Medieval catalogues > UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF OXFORD > University > Gift of books by Humfrey Duke of Gloucester, 25 November 1439
UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE LIBRARIES OF OXFORD: University
UO1. Gift of books by Humfrey Duke of Gloucester, 25 November 1439
151 identified entries found.
-
UO1.1–3 (3 vols):
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.
-
UO1.4–7 (`dictionarius', 4 vols):
Pierre Bersuire [c1290–1362]
C. Samaran in HLF 39 (1962) 259–450.
Repertorium morale siue Dictionarius biblicus
pr. Nürnberg 1489
(GW 3866), &c.; Stegmüller Bibl. 6427.
-
UO1.9 (`concordancia biblie'):
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.]
-
UO1.10a:
Eusebius of Caesarea [c260–339], bishop of Caesarea
Historia ecclesiastica, tr. Rufinus
CPG 3495; PL 21. 465–540;
ed. T. Mommsen, GCS 9 (1903–9). [Almost invariably anonymous in catalogues.]
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UO1.10b (`Beda de gestis Anglorum'):
Bede the Venerable [c673–735], monk of Wearmouth–Jarrow
Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum
CPL 1375; pr. [Strassburg,
not after 1475] (ISTC), &c.; ed. B. Colgrave & R. A. B. Mynors, OMT (1969).
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UO1.11:
Cassiodorus Senator [c485–580]
(and Epiphanius), Historia tripartita
CPL 899, 2269. [See W. Jacob
& R. Hanslik, Handschriftliche Überlieferung der sogen. Historia Tripartita
(Berlin 1954).] [Almost invariably anonymous in catalogues.]
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UO1.12:
Bede the Venerable [c673–735], monk of Wearmouth–Jarrow
Commentary on Acts of the Apostles
CPL 1357, 1358; ed. M. L. W.
Laistner, CCSL 121 (1983) 1–99, 103–163.
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UO1.13 (attrib. G. de la Porrée):
Gilbert of Hoyland OCist [†1172], abbot of Swineshead
Sermons on the Song of Songs 3
1–5:10: PL 184. 11–252; Stegmüller
Bibl. 2493.
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UO1.14 (`Ricardus de Sancto Victore', identified from 2o fo., confirmed
by Gascoigne):
Richard of Saint-Victor OSA [†1173]
R. Goy, Die handschriftliche Überlieferung der Werke Richards von
St. Viktor im Mittelalter, Bibliotheca Victorina 18 (Turnhout 2006).
De potestate ligandi et soluendi
PL 196. 1159–78;
ed. J. Ribaillier, Richard de Saint-Victor. Opuscules théologiques (Paris 1967), 77–110;
Stegmüller Bibl. 7340.
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UO1.15:
Origen [c185–c254]
Homilies on Numbers, tr. Rufinus
CPG 1418; ed. W. A. Baehrens, GCS
30 (1921) 3–285; Stegmüller Bibl. 6178.
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UO1.16 (`psalterium glosatum', 2nd fo.):
Peter Lombard [c1100–1160]
Gloss on the Psalms (Magna glosatura)
PL 191. 55–1296;
Stegmüller Bibl. 6637.
-
UO1.17 (`I. Deuor' super historiam scripture'):
John Deverose [fl. 1360]
Illustrationes super historias sanctae scripturae
not known to
survive; Stegmüller Bibl. 4427.
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UO1.*18 (`Beda de temporibus'):
Bede the Venerable [c673–735], monk of Wearmouth–Jarrow
De temporum ratione, inc. `De natura rerum et ratione temporum'
(pref.), `De temporum ratione domino iuuante' (text)
CPL 2320; ed.
C. W. Jones, CCSL 123B (1977) 263–460. [There will be further copies
referred to as De temporibus, which, without corroboration, cannot be
correctly identified.]
-
UO1.18 (`Musca super cantica canticorum'):
John Ridewall OFM [† after 1340]
Commentary on Proverbs and the Song of Songs
not known to survive;
Stegmüller Bibl. 4884; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 301.
