Medieval catalogues > NEW FRIARS > Exeter-Dominican > Leland, c. 1536-40
NEW FRIARS: Exeter-Dominican
F10. Leland, c. 1536-40
73 identified entries found.
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F10.†7 (`notule super Matheum secundum fratrem Symonem Hoton'):
Simon of Hinton OP [† after 1261]
(attrib.) Postills on Matthew
unpr.; Stegmüller Bibl. 7680; Kaeppeli
3599. Extract, ed. B. Smalley, `Two biblical commentaries of Simon of Hinton',
RTAM 13 (1946) 57–85 (text, 79–85).
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F10.11:
Bernard of Clairvaux OCist [1090–1153], abbot of Clairvaux
Sermones super Cantica canticorum
SBO vols. 1–2.
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F10.12a:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De doctrina christiana
CPL 263; ed. J. Martin, CCSL 32
(1962) 1–167; ed. R. P. H. Green (Oxford 1995).
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F10.12b (attrib. Augustine):
Caesarius of Arles [c470–542], archbishop of Arles
De igne purgatorio (serm. 179; ps. Augustine serm.
104)
CPPM 1. 889; ed. G. Morin, CCSL 104 (1953) 724–9.
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F10.12c (`Augustinus . . de ammonicione'):
Caesarius of Arles [c470–542], archbishop of Arles
Sermo de resurrectione (serm. 206; ps. Augustine, serm. 252)
ed. G. Morin, CCSL 104 (1954) 824–8; CPPM 1. 1037, 4336.
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F10.12d:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Enchiridion
CPL 295; ed. E. Evans, CCSL 46 (1969) 23–114.
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F10.12e:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De praesentia Dei (ep. 187)
CPL 262; PL 33. 832–48; ed. A.
Goldbacher, CSEL 57 (1911) 81–119; Römer, 2/1. 296–7.
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F10.12f:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De duabus animabus
CPL 317.
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F10.12g:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Ad Orosium contra Priscillianistas
CPL 327.
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F10.12h:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Retractationes
CPL 250; ed. A. Mutzenbecher, CCSL 57 (1984).
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F10.12i:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De libero arbitrio
CPL 260; ed. W. M. Green, CCSL 29 (1970) 211–321.
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F10.12j:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De haeresibus
CPL 314; ed. R. Vander Plaetse & C. Beukers, CCSL 46 (1969) 273–345.
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F10.12k:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De perfectione iustitiae hominis
CPL 347.
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F10.12l:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De natura et gratia
CPL 344.
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F10.12m (`ad Valentinum'):
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Epistulae ad Valentinum (epp. 214–15)
CPL 262; PL 33. 968–74;
ed. A. Goldbacher, CSEL 57 (1911) 380–96.
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F10.12n:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De gratia et libero arbitrio
CPL 352.
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F10.12o:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De correptione et gratia
CPL 353; ed. G. Folliet, CSEL 92
(2000) 219–80.
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F10.12p (`Beda de imagine mundi'):
Honorius Augustodunensis [c1080–1137]
Imago mundi
→ Gossuin de Metz.]
PL 172. 119–188; ed. V. I. J. Flint, AHDLMA 49 (1982)
7–153. [For the French poem of this name,
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F10.12q:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De natura boni
CPL 323.
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F10.12r:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De immortalitate animae
CPL 256; ed. W. Hörmann, CSEL 89 (1986) 101–128.
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F10.13:
John Chrysostom [c347–407], patriarch of Constantinople
[pseud.]
Opus imperfectum in Matthaeum
CPL 707; J. van Banning, CCSL 87B
(1988); Stegmüller Bibl. 4350. [The tradition is largely English, and
this work is much commoner in England than the authentic Homilies on Matthew.]
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F10.14b (anon., see note):
Hugh of Saint-Cher OP [†1263]
Expositio missae siue Speculum ecclesiae
pr. Louvain 1476/7
(Goff H515), &c.; ed. G. Sölch, Opuscula et textus historiam ecclesiae
eiusque uitam atque doctrinam illustrantia 9 (Münster 1940); Kaeppeli
1990.
