:Collection from Central Italy]]
* from Central Italy [[Category:Collection from Central Italy]]
* saec. XII [[Category:Collection saec XII]]
* saec. XII [[Category:Collection saec XII]]

Revision as of 21:46, 8 August 2024

Title Collectio Casinensis
Key RO
Size Small (100 to 500 canons)
Terminus post quem 1110
Terminus ante quem 1120
Century saec. XII
Place of origin Montecassino
European region of origin Central Italy
General region of origin Southern Europe and Mediterranean
Main author Linda Fowler-Magerl

The collection in the Ms Montecassino, Archivio dell’Abbazia, 216 was compiled at and for the abbey in the second decade of the 12th century. The manuscript was copied in Beneventan script. The canons in the collection are not numbered. Roger Reynolds, who published an analysis of the collection numbered the texts, and the present analysis is based on his analysis (RO). Reynolds points to the use of papal bulls pertaining to the abbey itself (canons 312–315). Roughly the first half of the collection (to canon 192) consists of canons taken from the Collectio V librorum and the Liber decretorum of Burchard. The rest of the collection alternates between canons from these two sources and extracts from later material. There are numerous canons also found in Ivo's Decretum and/or Collectio B of the Tripartita. An extract from a letter of pope Alexander II (canon 205) comes from one of the two. Canon 208, Presbiterorum filios (decree 14 of the council held at Melfi in 1089), is inscribed Decretum Gregorius septimus papa et Urbanus secundus, an inscription also used in the Ivonian collections. A similar inscription [216] is attached to a different canon in the Collectio canonum in Vat. lat. 4977. This collection in turn has much in common with the Casinensis. It, too, consists largely of canons from Burchard and the Collectio V librorum.

The Collectio Casinensis contains what is probably the earliest surviving copy of the Proprie auctoritates apostolicae sedis (canon 299. 4). It also contains canons from the „Cassino“ version of the Diversorum patrum sententie (74T), the 14th decree of the council of Piacenza (1095), and the seventh decree of the Lateran council of 1110, which is inscribed here Paschalis papa omnibus orthodoxis (canon 327). It is the most recent text in the collection. The compiler used some of the same sources as the compiler of the Polycarpus, which was being compiled at Rome at the same time. Robert Somerville points out the similarity of the text of canon 208 to the transmission of that text in the Polycarpus.

Literature

For the analysis see Roger Reynolds, The Collectio canonum Casinensis duodecimi seculi (Codex terscriptus). A Derivative of the South-Italian Collection in Five Books. An Implicit Edition with Introductory Study (Monumenta Liturgica Beneventana III, Studies and Texts 137, Toronto 2001). – See Myron Wojtowytsch, Proprie auctoritates apostolice sedis: Bemerkungen zu einer bisher unbeachteten Überlieferung, DA 40 (1984), pp. 616–619. – For the canons of the council of Melfi (1089), see Somerville, Pope Urban II, pp. 187, 212 and 267. – For the councils of Paschal II see Blumenthal, The Early Councils, p. 120. – Kéry, Collections p. 279–280.

Categories

  • key is RO
  • small (100 to 500 canons) collection
  • from Central Italy
  • saec. XII