Medieval catalogues > SECULAR INSTITUTIONS: Hospitals, Towns, and the Professions > London, hospital of St Mary Elsing > Inventory of books, 7 October 1448
SECULAR INSTITUTIONS: Hospitals, Towns, and the Professions: London, hospital of St Mary Elsing
SH33. Inventory of books, 7 October 1448
56 identified entries found.
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SH33.32 (NT):
Nicholas of Lyre OFM [†1349]
H. Labrosse, `Oeuvres de Nicolas de Lyre', Études franciscaines 19 (1908)
153–75, 368–79, and 35 (1923) 171–87, 400–432; G. Dahan (ed.), Nicolas
de Lyre, franciscain du XIVe siècle, exégète et théologien (Turnhout
2011).
Postilla litteralis in uetus et nouum testamentum
pr. Rome 1471–2
(Goff N131), &c.; Stegmüller Bibl. 5829–5923.
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SH33.33 (`magister sentenciarum glosat''):
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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SH33.34 (`magister historiarum'):
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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SH33.35 (`psalterium glosatum'):
Peter Lombard [c1100–1160]
Gloss on the Psalms (Magna glosatura)
PL 191. 55–1296;
Stegmüller Bibl. 6637.
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SH33.36:
Gregory the Great [c540–604, sedit 590–604]
Homiliae in Ezechielem
CPL 1710; ed. M. Adriaen, CCSL 142 (1971).
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SH33.39:
Gregory the Great [c540–604, sedit 590–604]
Homiliae XL in euangelia
CPL 1711; pr. [Augsburg] 1473 (GW
11418), &c.
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SH33.42 (anon.):
Innocent III (Lotharius de Segnis) [1160/61–1216, sedit 1198–1216]
De miseria humanae conditionis (1194–5)
PL 217. 701–746; ed.
M. Maccarrone (Lugano 1955); ed. R. E. Lewis (Athens, GA, 1978); Bloomfield
1753.
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SH33.43:
Fasciculus morum, a Franciscan compilation
ed. S. Wenzel (University
Park, PA, 1989); Bloomfield 6196; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 572.
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SH33.44 (`gemma anime', anon.):
Honorius Augustodunensis [c1080–1137]
(attrib.), Gemma animae siue De diuinis officiis
PL 172. 541–738.
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SH33.45 (`liber encheridion', anon.):
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Enchiridion
CPL 295; ed. E. Evans, CCSL 46 (1969) 23–114.
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SH33.46 (`Crisostomus in opere imperfecto'):
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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SH33.47 (`A. de simbolo'):
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Sermo ad catechumenos de symbolo
CPL 309; ed. R. Vander
Plaetse, CCSL 46 (1969) 185–99. [The four books De symbolo are
CPL 309 and Quodvultdeus, De symbolo, CPL 401, 402, and 403;
as for example in Worcester cathedral, MS F. 57 (s. xiii), fols.
218r–229v, or BL MS Royal 5 C. VI (s. xiv), fols. 73v–(87).]
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SH33.48 (attrib. Augustine):
Ambrosius Autpertus [†781]
De conflictu uitiorum et uirtutum
PL 17. 1057–74
& under other authors; ed. R. Weber, CCCM 27B (1979) 907–31; Bloomfield 0455.
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SH33.49 (`ueritas theologie', anon.):
Hugo Ripelinus OP [† c1300]
Compendium ueritatis theologicae
ed. A. Borgnet, Alberti
Magni opera omnia (Paris 1890–99), 34. 1–270; Stegmüller Sent. 368;
Kaeppeli 1982.
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SH33.50 (anon.):
Iohannes de Burgo [† after 1398]
Pupilla oculi
pr. London 1510 (STC 4115), &c.; Bloomfield 2441;
Sharpe, Latin Writers, 222.
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SH33.51 (`pars oculi'):
Willelmus de Pagula [early 14th cent.]
Oculus sacerdotis
unpr.; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 799; Bloomfield
1088, 2499, 3129, 3686.