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F10.14c (`omelie Gregorii'):
Gregory the Great [c540–604, sedit 590–604]
Homiliae XL in euangelia
CPL 1711; pr. [Augsburg] 1473 (GW
11418), &c.
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F10.15a (attrib. Augustine):
Caesarius of Arles [c470–542], archbishop of Arles
De igne purgatorio (serm. 179; ps. Augustine serm.
104)
CPPM 1. 889; ed. G. Morin, CCSL 104 (1953) 724–9.
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F10.15b:
Bernard of Clairvaux OCist [1090–1153], abbot of Clairvaux
[pseud.]
Meditationes piissimae de cognitione humanae conditionis
PL 184.
485–508; Bloomfield 3126.
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F10.15c:
Anselm of Canterbury OSB [c1033–1109], archbishop of Canterbury
Orationes and Meditationes
SAO 3. 3–75, 76–91, for authentic
works. Manuscript collections varied widely and usually comprised both authentic
and pseudonymous texts; for a 12th-cent. example, see T. H. Bestul, A Durham
Book of Devotions (Toronto 1987). PL 158. 709–820 is a compilation based
on later medieval collections; these tend to be far more extensive than those
of the 12th cent. [See also Wilmart, Auteurs spirituels, 147–216.]
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F10.15d:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
[pseud.]
Meditationes de spiritu sancto
CPPM 2. 3072; PL 40.
901–942; Wilmart, Auteurs, 415–56.
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F10.15e:
Similitudines Anselmi
PL 159. 605–708. This is much commoner than
the arguably authentic (but posthumously edited), Liber Anselmi de
humanis moribus: ed. R. W. Southern & F. S. Schmitt, Memorials of St
Anselm (London 1969), 39–104. [See also Anselm ps., De XIIII
partibus beatitudinis.]
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F10.16:
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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F10.17:
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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F10.†18 (`questiones que sic incipiunt Vtrum anima'):
Thomas Aquinas OP [c1225–1274]
Kaeppeli's repertory of Dominican writers excluded Thomas Aquinas, for
whom there is no manuscript-based listing. Since the list by Glorieux,
1. 85–104, the tally of works has been reduced. For an up-to-date list,
see G. Emery in J. P. Torrell, Thomas Aquinas 1 The Person and His work
(Washington, DC, 1996), 330–61, following on from lists by I. T. Eschmann
in E. Gilson, The Christian Philosophy of St Thomas Aquinas (New York,
NY, 1956), 381–437, and J. A. Weisheipl, Friar Thomas d'Aquino (New
York, NY, 1974), 355–405. There is an up-to-date list of current editions
by E. Alarcón, Optimae editiones operum Thomae de Aquino,
http://corpusthomisticum.org/reoptiedi.html.
[pseud.]
Quaestio Vtrum anima
ed. L. A. Kennedy, `The soul's knowledge of
itself. An unpublished work attributed to Thomas Aquinas', Vivarium 15
(1977) 34–45.
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F10.19 (Ia IIe):
Thomas Aquinas OP [c1225–1274]
Summa theologica
STO vols. 4–12; Glorieux Rép. 14ax.
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F10.21 (`liber paruus qui sic incipit Tripliciter est esse'):
John Foulsham OCarm [†1348]
[pseud.]
Moralitates de naturis rerum, incorrectly attributed by Bale to
John Foulsham
ed. D. V. Abramov (forthcoming); Sharpe, Latin Writers, 249;
Bloomfield 6089.
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F10.22 (I):
Richard Fishacre OP [†1248]
Commentary on the Lombard's Sentences
unpr. apart from prol. ed. R. J. Long
in Med. Stud. 34 (1972) 71–98; Sharpe Latin Writers, 477; Stegmüller
Sent. 718; Kaeppeli 3466.
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F10.23:
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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F10.27:
Nicholas de Gorran OP [† c1295]
Distinctiones theologicae
unpr.; Kaeppeli 3090; Bloomfield 0062.
