Medieval catalogues > UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF CAMBRIDGE > Corpus Christi College > Thomas Markaunt's bequest, 1439
UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF CAMBRIDGE: Corpus Christi College
UC19. Thomas Markaunt's bequest, 1439
159 identified entries found.
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UC19.1–2 (2 copies):
Gregory the Great [c540–604, sedit 590–604]
Moralia in Iob
CPL 1708; ed. M. Adriaen, CCSL 143, 143A, 143B
(1979–85).
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UC19.3b:
Richard of Saint-Victor OSA [†1173]
R. Goy, Die handschriftliche Überlieferung der Werke Richards von
St. Viktor im Mittelalter, Bibliotheca Victorina 18 (Turnhout 2006).
Liber exceptionum
PL 177. 191–284 (Part I only); ed. J. Châtillon,
Textes philosophiques du moyen âge 5 (Paris 1958); Stegmüller Bibl. 7317. [Part
II, Books I–IX, circulated as Allegoriae super V. T.: PL 175. 633–750;
ed. Châtillon, 213–373. Books XI–XIV, Allegoriae super N. T.: PL 175.
751–924; ed. Châtillon, 439–517; Stegmüller Bibl. 3847–8 (Hugh), 6573 (Petrus Comestor), 7316 (Richard)]
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UC19.4 (Jer):
Hugh of Saint-Cher OP [†1263]
Biblia cum postilla
pr. [Basel 1498–1502], 7 vols. (GW 4285);
pr. Venice 1703; Stegmüller Bibl. 3631–3769; Kaeppeli 1989. [P. Stirnemann,
`Les manuscrits de la Postille', and B. Carra de Vaux, `La constitution du
corpus exégétique', in Hugues de Saint-Cher (†1263), bibliste et
théologien (Turnhout 2004), 31–42, 43–63.]
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UC19.5:
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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UC19.7:
Stephen Langton [c1165–1228], archbishop of Canterbury
Commentary on the Pentateuch
as above.
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UC19.8:
Concordantia maior, the so-called `third concordance' compiled by the
Dominicans of Saint-Jacques, Paris
pr. Strassburg, [not after 1474] (GW
7418) (under the name Conradus de Alemannia), &c.; Stegmüller Bibl.
1999, 3605–6; R. H. Rouse & M. A. Rouse in AFP 44 (1974) 5–30;
Kaeppeli 755 (as Conradus de Halberstadt OP). Rouse & Rouse show that the
work circulated in Paris by 1286; the attribution to Conrad is made only
in the printed editions. [For the so-called `second concordance' or
`English concordance', see Richard Stainsby.]
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UC19.9a:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Retractationes
CPL 250; ed. A. Mutzenbecher, CCSL 57 (1984).
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UC19.9b:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Contra Iulianum
CPL 351; ed. M. Zelzer, CSEL 85 (1974).
[There is some possibility of confusion here with Paulinus of Aquileia
(ps. Augustine), Liber exhortationis, which was known as `Augustinus
ad quendam comitem' and at Syon as `ad Iulianum comitem'. Also
`Augustinus contra Iulianum hereticum' at Bury (B13.*42a) is Contra
duas epistulas pelagianorum (CPL 346).]
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UC19.9c:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Contra Faustum manichaeum
CPL 321.
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UC19.9d:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Contra aduersarium legis et prophetarum
CPL 326; ed. K. D.
Daur, CCSL 49 (1985) 35–131.
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UC19.9e (attrib. Aug.):
Vigilius Thapsensis [fl. 484], bishop of Thapsus
Contra Felicianum arianum
CPL 808. [See also Athanasius.]
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UC19.9f:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De cura pro mortuis gerenda
CPL 307.
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UC19.9g (`ammonicio Augustini'):
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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UC19.9h:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De adulterinis coniugiis
CPL 302.
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UC19.9i:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De nuptiis et concupiscentia
CPL 350. The letter to Valerius
(ep. 200) often precedes the work, and the second book is sometimes
distinguished as Contra cartulam.
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UC19.9j:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
[pseud.]
De uera et falsa poenitentia
PL 40. 1113–1130; Bloomfield 4419.
[Perhaps by Gilbert the Minorite.]
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UC19.9k:
Quodvultdeus [†453], bishop of Carthage
(ps. Augustine), Sermo aduersus quinque haereses (serm. 10)
CPL 410; ed. R. Braun, CCSL 60 (1976) 261–301. [This and the other
sermons of Quodvultdeus are always ascribed to Augustine in manuscripts.]
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UC19.9l:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
[pseud.]
Hypomnesticon contra pelagianos et caelestianos
CPL 381;
ed. J. E. Chisholm (Fribourg 1980); CPPM 2. 178. [Book VI is often found
with the inscription `contra Pelagianos de predestinatione diuina';
Römer, 2/1. 102–4.]
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UC19.9m (attrib. Augustine):
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
[pseud.]
De XII abusiuis saeculi
CPL 1106.
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UC19.9n:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De utilitate credendi
CPL 316.
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UC19.9o:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De uera religione
CPL 264; ed. W. M. Green, CSEL 77/2 (1961); ed. K. D.
