Medieval catalogues > UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF CAMBRIDGE > University > Leland, c. 1535
UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF CAMBRIDGE: University
UC6. Leland, c. 1535
11 identified entries found.
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UC6.1:
John Waleys OFM [†1285]
Communiloquium siue Summa collationum ad omne genus hominum
pr. Lyon 1511, 1r–139v, &c.; Glorieux Rep. 322a.
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UC6.*2 (`H.
super euangelia'):
Hildebrandus [12th cent.]
Commentary on Matthew
unpr.; Stegmüller Bibl. 3559 records only
Lambeth Palace, MS 539 (s. xii), containing Books VI–X, that is homilies
41–84. Extract in PL 148. 823 (quotation from Lambeth MS); another
copy may lie behind PL 181. 1691–1704 (`ex codice MS. Himeradensi').
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UC6.3:
Nicholas Trevet OP [c1258–c1334]
Commentary on Genesis
unpr.; Kaeppeli 3131; Stegmüller Bibl.
6033.
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UC6.4:
William de Montibus [†1213]
Distinctiones theologicae
unpr. apart from excerpts in Goering,
William de Montibus, 261–303; Stegmüller Bibl. 2993–5; Bloomfield 0159, 0478.
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UC6.5:
Nicholas Trevet OP [c1258–c1334]
Commentary on Boethius's Philosophiae consolatio
unpr.; dedication,
ed. R. J. Dean, Studies in Philology 63 (1966) 600–603; extracts in
Chaucer's Boece and the Medieval Tradition of Boethius, ed. A. J. Minnis
(Cambridge 1993), 35–91; Kaeppeli 3134.
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UC6.*6:
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.
Philosophiae consolatio, English tr. by Geoffrey Chaucer
ed. L. D. Benson & F. N. Robinson, The Riverside Chaucer (Boston, MA,
1987), 395–469. Chaucer also used the commentary by Nicholas Trevet.
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UC6.7:
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.]
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UC6.8 (`compendium de dictis & factis memorabilibus', inc.):
Roger of Waltham [† after 1332]
Compendium morale
unpr.; Bloomfield 1977, 5286, 5289.
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UC6.9:
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.
De generatione et corruptione, tr. Andronicus Callistus
unpr.;
DBI 3. 162–3.
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UC6.*10 = UC7.*113:
Robert Grosseteste, known as Lincolniensis [†1253], bishop of Lincoln
[pseud.]
Summa philosophiae, inc. `Philosophantes famosi'
ed. L. Baur, BGPM
9 (1912), 275–643; Thomson, Grosseteste, 265–6.
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UC6.11:
Bartholomaeus Fatius [c1400–1457]
DBI 44. 112–21.
De humanae uitae felicitate
pr. in Dialogi decem uariorum
auctorum, [Cologne] 1473 (Bod-Inc D-043); ed. F. Sandeus, De legibus
Siciliae et Apuliae (Hanau 1611), 106–148.
11 identified entries found.
All data was derived from the List of Identifications by Professor Richard Sharpe.
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