Medieval catalogues > UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF CAMBRIDGE > Corpus Christi College > Inventory, mid 16th cent.
UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF CAMBRIDGE: Corpus Christi College
UC25. Inventory, mid 16th cent.
25 identified entries found.
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UC25.¶*10 (`Scotus doctor subtilis'):
Iohannes Duns Scotus OFM [†1308]
Scriptum super libros Sententiarum, known as the Opus Oxoniense
DSO vols. 8–21; ed. C. Balić & others, Ioannis Duns Scoti opera
omnia, vols. 1–# (Vatican City 1950–#); Stegmüller Sent. 421.
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UC25.¶11:
Petrus de Harentals OPrem [1322–1391]
Collectarius super librum Psalmorum
pr. Cologne 1480 (Goff P471),
&c.; Stegmüller Bibl. 6616.
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UC25.¶20:
Sermones Meffreth, alias Hortulus reginae de tempore
pr. [Basel
not after 1483] (Goff M440), &c.
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UC25.¶*27 (`de
scriptoribus ecclesiasticis'):
Johannes Tritheim OSB [1462–1516], abbot of Sponheim
De scriptoribus ecclesiasticis
pr. Basel 1494 (Goff T452), &c.
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UC25.¶29 (`psalterium
quintuplex'):
Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples (Iacobus Faber Stapulensis) [c1455–1536]
E. Amann in DTC 9. 132–59.
Quincuplex Psalterium
pr. Paris 1509 (Moreau, 1. 27), &c.; pr. Paris
1513 / repr. Geneva 1979; preface, Rice 66.
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UC25.¶*31:
Vitas patrum. Collections with this common title invariably begin with
Rufinus's translation (often ascribed to Jerome) of the Historia monachorum
in Aegypto (PL 21. 387–462; ed. E. Schulz-Flügel [Berlin 1990]), and then
go on to include other Lives and apophthegmata of the type collected and
published by H. Rosweyde and reprinted in PL vols. 73–4. Jerome's Lives
of St Paul the Hermit, St Hilarion, and St Malchus (CPL 617–19) also make
a frequent appearance. [See also Historia monachorum in Aegypto; Jerome,
Liber adhortationum sanctorum patrum.]
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UC25.44 (`Fulgentius Maxentius
et Basilius in uno codice', Hagenau 1520):
Fulgentius of Ruspe [† c532], bishop of Ruspe
Opera
pr. Hagenau 1520 (Adams F1136) (with Ioannes Maxentius), &c.
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UC25.¶47 (`Iacobus
de Valentia'):
Diego Perez de Valencia OESA [c1408–1490]
Commentary on the Psalms
pr. Valencia 1484 (Goff P276), &c.;
Stegmüller Bibl. 3983. [Sometimes confused with Thomas Waleys, Expositio
super duos nocturnos Psalterii
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UC25.¶72:
M. Tullius Cicero [106–43 BC]
Epistulae ad familiares, with commentary by Hubertinus Clericus
pr.
Venice 1480 (GW 6834), &c.
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UC25.¶87:
Baptista Mantuanus (Battista Spagnuoli of Mantua) OCarm [1448–1516]
Adolescentia
pr. Mantua 1498 (GW 3244), &c.
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UC25.¶*90 (5 vols):
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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UC25.¶*91:
Ralph of Flaix OSB [mid 12th cent.], abbot of Flaix
Commentary on Leviticus
pr. Marburg/Cologne 1536, repr.
in Maxima bibliotheca ueterum patrum (Lyon 1677), 17. 48–246;
Stegmüller Bibl. 7093.
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UC25.¶*99 (`breuiloquus', anon.):
Johannes Reuchlin [1454/5–1522]
Vocabularius breuiloquus
pr. Basel 1478 (Goff R155), &c.
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UC25.¶106–107 (2 vols):
Rainerius Iordanis de Pisis OP [† c1348]
Pantheologia
pr. Nürnberg 1473 (Goff R5), &c.; Kaeppeli 3429;
Stegmüller Bibl. 7169.
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UC25.¶*111:
Conrad of Brundelsheim (`Soccus') [†1321]
Sermones de sanctis
pr. Deventer [1477/79] (GW 7413), &c.; Schneyer
Rep. 1. 738–47.
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UC25.126 (`sermones M. de Vngaria'):
Michael of Hungary OFM Obs. [†1480]
G. Borsa, Michael de Hungaria, a medieval author in Britain: His person and a
bibliography of the printed editions of his work between 1480 and 1621
(Budapest 1998).
Sermones praedicabiles
pr. [Louvain 1477/83] (Goff M539a), &c.
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UC25.¶*126x:
John Alcock [†1500], bishop of Ely
Gallicantus in synodo apud Bernwell
pr. R. Pynson, [London 1498]
(STC 277).
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UC25.127 (attrib. Hugo de Prato Florido):
Evrardus de Valle Scholarum OSA [† c1272]
Sermones de sanctis
pr. Heidelberg 1485 (GW
9489), &c.
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UC25.128:
Hugo de Prato Florido OP [1262–1322]
Sermones dominicales super euangelia et epistolas
pr. [Strassburg
c. 1472] (Goff H503), &c.; Schneyer Rep. 2. 741–53; Kaeppeli 1979.
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UC25.¶134:
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.
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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UC25.136:
Lumen animae
pr. [Augsburg] 1477 (Goff L393), &c.; M. A. Rouse &
R. H. Rouse in AFP 41 (1971) 5–113; version C, ed. N. Harris (Oxford
2007); Kaeppeli 565–7.
25 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).