Daur, CCSL 32 (1962) 187–260.
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UC19.9p (attrib. Augustine):
Gennadius [late 5th cent.]
Liber ecclesiasticorum dogmatum
CPL 958.
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UC19.10:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De ciuitate Dei
CPL 313; pr. [Subiaco 1467] (GW 2874), &c.;
ed. B. Dombart & A. Kalb, CCSL 47–8 (1955).
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UC19.11 (I):
Giles of Rome OESA [c1243–1316], archbishop of Bourges
DBI 42. 319–41; G. Bruni, `Catalogo critico delle opere di Egidio Romano',
Bibliofilia 35 (1933) 7–69, 36 (1934) 78–110, and 37 (1935) 247–306.
Commentary on Books I and II of the Lombard's Sentences
Book I,
pr. Venice 1492 (GW 7206), &c.; Book II, pr. Venice 1482 (GW 7207),
&c.; Stegmüller Sent. 43; Glorieux Rép. 400k, bb. [The commentaries were
completed at long intervals, and a third book ends incomplete at III d. 11,
Glorieux Rép. 400bc. The edition by A. de Aguilar covers I–III (3rd edn,
Córdoba 1699–1706). A fourth book was printed by Aguilar as the work of
Giles of Rome (Córdoba 1708), but it is not recognized by the repertories.]
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UC19.12a:
Ambrose [c339–397], archbishop of Milan
Hexaemeron
CPL 123.
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UC19.12b:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Enchiridion
CPL 295; ed. E. Evans, CCSL 46 (1969) 23–114.
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UC19.13 (Is, Ez):
Hugh of Saint-Cher OP [†1263]
Biblia cum postilla
pr. [Basel 1498–1502], 7 vols. (GW 4285);
pr. Venice 1703; Stegmüller Bibl. 3631–3769; Kaeppeli 1989. [P. Stirnemann,
`Les manuscrits de la Postille', and B. Carra de Vaux, `La constitution du
corpus exégétique', in Hugues de Saint-Cher (†1263), bibliste et
théologien (Turnhout 2004), 31–42, 43–63.]
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UC19.14b:
Giles of Rome OESA [c1243–1316], archbishop of Bourges
De originali peccato
pr. Oxford 1479 (STC 158), &c.; pr. Rome
1554 / repr. Frankfurt 1968; Glorieux Rép. 400h; Bloomfield 1886.
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UC19.14c:
Giles of Rome OESA [c1243–1316], archbishop of Bourges
Theoremata de corpore Christi
pr. Bologna 1481 (GW 7208), &c.;
pr. Rome 1554 / repr. Frankfurt 1968; Glorieux Rép. 400i.
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UC19.14d:
Giles of Rome OESA [c1243–1316], archbishop of Bourges
De regimine principum
pr. Augsburg 1473 (GW 7217), &c.;
pr. Rome 1556 / repr. Frankfurt 1968; Glorieux Rép. 400q;
Bloomfield 2051.
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UC19.*15:
Gregory the Great [c540–604, sedit 590–604]
Homiliae XL in euangelia
CPL 1711; pr. [Augsburg] 1473 (GW
11418), &c.
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UC19.16 (II):
Bonaventure OFM [1221–1274]
Commentary on the Lombard's Sentences
SBonO vols. 1–4; Distelbrink
2; Glorieux Rép. 305b; Stegmüller Sent. 111.
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UC19.17a:
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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UC19.17d:
Boethius, Anicius Manlius Torquatus Severinus [c480–524]
L. Minio-Paluello in DSB 2. 228–36; bibliography in J. Gruber,
`Boethius 1925–1998', Lustrum 39 (1997) 307–383 and 40 (1998)
199–259.
Quomodo substantiae in eo quod sint bonae sint
CPL 892, one
of the five opuscula sacra.
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UC19.17e (`de duabus naturis et una natura Christi'):
Boethius, Anicius Manlius Torquatus Severinus [c480–524]
Liber contra Eutychen et Nestorium
CPL 894, one of the
five opuscula sacra.
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UC19.17f (`quattuor libri I. D. de incomprehensibilitate Christi et
aliis'):
John of Damascus [c675–749]
De fide orthodoxa, tr. Burgundio of Pisa
ed. E. M. Buytaert
(St Bonaventure, NY, 1955). [On the three translations see I. Backus
in JWCI 49 (1986) 211–17.]
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UC19.17h (`de centum haeresibus'):
John of Damascus [c675–749]
De haeresibus
CPG 8044.
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UC19.18 (`T. de ueritatibus'):
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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UC19.19a (w. R. Bacon):
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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UC19.19b:
Roger Bacon OFM [†1294]
DSB 1. 377–85.
Tractatus ad declarandum quaedam obscure dicta in libro
Secreti secretorum
ed. Steele, 5. 1–24; Lohr, 121–2.
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UC19.19d (`rethorica Aristotelis ad A.'):
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.]
Rhetorica ad Alexandrum, tr. Francesco Filelfo
pr. Milan 1483–4
(Goff P607), &c.
