Medieval catalogues > NEW FRIARS > Aylesford-Carmelite > Part of catalogue, 1381
NEW FRIARS: Aylesford-Carmelite
F1. Part of catalogue, 1381
15 identified entries found.
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F1.1:
Concordantia maior, the so-called `third concordance' compiled by the
Dominicans of Saint-Jacques, Paris
pr. Strassburg, [not after 1474] (GW
7418) (under the name Conradus de Alemannia), &c.; Stegmüller Bibl.
1999, 3605–6; R. H. Rouse & M. A. Rouse in AFP 44 (1974) 5–30;
Kaeppeli 755 (as Conradus de Halberstadt OP). Rouse & Rouse show that the
work circulated in Paris by 1286; the attribution to Conrad is made only
in the printed editions. [For the so-called `second concordance' or
`English concordance', see Richard Stainsby.]
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F1.3:
John of Genoa OP [† after 1286]
Catholicon
pr. [Mainz ?1460] (GW 3182), Augsburg 1469 (GW
3183), &c.; Kaeppeli 2199. [Usually anonymous in lists.]
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F1.4:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Sermones de uerbis Domini et apostoli, a common grouping of
ninety-nine sermons on the Gospels and Epistles
analysis and list of
manuscripts by P. P. Verbraken in RB 77 (1967) 27–46; L. De Coninck,
La tradition manuscrite du recueil De uerbis Domini jusqu'au XIIe
siècle (Turnhout 2006). Most English copies lack the last ten sermons,
Römer, 2/1. 350–53.
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F1.5:
Peter Lombard [c1100–1160]
Sententiarum libri IV
pr. [Strassburg, before 1471] (Goff P479),
&c.; PL 192. 521–962; ed. I. Brady, Spicilegium Bonauenturianum 4–5
(Grottaferrata 1971–81).
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F1.7:
William Brito [late 13th cent.]
Expositiones uocabulorum Bibliae
ed. L. W. & B. A. Daly (Padua 1975); Stegmüller Bibl. 2820.
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F1.8 (`liber Raymundi'):
Raymond of Peñafort OP [c1180–1275]
Summa de casibus poenitentiae
ed. X. Ochoa & A. Diez, Universa
bibliotheca iuris 1B (Rome 1976); Kuttner, 443–5; Bloomfield 5054; Diaz
1324. [Manuscripts listed by L. Robles, `Escritores dominicos de la Corona
de Aragón (siglos XIII–XV)', in Repertorio de historia de las ciencias
eclesiásticas en España (Salamanca 1967–79), 3. 11–175 (at 14–31).
The common apparatus is that of William of Rennes.] [Book III tit. 34,
De poenitentiis et remissionibus, Ochoa & Diez, 795–882 (Bloomfield
3954) and Book IV, Ochoa & Diez, ??? (Bloomfield 4943) also circulate
separately.]
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F1.9a:
Raymond of Peñafort OP [c1180–1275]
[dub.]
`Sententiae Raymundi'
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F1.9c (anon.):
Willelmus Durandus the Elder [1237–1296], bishop of Mende
Rationale diuinorum officiorum
pr. Mainz 1459 (GW 9101), &c.;
ed. A. Davril & T. M. Thibodeau, CCCM 140, 140A (1995–8); Schulte,
2. 155. [There is also an annotated English translation of Book IV by T. M.
Thibodeau (Turnhout 2013).]
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F1.†9d (anon.):
Willelmus Peraldus OP [†1261]
Summa de uitiis et uirtutibus
pr. [Basel, not after 1474] (Goff
P89), &c.; Kaeppeli 1622; Bloomfield 1628, 5601. [See also William of
Auvergne, also called Parisiensis, from whose work of the same title this
is often indistinguishable.]
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F1.10:
Gregory IX (Ugolino da Segni) [c1148–1241, sedit 1227–1241]
Decretales
ed. Friedberg, Corpus iuris canonici, 2. 1–928;
Schulte, 2. 3–25, 412. [The ordinary gloss on the Decretals is that by Bernard
of Parma: pr. Strassburg 1468/71 (GW 11450), &c.; pr. Venice 1605; Schulte,
2. 115.] [Entries for Decretales ueteres are more likely to refer to one of
the older decretal compilations; entered under Bernard of Pavia.]
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F1.11:
Petrus Comestor [†1187]
Historia scholastica
pr. [Augsburg] 1473 (Goff P458), &c.; PL
198. 1053–1722; ed. H. A. Vollmer (Berlin 1925–7); Genesis only, ed. A.
Sylwan, CCCM 191 (2005).
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F1.12:
Innocent IV (Sinibaldo Fieschi) [sedit 1243–1254]
Apparatus in quinque libros Decretalium
pr. Strassburg 1478
(Goff I95), &c.; Schulte, 2. 91–4.
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F1.13a:
Liber sextus Decretalium, continuing the Decretals from Gregory IX
(1234) to Boniface VIII (1298)
pr. Strassburg 1465 (GW 4848), &c.;
ed. E. Friedberg, Corpus iuris canonici, 2. 933–1124; Schulte,
2. 34–44. [The ordinary gloss on the Sext is that of Iohannes Andreae;
at Paris that of Iohannes Monachus was preferred; the triple gloss also
contained Guido de Baysio.]
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F1.13b (`vij decretalium'):
Constitutiones Clementinae, collecting the constitutions of Clement V,
promulgated by John XXII in 1317
ed. E. Friedberg, Corpus iuris canonici,
2. 1129–1200; Schulte, 2. 45–50. [The ordinary gloss on the Clementines is
that of Iohannes Andreae; others include Jean le Moine, Guido de Baysio,
Jesselin de Cassagnes, Paulus de Liazariis, and William of Mont Lauzun.]
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F1.14 (`P. de Vineis de modo dictandi'):
Petrus de Vinea [†1249], chancellor to Frederick II
Summa dictaminis
ed. S. Schardius, Epistolarum Petri de Vineis
libri VI (Basel 1566); manuscripts listed by H. M. Schaller, Deutsches
Archiv 12 (1956) 114–59.
15 identified entries found.
All data was derived from the List of Identifications by Professor Richard Sharpe.
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