Medieval catalogues > NEW FRIARS > Lincoln-Carmelite > Lincolnshire list, 1528
NEW FRIARS: Lincoln-Carmelite
F21. Lincolnshire list, 1528
27 identified entries found.
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F21.1 (`postille Rowell super . . '):
William Rothwell OP [late 13th cent.]
Commentaries on Judges, Kings, Psalms, Ecclesiasticus, &c.
not
known to survive; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 806.
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F21.2a:
Stephen Langton [c1165–1228], archbishop of Canterbury
Commentary on the Pentateuch
as above.
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F21.2b (`super libros Salomonis'):
Stephen Langton [c1165–1228], archbishop of Canterbury
Commentary on Sapiential books
as above.
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F21.2c:
Stephen Langton [c1165–1228], archbishop of Canterbury
Commentary on Jeremiah, inc. `Vidit Daniel uirum indutum lineis super
aquam fluminis &c. [Dn 10
5] Per Danielem qui interpretatur': unpr.;
Stegmüller Bibl. 7829. Stegmüller reports more copies than Smalley.
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F21.2d:
Stephen Langton [c1165–1228], archbishop of Canterbury
Commentary on Ecclesiasticus, inc. `Hoc nomine Ecclesiastes
interpretatur concionator'
unpr.; Stegmüller Bibl. 7814. There is a
second commentary, inc. `Cum de edificio sito in monte loqueretur, Ezechiel
ait, Thalami porte, &c. [Ez 40:10]' (Stegmüller Bibl. 7813), ascribed
to Langton in at least one copy, transmitted with Langton, and accepted as
also authentic by both Smalley and Stegmüller.
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F21.3a (`in duos libros Paralipomenon'):
Nicholas Trevet OP [c1258–c1334]
Commentary on Chronicles
not known to survive; Stegmüller Bibl.
6037.
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F21.3b = F22.1:
Nicholas Trevet OP [c1258–c1334]
Commentary on the Psalter
unpr.; Stegmüller Bibl. 6038;
Kaeppeli 3135.
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F21.4a:
Richard Fishacre OP [†1248]
Commentary on the Psalms
not known to survive; Sharpe,
Latin Writers, 476; Stegmüller Bibl. 7267.
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F21.4b:
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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F21.5a:
Robert Kilwardby OP [†1279]
Quaestiones on the Lombard's Sentences
I, ed. J. Schneider (Munich 1986);
II, ed. G. Leibold (Munich 1992); III/1, ed. E. Gössmann (Munich 1982);
III/2, ed. G. Leibold (Munich 1985);
IV, ed. R. Schenk (Munich 1993); Stegmüller Sent. 742; Kaeppeli 3519.
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F21.5b:
Robert Kilwardby OP [†1279]
De ortu scientiarum, inc. `Diuisio scientiae'
ed. A. G. Judy,
Auctores Britannici medii aeui 4 (1976); Kaeppeli 3516.
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F21.5c:
Robert Kilwardby OP [†1279]
De conscientia et synderesi
unpr.: excerpts in O. Lottin, Psychologie
et morale aux XIIe et XIIIe siècles (Louvain 1942–60), 2. 312–32; Kaeppeli
3518; Bloomfield 0944, 4693.
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F21.5d:
Robert Kilwardby OP [†1279]
[dub.]
`De sacramento alratis'
not identified.
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F21.5e (`de predicamento relationis'):
Robert Kilwardby OP [†1279]
De natura relationis
ed. L. Schmücker (Lenggries 1980);
Glorieux Arts 411x; Kaeppeli 3515.
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F21.5f (as a work of R. Kilwardby):
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.
[pseud.]
Liber de causis, Latin tr.
ed. A. Pattin in Tijdschrift voor
Filosofie 28 (1966) 90–203; the text is also printed with the edition
of Aquinas's commentary, ed. H. D. Saffrey (Fribourg/Louvain 1954);
Thorndike/Kibre 996; PAL 18–20 (no. 13). The work is largely extracted
from Proclus's Elementatio theologica, and Albertus Magnus names the
compiler as David Iudaeus. Copies are often said to be accompanied by
a commentary, `Cum ergo remouet causa secunda uniuersalis', attributed
to Alfarabius and to other writers; these passages are in fact
demonstrations added by the compiler.
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F21.5g (as a work of R. Kilwardby):
Costa ben Luca (Qusta b. Luqa) [late 9th cent.]
(ps. Aristotle), De differentia spiritus et animae, tr.
John of Seville
ed. S. Barach, Excerpta ex libro Alfredi (Innsbruck 1878),
120–39; Thorndike/Kibre 771, 1212, 1526.
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F21.6:
Stephen Langton [c1165–1228], archbishop of Canterbury
Quaestiones theologicae
unpr.; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 628–9;
Stegmüller Sent. 824–6.
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F21.†7 (`sermones sancti Patricii'):
Caesarius of Arles [c470–542], archbishop of Arles
Homiliae X ad monachos
a group common in English manuscripts,
comprising seven sermons of Caesarius, a letter of Caesarius, a
Eusebian sermon, and ps. Augustine, De tribus habitaculis (attributed to
Patrick of Dublin). On the texts and manuscripts, see A. O. Gwynn, The
Writings of Bishop Patrick 1074–84 (Dublin 1955), 28–45, 132–5. The group
often accompanies eight sermones ad monachos attributed to Eusebius
Gallicanus.
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F21.8a:
Vincent of Beauvais OP [1189/94–c1264]
De eruditione regalium filiorum
pr. Rostock 1477, &c.; ed.
A. Steiner (Cambridge, MA, 1938); Kaeppeli 4003.
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F21.9 (`eulogium Cornubiensis'):
John of Cornwall [† after 1179]
Eulogium ad Alexandrum III
PL 199. 1043–86; ed. N. M.
Häring, Med. Stud. 13 (1951) 256–300. [See also above, De homine
assumpto.]
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F21.11 (`cum exposicione'):
Geoffrey of Monmouth [†1154]
Prophetia Merlini (Historia regum Britanniae VII), often found separately
ed. A. Griscom (London 1929), 383–97; ed. E. Faral, La Légende arturienne
(Paris 1929), 3. 186–203. [= §§ 106–118 in Faral's text of the Historia regum Britanniae.]
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F21.12 (`uitas fratrum predicatorum', anon.):
Gerardus de Fracheto OP [1205–1271]
Vitae fratrum ordinis Praedicatorum
ed. B. M. Reichert (Louvain
1896); Kaeppeli 1282.
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F21.13 (`originalia Kilwardby'):
Robert Kilwardby OP [†1279]
Tabula super originalia patrum
unpr.; Kaeppeli 3521; Sharpe,
Latin Writers, 564.
27 identified entries found.
All data was derived from the List of Identifications by Professor Richard Sharpe.
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