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UC19.20:
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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UC19.*21:
Alan of Tewkesbury OSB [†1202], prior of Christ Church, Canterbury, later
abbot of Tewkesbury
Revision of John of Salisbury's Vita S. Thomae Becket
ed. J. C.
Robertson, Materials for the History of Thomas Becket, RS 67 (1875–85),
2. 299–301, 323–52; BHL 8179–81; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 34. [Found
with his collection of Becket's letters.]
-
UC19.*21b:
Bonaventure OFM [1221–1274]
[pseud.]
De officio missae
unpr.; Distelbrink 56.
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UC19.*21c (`regula fratrum minorum'):
Regula S. Francisci (`Regula bullata')
ed. K. Esser, Opuscula Sancti
Patris Francisci Assisiensis, Bibliotheca Franciscana ascetica medii aevi
12 (Grottaferrata 1978), 224–38.
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UC19.*21d (`de uita prothoplausti'):
De arbore crucis, variously known as Apocalypsis Moysis, De poenitentia
Adae, De oleo misericordiae, Historia Adae et Euae
ed. W. Meyer, Abh.
Bayer. Akademie, phil.-hist. Kl. 14/3 (1878), 221–50 (two recensions);
ed. B. Hill, Medium Ævum 34 (1965) 203–222; Stegmüller Bibl. 74,2–11;
Bloomfield 3966.
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UC19.*21e (`epistola M. de inicio et progressu mundi et die iudicii'):
Methodius [], bishop of Olympus
[pseud.]
De initio et fine saeculi
the form found in most English copies
is unpr.; the oldest Latin version, ed. W. J. Aerts & G. A. A. Kortekaas,
Die Apokalypse des Pseudo-Methodius (Louvain 1998); other versions, pr.
in Maxima bibliotheca ueterum patrum (Lyon 1677), 3. 727–35, and ed.
E. Sackur, Sibyllinische Texte und Forschungen (Halle 1898), 61–96.
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UC19.*21f (`de speculo mundi', anon.):
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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UC19.*21g:
H. of Sawtry OCist [12th cent.]
Tractatus de purgatorio S. Patricii
ed. K. Warnke, Das Buch vom
Espurgatoire S. Patrice der Marie de France und seine Quellen, Bibliotheca
Normannica 9 (Halle/Saale, 1938), 2–166 [first col.]; BHL 6510–12a.
-
UC19.*21h (`uita sancti Brendani'):
Nauigatio S. Brendani
ed. C. Selmer (Notre Dame, IN, 1959); BHL 1437.
-
UC19.*21i:
`Sir John Mandeville'
Voyage d'outre mer, Latin tr.
pr. Zwolle 1483 &c.; ed. R.
Hakluyt (London 1589).
-
UC19.*21j:
Iohannes presbyter (`Prester John')
Epistola Manueli Comneno imperatori Graecorum
ed. F. Zarncke,
Abh. der k. Sächsischen Gesellschaft d. Wissenschaften philol.-hist.
Kl. 7 (1879) 909–924; B. Wagner, Die Epistola presbyteri Iohannis
lateinsch und deutsch: Überlieferung, Textgeschichte, Rezeption und
Übertragungen im Mittelalter (Tübingen 2000).
-
UC19.*21l:
Francesco Petrarca [1304–1374]
Historia Griseldis, based on a story in Boccaccio's Decamerone
pr. Cologne c. 1469 (Goff P400), &c.; ed. U. Hess, Heinrich Steinhowels
Griseldis (Munich 1975), 173–238; ed. L. C. Rossi (Palermo 1991).
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UC19.*21m:
John of Hildesheim OCarm [†1375]
Historia trium regum
pr. as Liber de gestis et translatione
trium regum, [Cologne] 1477 (Goff J336), &c.; M. Behland, Die
Dreikönigslegende des Iohannes von Hildesheim (Munich 1968).
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UC19.*21n:
Vita Secundi philosophi, tr. Willelmus medicus
ed. A. Hilka, Leben und
Sentenzen des Philosophus Secundus (Breslau 1910), 8–23; ed. W. Suchier,
Illinois Studies in Language and Literature 24/2 (1939), 152–9, repr. B. E.
Perry, Secundus the Silent Philosopher (Ithaca, NY, 1964), 92–100; CTC
2. 1–3; Thorndike/Kibre 1423. [Suchier, 162–6, lists more than a hundred
copies.]
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UC19.*21o:
John Grandisson [†1369], bishop of Exeter
Vita S. Thomae Cantuariensis
unpr.; Sharpe, Latin Writers,
260; BHL 8215b.
-
UC19.22:
Gregory the Great [c540–604, sedit 590–604]
Homiliae in Ezechielem
CPL 1710; ed. M. Adriaen, CCSL 142 (1971).
-
UC19.23:
Nicholas de Gorran OP [† c1295]
Distinctiones theologicae
unpr.; Kaeppeli 3090; Bloomfield 0062.
-
UC19.24a:
Iacobus de Voragine (Iacopo da Varazze) OP [†1298]
Tabula super Sacram Scripturam, also titled Distinctiones
unpr.;
Stegmüller Bibl. 3998,1; Bloomfield 0122.
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UC19.†24b (`tractatus de passione Christi'):
Bonaventure OFM [1221–1274]
[pseud.]
