Omnibonus, Abbreviatio decreti
Selected Canon Law Collections, ca. 500–1234
| Title | Omnibonus, Abbreviatio decreti |
|---|---|
| Key | |
| Wikidata Item no. | - |
| Terminus post quem | 1139 |
| Terminus ante quem | 1185 |
| Century | saec. XII |
| Place of origin | Bologna |
| European region of origin | Northern Italy |
| Author | Christof Rolker |
Omnibonus (or Omnibene) produced a substantial abbreviated version of Gratian, perhaps in 1157 (Weigand). According to Pennington/Larson, the following manuscripts are known:
- Cambrai, BM, 602
- Frankfurt, Universitätsbibliothek, Barth. 68 (with glosses)
- Köln, Historisches Archiv, Bestand 7010 248 (olim W 248), fol. 1–178 (with glosses)
- ex Königsberg, Universitätsbibliothek, 32 (with glosses). Maybe identical to Toruń, Biblioteka Uniwersytecka, Rps 30).
- London, British Library, Royal 10.C.IV, fol. 1–136 (with glosses)
- Oxford, Bodleian Library, Tanner 8, fol. 1–299
- Paris, BnF, lat. 3886 (with glosses)
- Troyes, BM, 44 (with glosses)
- Città del Vaticano, BAV, Reg. lat. 1039
Links
- Pennington/Larson, Bio-Bibliographical Guide to Medieval and Early Modern Jurists, Report a363
Edition
The abbreviatio was partly edited by von Schulte who transcribed parts of the Frankfurt manuscript in his Dissertatio de decreto.
Literature
Kuttner, Repertorium p. 259