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F10.28 (`distinctiones Odonis super psalterium') = F11.27:
Odo de Castro Radulphi [†1273]
Distinctiones super Psalterium
unpr.; Stegmüller Bibl. 6082–3.
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F10.29 (`distincciones Boraston Abicere'):
Simon Boraston OP [† after 1338]
Distinctiones theologiae
unpr.; Bloomfield 0074; Stegmüller Bibl.
7641; Kaeppeli 3589; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 609–10.
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F10.31c:
Robert Grosseteste, known as Lincolniensis [†1253], bishop of Lincoln
Templum Domini
ed. J. W. Goering & F. A. C. Mantello (Toronto 1984);
Thomson, Grosseteste, 138–140; Bloomfield 5982.
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F10.33:
Bartholomew the Englishman [†1250]
De proprietatibus rerum
pr. Frankfurt 1601; H. Meyer, Die
Enzyklopädie des Bartholomäus Anglicus. Untersuchungen zur Überlieferungs-
und Rezeptionsgeschichte von De proprietatibus rerum (Munich 2000);
Sharpe, Latin Writers, 69. A collaborative edition is in progress in the
series De diuersis artibus (Turnhout 2007–).
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F10.34:
Thomas Hibernicus [14th cent.]
Manipulus florum
pr. Piacenza 1483 &c. Discussed by
R. H. & M. A. Rouse, Preachers, Florilegia, and Sermons: Studies on the
Manipulus Florum of Thomas of Ireland (Toronto 1979).
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F10.38 (`legenda sanctorum') = F11.39:
Iacobus de Voragine (Iacopo da Varazze) OP [†1298]
Legenda aurea
ed. T. Graesse (Breslau 18903/ repr. Osnabrück
1965); ed. G. P. Maggioni, Millennio medievale 6 (Florence 1998, 21999);
Kaeppeli 2154. [B. Fleith, Studien zur Überlieferungsgeschichte der
lateinischen Legenda aurea, Subsidia hagiographica 72 (1991), records more
than one thousand copies in manuscript; ISTC records some 150 printed
editions before 1501.]
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F10.39 (abbrev.) = F11.42:
Iacobus de Voragine (Iacopo da Varazze) OP [†1298]
Legenda aurea
ed. T. Graesse (Breslau 18903/ repr. Osnabrück
1965); ed. G. P. Maggioni, Millennio medievale 6 (Florence 1998, 21999);
Kaeppeli 2154. [B. Fleith, Studien zur Überlieferungsgeschichte der
lateinischen Legenda aurea, Subsidia hagiographica 72 (1991), records more
than one thousand copies in manuscript; ISTC records some 150 printed
editions before 1501.]
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F10.40a (`speculum Marie', anon.):
Conrad Holtnicker of Saxony OFM [†1279]
Speculum beatae Mariae uirginis
ed. L. Schmitz (Quaracchi 1904);
Distelbrink 214; Glorieux Rép. 305dp; Stegmüller Bibl. 2016–17.
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F10.40b (anon.):
Geoffrey of Coldingham OSB [early 13th cent.], monk of Durham
(?), Vita S. Godrici
ed. G. Henskens, Acta SS., Maii V (1685), 70–85;
BHL 3602. The Life was written soon after 1196 by a Durham monk named
Geoffrey, probably to be identified with the chronicler; this is the most
widely known Life of St Godric.
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F10.41a:
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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F10.†41b (`biblia pauperum'):
Nicholaus de Hanapis OP [c1225–1291], patriarch of Jerusalem
Liber de exemplis sacrae scripturae
pr. as a work of
Bonaventure, [Venice c. 1480] (Goff B850), &c.; S. Bonaventurae opera
(Paris 1588–96), 7. 469–563; Distelbrink 64; Kaeppeli 3094; Stegmüller
Bibl. 5815; Bloomfield 1006. [Discussion of the early editions and their
various texts by V. Scholderer in Gutenberg Jahrbuch 1936, 61–2.]