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SH33.52 (`Parisiensis de sacramentis'):
William of Auvergne, known as Parisiensis [c1180–1249], bishop of Paris
P. Viard in DS 6 (1967) 1182–92.
De sacramentis
pr. [Nürnberg 1497] (GW 11869), &c.; pr.
in Guillelmi Alverni opera omnia (Paris/Orleans 1674), 1. 407–455;
Ottman 16; Glorieux Rép. 141o. [Entries reported here are perhaps
indistinguishable from ps. William, Dialogus de septem sacramentis,
Glorieux Rép. 141ag.]
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SH33.53 (anon.):
John of Mirfield [fl. 1390]
Florarium Bartholomaei
part ed. P. H. S. Hartley & H. R. Aldridge,
Johannes de Mirfield of St Bartholomew's Hospital, Smithfield. His Life and
Works (Cambridge 1936), 114–164.
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SH33.*54:
Secretum secretorum (ps. Aristotle), Latin tr. from Arabic by Philippus
Tripolitanus
ed. R. Steele, Opera hactenus inedita Rogeri Baconi (Oxford
1909–40), 5. 1–175; S. J. Williams, The Secret of Secrets. The scholarly
career of a pseudo-Aristotelian text in the Latin middle ages (Ann Arbor, MI,
2003), 360–63 (translator's prologue), 388–413 (list of manuscripts); PAL
54–75 (no. 81B). [See also John of Seville, for an excerpt translated in the
12th cent., and Aristotle ps., Epistola Aristotelis ad Alexandrum for
other possible copies.]
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SH33.57 (inc.):
Jerome [c347–420]
Psalterium
PL 29. 119–397; Stegmüller Bibl. 21.
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SH33.58 (`minores collaciones patrum'):
John Cassian [c360–435], abbot of Marseilles
Collationes
CPL 512.
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SH33.59:
Gregory the Great [c540–604, sedit 590–604]
Dialogi
CPL 1713; ed. A. de Vogüé, SChr 251, 260, 265 (1978–80).
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SH33.60:
Ranulf Higden OSB [†1364]
Speculum curatorum
unpr.; J. Taylor, The Universal Chronicle of Ranulf
Higden (Oxford 1966), 182; Bloomfield 1063.
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SH33.†61 (`uiridarium psalterii'):
Richard Rolle [†1349]
Viridarium
unpr.; Stegmüller Bibl. 7301; Allen, Rolle, 161–5;
Sharpe, Latin Writers, 336, 503. The work collects verses from the Psalms
that mention misericordia and related words.
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SH33.62 (`B. de uita Christi'):
Iohannes de Caulibus OFM [14th cent.]
DBI 55. 768–74.
(attrib.; ps. Bonaventure), Meditationes uitae Christi
pr. Augsburg
1468 (GW 4739), &c.; ed. A. C. Peltier, Sancti Bonaventurae opera omnia
(Paris 1864–71), 12. 509–630; ed. M. Stallings-Taney, CCCM 153 (1997);
Distelbrink 166. [The ps. Bonaventure Meditationes passionis Christi are
derived from this work. Stallings's text relies on 14th-cent. manuscripts;
Peltier reprinted a Vatican edition of 1596 that lay at the end of a long
line of revisions; C. M. Stallings-Taney in Franciscan Studies 55 (1998)
253–80.]
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SH33.63:
Speculum humanae saluationis
pr. [Low Countries c. 1466] (Goff S656),
&c.; ed. P. Lutz & P. Perdrizet (Mulhouse 1907); Bloomfield 2562.
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SH33.64–65 (`legenda aurea', `legenda alia sanctorum non completa'):
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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SH33.66:
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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SH33.70:
Henricus Suso OP (Heinrich Seuse) [1295–1366]
Horologium sapientiae
ed. P. Künzle, Heinrich Seuses
Horologium sapientiae, Spicilegium Friburgense 23 (1977); Bloomfield 5416;
Kaeppeli 1852. [W. Wichgraf, 'Susos Horologium sapientiae in England nach
HSS. des 15. Jahrhunderts', Anglia 41 (1929) 123–33, 269–87, 345–73,
and 42 (1930) 351–2.]
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SH33.71:
William of Tournai [late 13th cent.]
Flores Bernardi
unpr.; Bloomfield 1155.
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SH33.72:
Richard Scrope [†1405], archibishop of York
Postills on the Pauline Epistles
not known to survive; Sharpe,
Latin Writers, 509.