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UO1.19–20:
Peter of Cornwall OSA [1140–1221]
Pantheologus
unpr.; Sharpe, Latin Writers, 425–6.
-
UO1.21:
Iohannes de Tambaco (Johann von Dambach) OP [1288–1372]
Consolatio theologiae
pr. Mainz [c. 1470/75] (Goff J435),
&c.; Kaeppeli 2256.
-
UO1.†22 (`flores certorum librorum Augustini'):
Prosper of Aquitaine [c390–c463]
De uera innocentia ex operibus S. Augustini
CPL 525;
ed. M. Gastaldo, CCSL 68A (1972) 257–365.
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UO1.23–24 ('prima pars Petri Damiani', 'secunda pars eiusdem'):
Peter Damian OSB [1007–1072]
Epistolae
ed. K. Reindel, Die Briefe des Petrus Damiani, 4 vols,
MGH Die Briefe der deutschen Kaiserzeit 4 (1983–93). Peter's treatises
are mostly addressed as letters; what appears as opuscula in PL 145
appears as letters here. Kirkestede's source is unknown.
-
UO1.25:
Francesco Petrarca [1304–1374]
De uita solitaria
pr. [Strassburg, not after 1473] (Goff P417), &c.;
ed. G. Martellotti & others, Petrarca. Prose (Milan 1955), 286–591.
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UO1.*26 (`Beda de temporibus'):
Bede the Venerable [c673–735], monk of Wearmouth–Jarrow
De temporibus
CPL 2318; ed. C. W. Jones, CCSL 123C (1980)
585–611. [The same title is also used to refer to Bede, De temporum ratione
(CPL 2320), and unconfirmed entries may be either work; where there is
some corroboration, it always points to De temporum ratione, though
sometimes manuscript catalogues have simply accepted the medieval title and
not confirmed the text, e.g. James, St John's, 31. The cumulative indexing
has led to reassignment of identifications in a number of cases.]
-
UO1.†27 (`tabula super diuersos libros Augustini', anon.):
Robert Kilwardby OP [†1279]
Tabulae originalium Augustini
unpr.; D. A. Callus in Studia
mediaevalia R. J. Martin (Bruges 1948), 243–70; Kaeppeli 3521.
-
UO1.28 (`Epistole Cassiodori', identified from 2nd fo.):
Ps. Clement of Rome
Epistola ad Iacobum fratrem Domini, transmitted with the
Recognitiones in some copies
ed. B. Rehm & G. Strecker, GCS 51
(19932), 375–87. A second letter is first attested in the
ps.-Isidorean decretals (PL 56. 893–6); it too circulated with the
Recognitiones.
-
UO1.†28 (`epistole Cassiodori', but 2nd fo. does not fit):
Cassiodorus Senator [c485–580]
Variae
CPL 896; ed. $caring$$. J. Fridh, CCSL 96 (1973) 3–499.
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UO1.29:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
Epistulae
CPL 262.
-
UO1.30:
Jerome [c347–420]
Epistulae
CPL 620, 633; pr. Strassburg [not after 1469] (GW
12422), &c.
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UO1.31:
Ambrose [c339–397], archbishop of Milan
Epistulae
CPL 160; PL 16. 875–1286; ed. O. Faller & M. Zelzer,
CSEL 82/1–3 (1968–90). [The letters were reordered by Faller & Zelzer; for
a concordance, see CSEL 82/2 (1990) x–xiv.]
-
UO1.32a (`Petrus de Vineis'):
Petrus de Vinea [†1249], chancellor to Frederick II
Summa dictaminis
ed. S. Schardius, Epistolarum Petri de Vineis
libri VI (Basel 1566); manuscripts listed by H. M. Schaller, Deutsches
Archiv 12 (1956) 114–59.
-
UO1.32b:
Peter of Blois [†1211], archdeacon of Bath
Epistolae
PL 207. 1–560; L. Wahlgren, The Letter Collection of
Peter of Blois. Studies in the Manuscript Tradition, Studia Graeca et Latina
Gothoburgensia 58 (1993).