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F10.42 (part):
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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F10.43:
Bede the Venerable [c673–735], monk of Wearmouth–Jarrow
Vita S. Cuthberti
CPL 1381; BHL 2021.
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F10.44:
Silvester
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F10.45 (`tractatus de scaccario moralizato', inc.):
Jacobus de Cessolis OP [† after 1322]
Liber de moribus hominum et officiis nobilium ac popularium super ludo
scaccorum
ed. F. Vetter, Das Schachzabelbuch Kunrats von Ammenhausen nebst
den Schachbüchern des Jakob von Cessole und des Jakob Mennel (Frauenfeld
1892); Kaeppeli 2066. [Catalogue of manuscripts from German Sprachraum by O.
Plessow & others, Mittelalterliche Schachzabelbücher zwischen Spielsymbolik
und Wertevermittlung. Der Schachtraktat des Jacobus de Cessolis im Kontext
seiner spätmittelalterlichen Rezeption (Münster 2007).]
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F10.46:
Isidore of Seville [†636], bishop of Seville
Etymologiae
CPL 1186; Diaz 122.
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F10.47 (`Brito'):
William Brito [late 13th cent.]
Expositiones uocabulorum Bibliae
ed. L. W. & B. A. Daly (Padua 1975); Stegmüller Bibl. 2820.
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F10.48:
Priscian [fl. 500]
De constructione (Institutiones grammaticae XVII–XVIII)
CPL
1546; GL 3. 105–377.
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F10.49a (`liber qui sic incipit, Si separaueris'):
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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F10.49b (`cum libro de gramatica de nominibus utensilium', anon.):
Alexander Nequam OSA [1157–1217], canon of Cirencester
De nominibus utensilium
ed. T. Wright, A Volume of Vocabularies
(London 1857), 96–119; ed. A. B. Hunt, Teaching and Learning Latin in
Thirteenth-Century England (Cambridge 1991), 1. 181–90; Hunt, Nequam,
126–8; Dean 301.
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F10.50 (`R. super Donatum cum aliis opusculis'):
Remigius of Auxerre [841–908], monk of Saint-Germain, Auxerre
Commentary on Donatus's Ars minor
ed. W. Fox, Teubner (1902).
With or without his Commentary on Donatus's Ars maior: ed. H. Hagen, Anecdota
Helvetica (Leipzig 1870), 219–274; complemented by the missing portions,
ed. J. P. Elder, Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 56–57 (1945–6)
129–60; Manitius, Geschichte, 1. 506–8.
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F10.51 (`cum apparatu'):
Gratian [† by c1160]
Decretum
PL 187; ed. E. Friedberg, Corpus iuris canonici, vol.
1 (1879). [The ordinary gloss on the Decretum is that of Iohannes Teutonicus,
revised in the mid 13th cent. by Bartholomew of Brescia: pr. Venice 1605;
Kuttner, 103–115.] [`Paleae' are canons added to Gratian's original
recension in the second, vulgate version.]
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F10.52 (`sine apparatu'):
Gratian [† by c1160]
Decretum
PL 187; ed. E. Friedberg, Corpus iuris canonici, vol.
1 (1879). [The ordinary gloss on the Decretum is that of Iohannes Teutonicus,
revised in the mid 13th cent. by Bartholomew of Brescia: pr. Venice 1605;
Kuttner, 103–115.] [`Paleae' are canons added to Gratian's original
recension in the second, vulgate version.]
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F10.53 (anon.):
Willelmus de Pagula [early 14th cent.]
Summa summarum
unpr.; excerpts ed. L. E. Boyle, Proceedings of
Second Congress of Medieval Canon Law (Vatican City 1965), 415–56;
Bloomfield 0234; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 800.
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F10.54 (`cum apparatu'):
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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F10.55:
Goffredo di Trani [†1245]
Summa super titulis Decretalium
pr. [Cologne c. 1480] (GW
10949), &c.; Schulte, 2. 89–91.