Meditationes de passione Christi
ed. M. Stallings (Washington, DC,
1965); Distelbrink 164. [The text is a part of the Meditationes uitae Christi
attributed to Iohannes de Caulibus, but the text as edited represents a
16th-cent. recension. The edition appeared under the name Sr M. Jordan Stallings;
her 1997 edition of the work of Iohannes appeared under the name C. Mary
Stallings-Taney and represents a very different perspective on the text.]
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UC19.25 (`tabula Deueroys super ethica'):
John Deverose [† after 1400]
Tabula to Aristotle's Ethica
not known to survive.
-
UC19.26 (w. Hugh of St Victor, Eriugena, Sarrazin, &c.):
Ps. Dionysius the Areopagite
Opera, Latin tr.
CPG 6600–6607; pr. Bruges [1479] (GW 8408),
&c.; ed. P. Chevallier, Dionysiaca (Bruges 1937–50). [The several
translations are printed concurrently by Chevallier.]
-
UC19.26a (w. Hugh of St Victor, Eriugena, Sarrazin, &c.):
Ps. Dionysius the Areopagite
De caelesti hierarchia, Latin tr.
CPG 6600; ed. P. Chevallier,
Dionysiaca (Bruges 1937–50), 727–1066.
-
UC19.26b (w. Hugh of St Victor, Eriugena, Sarrazin, &c.):
Ps. Dionysius the Areopagite
De diuinis nominibus, Latin tr.
CPG 6602; ed. P. Chevallier,
Dionysiaca (Bruges 1937–50), 5–561.
-
UC19.26c (w. Hugh of St Victor, Eriugena, Sarrazin, &c.):
Ps. Dionysius the Areopagite
De mystica theologia, Latin tr.
CPG 6603; ed. P. Chevallier,
Dionysiaca (Bruges 1937–50), 565–602.
-
UC19.26d (`de decem eius diuersis epistolis'):
Ps. Dionysius the Areopagite
Epistulae, Latin tr. The group circulating with the ps. Dionysian
corpus, comprising ten letters addressed to Gaius (epp. 1–4) and others
CPG 6604–6613; ed. P. Chevallier, Dionysiaca (Bruges 1937–50), 605–669,
1479–1578.
-
UC19.26e:
Hugh of Saint-Victor OSA [c1096–1141]
Commentary on ps. Dionysius's Hierarchia caelestis
PL 175.
923–1154; ed. D. Poirel (in preparation); Goy, 181–96.
-
UC19.26f:
Iohannes Scottus Eriugena [c815–877]
Commentary on ps. Dionysius, De caelesti hierarchia and De
mystica theologia
PL 122. 125–284; ed. J. Barbet, CCCM 31 (1975).
-
UC19.26g:
Iohannes Sarracenus (John Sarrazin) [fl. 1170]
Commentary on ps. Dionysius
-
UC19.26i (exc.):
Maximus the Confessor [c580–662]
Scholia on ps. Dionysius, Latin tr.
CPG 7708; PG 4. 15–452,
527–76. The edition does not clearly differentiate the core of scholia by
John of Scythopolis from the later additions of Maximus the Confessor.
-
UC19.26j:
John of Scythopolis [mid 6th cent.]
Scholia in corpus Areoagiticum
CPG 6582; PG 4. 15–452,
527–76. The edition does not clearly differentiate the core of John's scholia
from the later additions of Maximus the Confessor; P. Rorem & L. C. Lamoreaux,
John of Scythopolis and the Dionysian Corpus (Oxford 1998).
-
UC19.†26h (`cum glosis A. B. de greco in latinum translatis'):
Anastasius Bibliothecarius [† after 873]
Epistolae ad Carolum Caluum imperatorem de Areopagiticis et de
Iohanne Scoto interprete
PL 122. 1026–30; PL 129. 737–9, 739–41.
-
UC19.27 (`extractus doctoris de Lira super multos libros biblia cum
duobus Gregoriis'):
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.
-
UC19.29 (`reductorium morale super libros biblie'):
Pierre Bersuire [c1290–1362]
C. Samaran in HLF 39 (1962) 259–450.
Reductorium morale super totam Bibliam, the sixteenth book of
his Reductorium morale, which circulated widely on its own
pr. as
Liber Bibliae moralis, Ulm 1474 (GW 3862), &c.; Stegmüller Bibl.
6426.
-
UC19.*30 (`Brito in summa de uerbis biblie'):
William Brito [late 13th cent.]
Expositiones uocabulorum Bibliae
ed. L. W. & B. A. Daly (Padua 1975); Stegmüller Bibl. 2820.
-
UC19.32 (`cum sermonibus Bonaventure'):
Bonaventure OFM [1221–1274]
Sermones (unspec.)
-
UC19.33 (IIa IIe):
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.
Summa theologica
STO vols. 4–12; Glorieux Rép. 14ax.
-
UC19.34:
John of Genoa OP [† after 1286]
Catholicon
pr. [Mainz ?1460] (GW 3182), Augsburg 1469 (GW
3183), &c.; Kaeppeli 2199. [Usually anonymous in lists.]