-
UO1.†33 (`tabula originalium'):
Robert Kilwardby OP [†1279]
Tabula super originalia patrum
unpr.; Kaeppeli 3521; Sharpe,
Latin Writers, 564.
-
UO1.34 (`epistole'):
Cyprian of Carthage [†258], bishop of Carthage
Epistulae
CPL 50; ed. G. F. Diercks, CCSL 3B, 3C (1994–5). Copies
include most of the shorter treatises among the letters; see Rouse & Rouse,
Registrum, 145.
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UO1.36:
Athanasius [c296–373], patriarch of Alexandria
De trinitate, a standard Athanasian group of texts, comprising
–
a. De trinitate, Books I–VII (attributed by Morin to Eusebius
Vercellensis): CPL 105; ed. V. Bulhart, CCSL9 (1957) 3–99; Book VIII,
ib. 115–18 (a later addition). [The work circulated under the names of
Athanasius, Ambrosius, Vigilius Thapsensis.]
b. A form of the Nicene Creed with
commentary: CPL 552; ed. V. Bulhart, 129–32 (Book IX), 135–45 (Book X).
c. De trinitate et de spiritu sancto: ed. V. Bulhart, 165–205.
d. Vigilius Thapsensis, Contra arianos: CPL 807. The final part,
Sententia Probi iudicis, is sometimes treated as a separate book.
e. Potamius, Epistola ad Athanasium: CPL 542.
f. Ps. Athanasius, Ep. 2, ad Luciferum: PL 13. 1039–42; see CPL 117.
g. Ps. Vigilius Thapsensis, Solutiones obiectionum arianorum: CPL 812.
-
UO1.37:
Augustine [354–430], bishop of Hippo
De sermone Domini in monte
CPL 274; ed. A. Mutzenbecher, CCSL 35 (1967).
-
UO1.38:
Lactantius Firmianus [fl. 305–323]
Diuinae institutiones
CPL 85.
-
UO1.39 (`liber Iuliani episcopi de origine mortis humane', 2o fo.):
Julian of Toledo [†690], bishop of Toledo
Prognosticon futuri saeculi
CPL 1258; ed. J. N. Hillgarth, CCSL
115 (1976) 11–126.
-
UO1.40 (`Seneca de causis'):
Seneca the Elder [55 BC–AD c40]
Declamationes
ed. H. J. Müller (Vienna 1887); ed. L.
H$aring$$kanson, Teubner (1989).
-
UO1.41 (`liber de extraccione sermonum cum dictis Lincoln''):
Robert Grosseteste, known as Lincolniensis [†1253], bishop of Lincoln
Dicta CXLVII
part ed. E. Brown, Fasciculus rerum expetendarum
(London 1690), 2. 258–305; Thomson, Grosseteste, 214–32.
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UO1.‡42 (`Cato moralizatus'):
Philippus de Bergamo [† c1380]
Speculum regiminis
pr. Augsburg 1475 (GW 6277),
&c.; Bloomfield 3615. The work is a commentary on Disticha Catonis.
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UO1.42 (`Cato moralizatus'):
Disticha Catonis
ed. M. Boas & H. Botschuyver (Amsterdam 1952); Manitius,
HSS, 164–9. [For glossed texts in late medieval contexts, see Philippus de
Bergamo and Robertus de Euromodio.]
-
UO1.43a (` . . cum commento'):
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 anima, Latin tr. from Arabic by Michael Scot
pr. Padua 1472 (GW
2349), &c.; Thorndike/Kibre 179, 1271.
Latin tr. from Greek by James of Venice [AL 12/1], ed. J. Decorte & J. Brams,
ALD.
Latin tr. from Greek by William de Moerbeke [AL 12/2], pr. with Thomas
Aquinas's commentary, ed. R. A. Gauthier, STO 45/1 (1984).
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UO1.43b:
Averroes (Ibn Rushd) [1126–1198]
Commentarium magnum on Aristotle's Ethica, tr. Michael Scot
pr. Aristotelis omnia quae extant opera, 11 vols. (Venice 1573–6), vol.
