Medieval catalogues > UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF CAMBRIDGE > Donor documents > Will of Thomas Colyer, 1506; various
UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF CAMBRIDGE: Donor documents
UC115. Will of Thomas Colyer, 1506; various
24 identified entries found.
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UC115.¶1 (`opuscula'):
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.
Opuscula
there are several early printed collections of
opuscula, among them Opuscula LXX, pr. [southern Netherlands
c. 1488] (Copinger 574); Opuscula LXXI, pr. Venice 1490 (Goff
T258); and Opuscula LXXIII, pr. Venice 1498 (Goff T257).
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UC115.¶2 (3 vols):
Ambrose [c339–397], archbishop of Milan
Opera
pr. Basel 1492 (GW 1599), Basel 1506 (Adams A934), &c.
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UC115.¶3 (`questiones', GW 2195):
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Opera
ed. J. Amerbach (Basel 1505–6), &c.; ed. Erasmus (1518). See
J. de Ghellinck, `Une édition patristique célèbre', Patristique et moyen
âge: études d'histoire littéraire et doctrinale 3 (Paris 1948), 339–484;
V. Scholderer, `The first collected edition of St Augustine', Fifty essays
in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century bibliography (Amsterdam 1966), 275–8.
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UC115.¶4:
Giovanni Pico della Mirandola [1443–1494]
Opera
pr. Bologna 1495–6 (Goff P632), &c.; pr. Basel 1557 / repr.
Hildesheim 1969.
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UC115.¶5:
Werner Rolewinck [1425–1502]
Fasciculus temporum
pr. Cologne [1473] (Goff R253), Cologne 1474
(Goff R254), &c.
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UC115.¶6:
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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UC115.¶7:
William de la Furmentarie OFM [?]
(attrib.), Pharetra
pr. [Strassburg 1472] (Goff P571), &c.;
ed. A. C. Peltier, S. Bonaventurae opera omnia
(Paris 1864–71), 7. 1–231; Glorieux Rép. 311t; Distelbrink 178;
Bloomfield 2530. [One copy of the work is dated 1261, which provides a
terminus ad quem; it is usually anonymous, but some copies carry an
ascription to Bonaventure, other to Guibert of Tournai, and one very
distinctively to William de la Furmentarie, an English friar.]
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UC115.¶8 (`opera Hemerlyn'):
Felix Hemmerlin [1389–?1459]
Opuscula et tractatus
pr. Strassburg 1497 (Goff H16), &c.
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UC115.¶9:
Aegidius Aurifaber [†1466]
DS 1. 1138–9.
[pseud.]
Speculum exemplorum
pr. Deventer 1481 (Goff S651), &c.; Bloomfield
2003. The author is thought to be Johannes Busch.
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UC115.¶10 (`Albertus de metallis que mineralia appellant'):
Albertus Magnus OP [1193–1280]
DSB 1. 100–103.
Mineralia
ed. A. Borgnet, Alberti Magni opera omnia (Paris 1890–99),
5. 1–103; Fauser 17; Glorieux Rép. 6ag.
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UC115.¶12 (I):
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.
Metaphysica I–IV 4, tr. James of Venice
ed. G. Vuillemin-Diem,
AL 25/1 (1970), 5–73.
Other translations:– Translatio composita: ibid. 89–155.
Translatio media (I–X, XII–XIV): ed. G. Vuillemin-Diem, AL 25/2 (1976),
7–275.
Translatio noua (I–XIV complete), by William of Moerbeke: ed.
G. Vuillemin-Diem, AL 25/3 (1995).
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UC115.¶13:
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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UC115.¶14:
Pius II (Enea Silvio de' Piccolomini) [1405–1464, sedit 1458–1464]
Epistulae familiares
pr. Louvain 1477 (Goff P715), &c.; ed. R.
Volkan, Der Briefwechsel des Eneas Silvius Piccolomini (Vienna 1909–12).
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UC115.¶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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UC115.17b:
Albertus Magnus OP [1193–1280]
[unidentified]
De modo significandi octo partium
pr. London [c. 1496] (STC
270).
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UC115.¶17a:
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
Ethica, tr. Leonardo Bruni (1417)
pr. Cologne c. 1470 (GW 2384,
5614), &c.; prefaces, ed. H. Baron, Leonardo Bruni.
Humanistisch-Philosophische Schriften (Berlin 1928), 75–81.
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UC115.¶20 (`sermones xxv grisostomi'):
John Chrysostom [c347–407], patriarch of Constantinople
Homilies on Matthew, tr. Annianus
CPG 4424; Stegmüller Bibl.
4350. Annianus translated hom. 1–25 from the series of ninety homilies.
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UC115.¶21:
Angelus Politianus (Angelo Ambrosini) [1454–1494]
Illustrium uirorum epistolae
pr. Lyon 1499 (GW 9368), &c.
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UC115.¶22:
Lactantius Firmianus [fl. 305–323]
Opera
pr. Subiaco 1465 (Goff L1), &c.; edited by Iohannes Andreae,
Rome 1470 (Goff L3), &c.
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UC115.¶23:
Guido delle Colonne OFM [†1408]
Historia destructionis Troiae
ed. N. E. Griffin (Cambridge, MA,
1936).
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UC115.¶24:
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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UC115.¶25:
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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UC115.¶26:
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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UC115.¶27:
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.]
24 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).