-
UC19.35:
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).]
-
UC19.36a:
Iohannes de Burgo [† after 1398]
Pupilla oculi
pr. London 1510 (STC 4115), &c.; Bloomfield 2441;
Sharpe, Latin Writers, 222.
-
UC19.36b:
Gregory the Great [c540–604, sedit 590–604]
De cura pastorali
CPL 1712.
-
UC19.37a:
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
Logica noua comprised four works of Aristotle
– a. De sophisticis
elenchis, tr. Boethius: ed. B. G. Dod, AL 6/1–3 (1975), 5–60.
b. Topica, tr. Boethius: ed. L. Minio-Paluello, AL 5/1–3 (1969),
5–179. c. Analytica priora, tr. Boethius: ed. L. Minio-Paluello,
AL 3/1–4 (1962), 5–139, 143–91 (two recensions). d. Analytica
posteriora, tr. James of Venice: ed. L. Minio-Paluello & B. G. Dod,
AL 4/1–4 (1968), 5–107.
-
UC19.37b:
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
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.]
-
UC19.38:
Nicholas Trevet OP [c1258–c1334]
Commentary on Augustine's De ciuitate Dei
part pr. [Strassburg
c. 1468] (GW 2883), Mainz 1473 &c.; Kaeppeli 3136. [Trevet's work was
used in early printings to continue the fuller but incomplete commentary
by Thomas Waleys, which ends at X 29.]
-
UC19.†39a (anon.):
Albertus Magnus OP [1193–1280]
DSB 1. 100–103.
Summa theologiae siue De mirabili scientia Dei
pr. Basel 1507; ed.
A. Borgnet, Alberti Magni opera omnia (Paris 1890–99), vols. 31–3; Fauser
64; Glorieux Rép. 6bz.
-
UC19.†39b (anon.):
Albertus Magnus OP [1193–1280]
Quaestiones de animalibus
AMO 12. 77–309; Fauser 32; Glorieux
Rép. 6be; Lohr, 344.
-
UC19.†39c (anon.):
Albertus Magnus OP [1193–1280]
Commentary on Aristotle's De anima
ed. A. Borgnet, Alberti Magni
opera omnia (Paris 1890–99), 5. 117–420; Fauser 18; Glorieux Rép.
6ar; Lohr, 342.
-
UC19.†40 (`Parisiensis de uiciis et uirtutibus', 2nd fo not found):
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.]
-
UC19.41a:
Robert Kilwardby OP [†1279]
Commentary on Aristotle's Analytica priora
pr. Venice 1499 (GW
7190) (as Giles of Rome); Lohr, 111–12.
-
UC19.41b:
Thomas Aquinas OP [c1225–1274]
Commentary on Aristotle's Analytica posteriora
STO 1*/2. 3–247;
Glorieux Rép. 14ba.
-
UC19.42 (`libellus de preparacione cordis', anon.):
Gerardus Leodiensis [early 13th cent.]
(attrib.), De doctrina cordis
pr. Paris 1506 &c.; pr. Naples 1607 (as
Gerardus Leodiensis OP); ed. G. Hendrix, Hugo de Sancto Caro. Traktaat De
doctrina cordis (Leuven 1995); Thomson, Grosseteste, 248–9. [Attributed in
the 13th cent. to `Gerardus OP lector domus Leodiensis'. Wilmart identified
the author as Gerardus de Leodio OCist (early 13th cent.). Not in Kaeppeli,
who does not recognize Girard of Liège as a Dominican (Kaeppeli, 2. 99); the
attribution to Hugh of Saint-Cher OP was put forward by G. Hendrix in 1980 but
especially in his book, Hugh de Sancto Caro. Traktaat De doctrina cordis
(Louvain 1995). The latest study by N. F. Palmer, `The authorship of De
doctrina cordis, in A Companion to The Doctrine of the Hert, ed. D.
Renevey & C. Whitehead (Exeter, 2010), 19–56, tests the evidence and supports
Wilmart's argument.]
-
UC19.43a:
Robert Allington [† after 1395]
Literalis sententia super Praedicamenta
part ed. A. D.
Conti in Documenti e studi sulla tradizione filosofica medievale 4 (1993)
179–306 (text, 241–306); Sharpe, Latin Writers, 522.
-
UC19.43h (`uniuersalia secundum Burleygh'):
Walter Burley [1275–after 1344]
DNB; BRUO 270–71; DSB 2. 608–612.
Quaestiones de uniuersalibus
pr. Venice 1493 (GW 5770), &c.;
ed. H.-U. Wöhler, Abh. der sächsischen Akademie 75/5 (Leipzig 1998,
19992) (text, 10–66); Sharpe, Latin Writers, 712–13.
-
UC19.44 (inc.):
John Wyclif [†1384]
Logicae continuatio
ed. M. H. Dziewicki, Tractatus de
logica 1. Wyclif Soc. (1893), 75–234; Thomson, Wyclyf, 5–6 (A2).
-
UC19.45:
David of Augsburg OFM [c1200–1272]
Formula nouiciorum is used as a title for more than one part of
De exterioris et interioris hominis compositione
pr. Quaracchi 1899;
Bloomfield 4155 (Book I), 5676 (Book I part 2), 2655 (Book II).