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SH33.73 (`Haymo super epistolas et euangelia'):
Haimo of Auxerre [fl. 840–865]
Textes et manuscrits exégétiques carolingiens. Études autour d'Haymon
d'Auxerre, ed. S. Shimahara (Turnhout 2007).
Homiliae de tempore
PL 118. 11–746.
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SH33.74:
Nigel Witeker OSB [† after 1206]
Speculum stultorum
ed. T. Wright, Anglo-Latin Satirical Poets,
RS 59/1 (1872), 3–10 (prose preface), 11–145 (verse); ed. J. H. Mozley & R.
Raymo (Berkeley, CA, 1960) (verse only); WIC 18944; Sharpe, Latin Writers,
401.
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SH33.75 (`H. de S. V. de claustro corporis et anime'):
Hugh of Fouilloy OSA [†1172/3], prior of Saint-Laurent-au-Bois, Fouilloy
J. Gobry in DS 7. 880–86.
De claustro animae
PL 176. 1017–1182; Bloomfield 5211. [The
title `De xii abusionibus claustri' refers to the excerpt, II 11–23.]
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SH33.76:
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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SH33.77 (`textus sexti'):
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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SH33.77b:
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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SH33.78:
Iohannes Andreae (Giovanni d'Andrea) [c1270–1348]
Apparatus ad Sextum
pr. with Liber sextus, Mainz 1465 &c. (GW
4848–87); standard edition is Corpus iuris canonici 3/3 (Rome 1582);
Schulte, 2. 213–14. [See also under Liber Sextus.]
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SH33.79 (`Abbas doctor super decretales'):
Nicholaus de Tudeschis, known as Abbas [†1445], archbishop of Palermo
Lectura in Decretales
pr. Venice 1475–77 (Goff P44), &c.;
Schulte, 2. 313.
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SH33.80:
Guido de Baysio, known as Archidiaconus [†1313], archdeacon of Bologna
Apparatus ad Sextum
pr. Milan 1490 (GW 3743); Schulte,
2. 188–9. [See also under Liber Sextus.]
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SH33.81:
Bernard of Pavia [†1213]
Breuiarium extrauagantium, now known as Compilatio prima
decretalium
ed. Agustín, Antiquae collectiones, 9–353; part ed. E.
Friedberg, Quinque compilationes antiquae (Leipzig 1882), 1–65; Kuttner,
322–44. [Also known as Iuste from its opening words, `Iuste iudicate'.
The ordinary gloss is by Tancred of Bologna.] Entries listed here may
refer to more than one of the compilationes.
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SH33.83:
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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SH33.85 (`Reymundus'):
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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SH33.86:
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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SH33.87 (`Brito'):
William Brito [late 13th cent.]
Expositiones uocabulorum Bibliae
ed. L. W. & B. A. Daly (Padua 1975); Stegmüller Bibl. 2820.
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SH33.†88 (`Ysidorus de mirabilibus mundi'):
Thierry of Saint-Trond OSB [†1107]
(ps. Ovid), De mirabilibus mundi
ed. J. G.
Préaux, Latomus 6 (1947) 353–65; WIC 8095, 18131.
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SH33.89:
Papias [fl. 1050]
Elementarium doctrinae rudimentum
pr. Milan 1476 (CIBN P22),
&c.; Venice 1496 / repr. Turin 1966; a new edition was begun by V. de Angelis,
A fasc. 1–3 (Milan 1977–80).
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SH33.90 (`liber topicorum'):
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.
Topica, tr. Boethius
ed. L. Minio-Paluello, AL 5/1–3 (1969),
5–179. [See also Aristotle, Logica noua.]
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SH33.†91 (`liber Galieni et Ypocratis'):
Hippocrates [c460–c380 BC]
Aphorismata, Latin tr.
pr. in Articella, [Padua c. 1476] (GW
2678), &c.; many versions are listed in HL 29–90.
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SH33.†91a (`liber Galieni'):
Galen [c129–?199]
Megategni, tr. Constantinus Africanus
pr. Lyon 1515, 2. 189v–209v (with
the works of Isaac Iudaeus); Thorndike/Kibre 1163. Manuscripts are listed by P. Kibre
in Galen's Method of Healing. Proceedings of the 1982 Galen Symposium,
ed. F. Kudlien & R. J. Durling (Leiden 1991), 117–118.
56 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).