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F10.55b:
Summa Actor et reus, inc. `Audacium improborum'
ed. L. Wahrmund in Archiv
für katholisches Kirchenrecht 79 (1899) 403–424, 603–628; J. E. Sayers in
BMCL new ser. 6 (1976) 75–81.
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F10.†56 (`liber Codicis apparatus'):
Azo of Bologna [†1220]
Summa Codicis and Summa Institutionum
pr. Speyer 1482 (GW 3144),
&c.; pr. Venice 1610.
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F10.57:
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.]
-
F10.58a:
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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F10.58b (`cum partibus tribus oculorum sacerdotis', anon.):
Willelmus de Pagula [early 14th cent.]
Oculus sacerdotis
unpr.; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 799; Bloomfield
1088, 2499, 3129, 3686.
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F10.†59 (anon.):
John of Freiburg OP [†1314]
Summa confessorum
pr. Augsburg 1476 (Goff J316), &c.; Schulte, 2.
421–2; Bloomfield 5256; Kaeppeli 2344. [Published in 1298; anonymous copies
often indistinguishable from the earlier work by Thomas of Chobham.]
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F10.60:
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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F10.61 (`summa magistri Thome de Cobham'):
Thomas of Chobham [† after 1233]
Summa confessorum
ed. F. Broomfield, Analecta
mediaevalia Namurcensia 25 (1968); Bloomfield 1145. [Anonymous copies after
1298 are more likely to be the work of John of Freiburg.]
-
F10.†62 (anon., abbrev.):
John of Freiburg OP [†1314]
Summa confessorum
pr. Augsburg 1476 (Goff J316), &c.; Schulte, 2.
421–2; Bloomfield 5256; Kaeppeli 2344. [Published in 1298; anonymous copies
often indistinguishable from the earlier work by Thomas of Chobham.]
-
F10.64 (`textus ueteris logice'):
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
L. Minio-Paluello in DSB 1. 267–81 (on tradition and influence).
Indexing Aristotle's works presents difficulties at several levels. He
wrote a great deal. The sources provide evidence at different periods for the
Greek text, multiple Latin translations from Arabic and from Greek, groupings
of individual works under familiar medieval titles, and a wide range of
pseudonymous texts. The descriptions provided by the sources are often
imprecise, especially as to which Latin translation was recorded. Since the
sixteenth century scholarly interest has focused on the Greek text rather than
on versions current in the middle ages. Only in recent decades has
Aristoteles Latinus attempted to document the Latin versions current at
different times, but its progress with editions has been slow. Recently
Aristoteles Latinus Database (ALD) has provided complementary material.
Since 1971 a separate series Aristoteles Semito-Latinus has aimed to edit
translations from Arabic. Where neither is not available, one must have
recourse either to major sixteenth-century printings of Latin (in cases where
they print the medieval versions) or to the earliest printed editions that may
themselves have been documented by our sources. The resulting index is
inevitably uneven. Thanks to Pieter de Leemans for his advice.
Logica uetus comprised
–
a. the Isagoge of Porphyrius, tr. Boethius: ed. L. Minio-Paluello, AL
1/6–7 (1966), 5–31.
b. Aristotle's Categoriae (usually called Praedicamenta), tr. Boethius:
ed. L. Minio-Paluello, AL 1/1–5 (1961), 5–41.
c. his De interpretatione (usually called Peri ermenias), tr. Boethius:
ed. L. Minio-Paluello, AL 2/1–2 (1965), 5–38.
d. Liber sex principiorum (attrib. to Aristotle, perh. by Gilbert de la Porrée):
ed. L. Minio-Paluello, AL 1/6–7 (1966), 35–58.
e. Boethius, Liber diuisionum: CPL 887.
f. Boethius, De differentiis topicis: CPL 889. [Some copies,
e.g. FA8.307, contained other texts in addition.]
73 identified entries found.
All data was derived from the List of Identifications by Professor Richard Sharpe.
A key to codes used in the List is available (opens in new tab).