-
UC19.46 (`liber de amore cum aliis tractatibus R. heremite'):
Richard Rolle [†1349]
Liber de amore Dei contra amatores mundi
ed. P. F. Theiner (Berkeley,
CA, 1968); Allen, Rolle, 203–209.
-
UC19.47 (`tabula Martini super decreta et decretalia'):
Martin of Troppau OP [†1278]
Margarita Decreti
pr. [Cologne] 1481 (CIBN M177), &c.;
Kaeppeli 2973.
-
UC19.†48 (`casuarium decretorum', anon.):
Bartholomew of Brescia [†1258]
Casus Decretorum, a reworking of Benencasa
pr. Basel 1489 (GW
3426), Paris 1505, &c.; Schulte, 2. 84–5.
-
UC19.49:
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.]
-
UC19.50b:
Geoffrey de Aspall [†1287]
Quaestiones on Aristotle's De caelo et mundo
unpr.; Sharpe,
Latin Writers, 120.
-
UC19.50c:
Geoffrey de Aspall [†1287]
Quaestiones on Aristotle's De generatione et corruptione
unpr.;
Sharpe, Latin Writers, 120; Lohr, 152.
-
UC19.50d:
Geoffrey de Aspall [†1287]
Quaestiones on Aristotle's Meteora
not known to survive, but
cited among the questions in Bodl. MS Bodley 167 (Macrae, 111).
-
UC19.50e:
Geoffrey de Aspall [†1287]
Quaestiones on Aristotle's De anima
ed. V. Cizmic, diss.
(Munich 2006); Sharpe, Latin Writers, 120.
-
UC19.50f:
Geoffrey de Aspall [†1287]
Quaestiones on Nicholas of Damascus (ps. Aristotle), De
uegetabilibus et plantis
not known to survive.
-
UC19.50g:
Geoffrey de Aspall [†1287]
Quaestiones on Aristotle's De sensu et sensato
unpr.; Sharpe,
Latin Writers, 121.
-
UC19.50h:
Geoffrey de Aspall [†1287]
(?), Quaestiones on Aristotle's De memoria et reminiscentia
unpr.; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 120.
-
UC19.50i:
Geoffrey de Aspall [†1287]
Quaestiones on Aristotle's De somno et uigilia
unpr.; Sharpe,
Latin Writers, 121.
-
UC19.50j:
Geoffrey de Aspall [†1287]
Quaestiones on Aristotle's De longitudine et breuitate uitae
not known to survive.
-
UC19.50k (`ii libri methaphisice'):
Geoffrey de Aspall [†1287]
(attrib.), Quaestiones on Aristotle's Metaphysica
unpr.; Sharpe,
Latin Writers, 121; Lohr, 151.
-
UC19.†50a (`expositio Aspal' super libros phisicorum'):
Geoffrey de Aspall [†1287]
Quaestiones on Aristotle's Physica
unpr.; Sharpe, Latin
Writers, 121; Lohr, 151.
-
UC19.52 (`Belial'):
Iacobus de Theramo (Giacomo Palladini) [c1350–1417]
VL 4. 441–7.
Consolatio peccatorum (1382), also known as Belial
pr. Augsburg
1472 (Goff J64), &c.; Bloomfield 3997.
-
UC19.56–7 (`textus naturalis philosophie', 2 copies):
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
Libri naturales, a collection comprising Aristotle's Physica,
De generatione et corruptione, De caelo, Meteora I–III, De plantis,
and the pseudo-Aristotelian Liber de causis and De differentia spiritus
et animae; in the late 13th cent. new translations from Greek were substituted
for those from Arabic
AL Codd. 1. 49–51 for analysis.
-
UC19.58 (`T. de ueritatibus theologie'):
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.
-
UC19.60:
Justinian [†565]
Codex
pr. Mainz 1475 (GW 7722), &c.; ed. P. Krüger, Corpus iuris
ciuilis 2 (Berlin 1877). [The ordinary gloss is that of Accursius: standard
text is that in Corpus iuris ciuilis (Lyon 1584).]
-
UC19.61a (`textus ethicorum'):
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
Ethica, tr. Robert Grosseteste
pr. Louvain 1476 (GW
2360), &c.; ed. R. A. Gauthier, AL 26/1–3 (1972–4), 141–370,
375–588 (two recensions, the second a revision by Moerbeke)).
Ethica noua (where specified) was an anonymous translation from the Greek
of Book I, circulating with Ethica uetus, a translation of Books II–III
(AL 26/2), both now attributed to Burgundio of Pisa.
-
UC19.61b:
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
Magna moralia, tr. ? Bartholomew of Messina
unpr.; AL Codd.
71–2, 159–60.
-
UC19.62 (itemized):
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
Libri morales, a collection comprising Aristotle's Ethica,
Politica, and the Aristotelian compilation De bona fortuna; often
including the ps. Aristotelian Oeconomica and other texts.
-
UC19.62b (`questiones B. mote et solute super 10 libros ethicorum'):
Walter Burley [1275–after 1344]
Commentary on Aristotle's Ethica
pr. Venice 1481 (GW 5778), &c.;
Sharpe, Latin Writers, 718–19.
