Medieval catalogues > UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF CAMBRIDGE > Donor documents > Will of Elizabeth de Burgh, 25 September 1355; Clare Hall
UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF CAMBRIDGE: Donor documents
UC111. Will of Elizabeth de Burgh, 25 September 1355; Clare Hall
4 identified entries found.
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UC111.2:
Hugutio of Pisa [12th cent.]
W. P. Müller, Huguccio. The Life, Works, and Thought of a
Twelfth-Century Jurist (Washington, DC, 1994), 35–66, dates the
Liber deriuationum to `the decade around 1161' (p. 47), making
it likely that the author is not to be identified with the jurist
of the same name.
Liber deriuationum
ed. E. Cecchini & others (Florence
2004). [There is a facsimile of Biblioteca Laurenziana, MS Plut.
XXVII sin. 5 (AD 1236), ed. G. Nencioni (Florence 2000). List
of manuscripts by A. Marigo, I codici manoscritti delle Deriuationes
di Uguccione Pisano (Rome 1936).]
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UC111.3:
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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UC111.4:
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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UC111.6 (`xxxii quaiers dun livre appelle de causa dei contra pelagianos'):
Thomas Bradwardine [1290–1349], archbishop of Canterbury
DNB; BRUO 244–6 and 3. xv–xvi; DSB 2. 390-97.
De causa Dei contra Pelagium
ed. H. Savile (London 1618); Sharpe,
Latin Writers, 643.
4 identified entries found.
All data was derived from the List of Identifications by Professor Richard Sharpe.
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