Collectio X partium in Köln, Historisches Archiv, Bestand 7010, 199

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Title Collectio X partium
Key KO
Alternative title Collectio X partium in Köln 199
Alternative title Cologne 10P
Size Very large (more than 2000 canons)
Terminus post quem 1139
Terminus ante quem 1199
Century saec. XII
Place of origin Rhineland
European region of origin Western Germany
General region of origin Northwestern Europe
Specific region of origin Rhineland
Main author Martin Brett


The Cologne Collection in Ten Parts (KO) parts is largely a re-arrangement of part A of the Collectio Tripartita in ten topical books.

The Manuscripts

In the 2005 version of the Clavis handbook (pp. 191-192) it was described on the basis of Köln, Historisches Archiv, Bestand 7010, 199, which for a long time was the only known copy. It has suffered some damage, and particularly the loss of a quire containing 2.15.3 med.–3.7.12. A second version in Leipzig, Universitätsbibliothek, Cod. Haen. 16, also once at Cologne, is a better copy, and probably is the source for the one still at Cologne. It too has lost a quire, this one covering 5.2.25 med. – 5.4.62 med., so between the two mss the whole can be reconstructed.

The Tripartia Version Used

Though neither Petersmann nor Fowler-Magerl made the claim, their accounts could be read as suggesting this as a witness to the circulation of Tripartita A without Tripartita B. However, Tripartita B does in fact appear occasionally in the collection – Köln, fol. 35v for Trip. 3.3.11-2, Leipzig fo.56r-v for Trip. 3.10.43, Köln, fol. 113v for Trip. 3.12.8, fol. 114v for 3.13.1, fol. 116v for 3.3.12, fols 118v-119v for 3.8.6-7a and 3.8.9; fol. 140 for 3.10.53; fo. 151 for 3.10.50; fos 153v-154v for 3.9.23; fol. 158v for 3.27.15; fol. 167r-v for 3.15.1, 3.15.4b, fol. 169r-v for 3.15.5b, 3.15.17, 21, 22; fol. 173 for 3.15.79; fol. 178v-179 for 3.16.8, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18; fos 179v-180 for 3.16.26. Further, sample collation of the Trip. A texts included shows that these were taken from the later state of the text, including 1.14.14. and 1.38.26a, peculiar to the later form. Though the editorial activity here is of considerable interest, it is most unlikely that the variants of the manuscript take one behind the text of more conventional copies.

Manuscripts

Two manuscripts are known:

Literature

The first person to recognize the significance of the collection was Johanna Petersmann, Die kanonistische Überlieferung des Constitutum Constantini bis zum Dekret Gratians: Untersuchung und Edition, DA 30 (1974), pp. 447–449. The Cologne manuscript had been known until then only for its artful initials and texts dealing with trade in Cologne in the early 12th century. Bruce Brasington generously shared his notes with Fowler-Magerl and Brett. – For the texts on canons regular see Charles Dereine, L’élaboration du statut canonique des chanoines réguliers spécialement sous Urbain II, RHE 46 (1951), pp. 534–565. – Kéry, Collections p. 287.

Links

Categories

  • Collection
  • key is KO
  • very large (more than 2000 canons) collection
  • from Rhineland
  • saec. XII
  • entries based on MS

DEFAULTSORT Collectio 010 partium Köln