-
UC19.62c (`capitula Eustracii super libros ethicorum'):
Eustratius [fl. 1082–1114]
(& others), Commentary on Aristotle's Ethica, tr. R. Grosseteste
ed. H. F. P. Mercken, Corpus latinum commentariorum in Aristotelem graecorum
6/1–3 (Louvain 1973–91); Thomson, Grosseteste, 68–70.
-
UC19.62d (`conclusiones B. super libros ethicorum'):
Walter Burley [1275–after 1344]
Conclusiones seu tituli eorum quae tractantur in libris X
Ethicorum
unpr.; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 719.
-
UC19.62e (`textus ethicorum cum exposicione sancti Thome'):
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
Ethica, tr. Robert Grosseteste
pr. Louvain 1476 (GW
2360), &c.; ed. R. A. Gauthier, AL 26/1–3 (1972–4), 141–370,
375–588 (two recensions, the second a revision by Moerbeke)).
Ethica noua (where specified) was an anonymous translation from the Greek
of Book I, circulating with Ethica uetus, a translation of Books II–III
(AL 26/2), both now attributed to Burgundio of Pisa.
-
UC19.62f:
Thomas Aquinas OP [c1225–1274]
Commentary on Aristotle's Ethica
STO 47. 1–607; Glorieux
Rép. 14at.
-
UC19.62g (`. . cum exposicione B. de Brugis'):
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
[pseud.]
Oeconomica, Latin tr.
pr. Cologne c. 1491 (GW 2431), &c.;
to appear, AL vol. 30/1–2. [There was a 13th-cent translation revised by
William de Moerbeke but the text usually found is a late-13th-cent. version
by Durand of Auvergne.]
-
UC19.62h:
Bartholomaeus de Brugis [† c1356]
DHGE 6. 985–8; HLF 37 (1938) 238–50.
Commentary on ps. Aristotelian Oeconomica
unpr.; Lohr, 376.
-
UC19.62k (`. . cum exposicione P. de Aluernia in margine'):
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
Politica, tr. William of Moerbeke
pr. Cologne 1492 (GW 2444),
&c. [The Translatio uetus, where specified, comprised only Books I–II,
ed. P. Michaud-Quantin, AL 29/1 (1961), but this had limited circulation.]
-
UC19.62l:
Peter of Auvergne [†1304]
List of works by G. Galle in BPM 42 (2000) 53–79.
Commentary on Aristotle's Politica III 7–VIII, a continuation
of the commentary by Thomas Aquinas
pr. with Bruni's translation of
the text, Rome 1492 (Goff A1024), &c.; ed. with Thomas's commentary by R. M.
Spiazzi (Turin 1951), 141–238; Glorieux Arts 338s1; Lohr, 342.
-
UC19.62m (`rethorica A. uallata cum exposicione fr. E. de Roma'):
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
Rhetorica, Latin tr.
ed. B. Schneider, AL 31/1–2 (1978), 5–154.
Another translation by William of Moerbeke, ibid. 159–321.
-
UC19.62n:
Giles of Rome OESA [c1243–1316], archbishop of Bourges
Commentary on Aristotle's Rhetorica
pr. Venice 1515/16 / repr.
Frankfurt 1968; Lohr, 334–5; Glorieux Rép. 400e.
-
UC19.62o:
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
De bona fortuna, a 13th-cent. Latin confection from Aristotle's
Magna moralia and Ethica eudemia
pr. as De bona fortuna in Aristotelis
opera, Venice 1482 (GW 2336), &c.; to appear, AL 28.
-
UC19.62p:
Giles of Rome OESA [c1243–1316], archbishop of Bourges
Commentary on the Aristotelian De bona fortuna
pr. Venice 1496
(GW 7203), &c.; Glorieux Rép. 400u.
-
UC19.62q:
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
[app.]
De uita Aristotelis
pr. in early editions of Aristotle's
works, Venice 1496 (GW 2341), &c.; ed. I. Düring, Aristotle in the
Ancient Biographical Tradition, Studia Graeca et Latina Gothoburgensia
5 (1957), 151–8; Thorndike/Kibre 138.
-
UC19.62r (`liber de morte Aristotelis cum prologo'):
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
[pseud.]
De pomo, tr. Manfred of Sicily
ed. M. Plezia (Warsaw 1960); E.
Acampora-Michel, Liber de pomo. Buch vom Apfel (Frankfurt 2001);
PAL 51–2 (no. 75); Thorndike/Kibre 286, 302.
-
UC19.62s (w. R. Bacon):
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.]
-
UC19.62t:
Roger Bacon OFM [†1294]
Tractatus ad declarandum quaedam obscure dicta in libro
Secreti secretorum
ed. Steele, 5. 1–24; Lohr, 121–2.
-
UC19.63:
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
De sophisticis elenchis, tr. Boethius
ed. B. G. Dod, AL
6/1–3 (1975), 5–60. [See also Aristotle, Logica noua.]
-
UC19.64:
M. Tullius Cicero [106–43 BC]
De inuentione
ed. E. Stroebel, Teubner (1915).
-
UC19.65a:
Bestiarium
on the genre and English manuscripts see F. Unterkircher,
Bestiarium: Die Texte der HS Ashmole 1511 (Graz 1986); W. B. Clark &
M. T. McMunn, Beasts and Birds of the Middle Ages (Philadelphia, PA, 1989).
-
UC19.66a (`formula dictandi Tria sunt'):
Geoffrey de Vinsauf [† after 1200]
Tria sunt
ed. E. Faral, Les Arts poétiques du XIIe et du XIIIe
siècle (Paris 1924), 265–320. English copies, such as Oxford, Balliol
College, MS 263, often contain a version of the text longer than that printed.
-
UC19.66b (`sompniale delucidarium pharonis'):
John of Limoges [fl. 1270]
Somnium delucidarium pharaonis
ed. K. Horváth, Iohannis
Lemovicensis opera omnia (Veszprém 1932), 1. 69–126; Stegmüller
Bibl. 4766; Bloomfield 5202; Glorieux Rép. 361d.
-
UC19.66c:
Alanus ab Insula (Alain de Lille) [c. 1128–1203]
R. de Lage, Alain de Lille, poète du XIIe siècle (Paris 1951),
169–86.
De planctu naturae
PL 210. 431–82; ed. N. M. Häring, Studi
medievali 3rd ser. 19 (1978) 797–879.
-
UC19.66d:
L. Annaeus Seneca [4 BC–AD 65]
Tragoediae
ed. O. Zwierlein, OCT (1986).
-
UC19.66e (`rethorica dictandi magistri Thome de Nouo Merc'):
Thomas of Newmarket [† after 1384]
Tractatus de rhetorica
not known to survive. Bale, Index, 447,
provides the incipit from a copy in Cambridge.
-
UC19.66f (`papa stupor mundi'):
Geoffrey de Vinsauf [† after 1200]
Poetria noua
ed. E. Faral, Les Arts poétiques du XIIe et XIIIe
siècle (Paris 1924), 197–262.
-
UC19.69a (w. Thomas of Newmarket's comm.):
Alexander de Villa Dei [c1170–c1240]
Algorismus
ed. J. O. Halliwell, Rara mathematica
(London 1839), 73–83; WIC 7470; Thorndike/Kibre 597.
-
UC19.69b:
Thomas of Newmarket [† after 1384]
Commentary on Alexander de Villa Dei, Algorismus
unpr.; Sharpe,
Latin Writers, 672.
-
UC19.69c:
Algorismus in minutiis, inc. `Quoniam cuiuslibet quantitatis notita'
unpr.; Thorndike/Kibre 1268.
-
UC19.69d:
Alexander de Villa Dei [c1170–c1240]
Massa compoti
ed. R. Steele, Opera hactenus inedita Rogeri Baconi
(Oxford 1909–40), 6. 268–89; Thorndike/Kibre 167 (text), 826–7 (prologue);
WIC 1835 (text), 10310 (prologue).
-
UC19.69e:
Iohannes de Sacro Bosco [early 13th cent.]
Tractatus de sphaera
ed. L. Thorndike (Chicago, IL, 1949);
Thorndike/Kibre 1577, 1524. [In almost all cases anonymous.]
-
UC19.69f:
Theorica planetarum
pr. Ferrara 1472 (GW 10684), Venice 1478 (GW
10685), &c.; ed. F. J. Carmody, Theorica planetarum Gerardi
(Berkeley, CA, 1942); Carmody, 167–8; Thorndike/Kibre 223. [O. Pedersen,
`The Theorica planetarum literature of the middle ages', Classica &
Medievalia 23 (1962) 225–32.]
-
UC19.69g (abbrev.):
Boethius, Anicius Manlius Torquatus Severinus [c480–524]
De institutione musica
CPL 880.
-
UC19.†69i (`musica Boecii abbreuiata per Iohannem de Muris'):
Iohannes de Muris [† after 1345]
DSB 7. 128–33.
Musica speculatiua secundum Boetium
ed. M. Gerbert, Scriptores
ecclesiastici de musica (St. Blasien 1784), 3. 256–83; ed. C. Falkenroth
(Stuttgart 1992); ed. S. Fast (Ottawa 1994); Thorndike/Kibre 1287.
-
UC19.72c:
Boethius, Anicius Manlius Torquatus Severinus [c480–524]
[pseud.]
De disciplina scholarium
ed. O. Weijers (Leiden 1976).
-
UC19.†72a (anon.):
Stephen Langton [c1165–1228], archbishop of Canterbury
Psalterium beatae Mariae uirginis
ed. G. M. Dreves, AH 35 (1900)
153–71; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 631.
-
UC19.678a (`sequenciarum glosatum'):
Hymnarium glosatum, used as an instruction-book for novices
and often found with school-books
pr. Paris 1485 (Goff E154), &c.;
pr. London [c. 1496] (STC 16111), &c.; H. Gneuss, Hymnar und Hymnen
im englischen Mittelalter (Tübingen 1968), 194–206; Hunt, Teaching
Latin, 1. 38–42.
159 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).