2; ed. F. S. Crawford, CCAA 6/1, Medieval Academy of America 59 (1953).
-
UO1.44 (`liber eticorum', but 2nd fo. does not fit):
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.
-
UO1.45 (`policraticon', anon., 2o fo.):
John of Salisbury [c1115–1180], bishop of Chartres
Policraticus
ed. C. C. J. Webb (Oxford 1909); I–IV, ed. K. S. B.
Keats-Rohan, CCCM 118 (1993).
-
UO1.46 (Y. in ethimologiis'):
Isidore of Seville [†636], bishop of Seville
Etymologiae
CPL 1186; Diaz 122.
-
UO1.47 (`Franciscus rerum memorendarum'):
Francesco Petrarca [1304–1374]
Rerum memorandarum libri
pr. [Louvain 1483] (Goff P406);
ed. G. Billanovich (Florence 1943).
-
UO1.48 (`liber Platonis'):
Plato [429–347 BC]
Phaedo, tr. Leonardo Bruni
unpr.; preface, ed. H. Baron, Leonardo
Bruni (Berlin 1928), 3–4.
-
UO1.49 (`etica A. traducta per Leonardum Aleatinum'):
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.
-
UO1.50 (`politeca A. traducte per eundem'):
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
Politica, tr. Leonardo Bruni (1437)
pr. [Barcelona c. 1481] (GW
2446), &c.; prefaces, ed. H. Baron,Leonardo Bruni (Berlin 1928), 70–74.
-
UO1.51 (`Seneca de breuitate uite', dial. 10):
L. Annaeus Seneca [4 BC–AD 65]
Dialogi
ed. L. D. Reynolds, OCT (1977). [The itemization of the
Dialogues in a manuscript such as BA1.1613 is misleading; De otio (dial. 8)
and Consolatio ad Polybium (dial. 11) were no doubt present but subsumed
under the preceding dialogues, as in the extant copies, since the starts of
both texts were already missing in the archetype.]
-
UO1.52 (`Franciscus de remediis fortuitorum'):
Francesco Petrarca [1304–1374]
De remediis utriusque fortunae
pr. [Strassburg c. 1475] (Goff
P407), &c.; ed. W. Fiske (Florence 1887).
-
UO1.53:
M. Tullius Cicero [106–43 BC]
De officiis
ed. M. Winterbottom, OCT (1994).
-
UO1.†54 (`libri Galieni', possible 2nd fo.):
Galen [c129–?199]
Commentary on Hippocrates' Aphorismata, Latin tr.
pr. in the
Articella, [Padua c. 1476] (GW 2678), &c.; HL 39–40.
-
UO1.55 (`compendium medicine secundum Gilbertinum'):
Gilbertus Anglicus [early 13th cent.]
Compendium seu Lilium medicinae
pr. Lyon 1510; Sharpe, Latin
Writers, 144; Thorndike/Kibre 3, 881.
-
UO1.56 (comm.):
Hippocrates [c460–c380 BC]
Aphorismata, Latin tr.
pr. in Articella, [Padua c. 1476] (GW
2678), &c.; many versions are listed in HL 29–90.
-
UO1.†56 (anon.):
Galen [c129–?199]
Commentary on Hippocrates' Aphorismata, Latin tr.
pr. in the
Articella, [Padua c. 1476] (GW 2678), &c.; HL 39–40.
-
UO1.57:
Hippocrates [c460–c380 BC]
Aphorismata, Latin tr.
pr. in Articella, [Padua c. 1476] (GW
2678), &c.; many versions are listed in HL 29–90.
-
UO1.58 (`expositio super artem medicine'):
Articella, a standard collection of medical works
pr. [Padua c. 1476]
(GW 2678), &c.
-
UO1.59 (`Bernardus de urinis'):
Bernard de Gordon [† c1320]
De conseruatione uitae humanae
pr. Lyon 1574, 669–855;
L. E. Demaître, Doctor Bernard de Gordon, Professor and Practitioner (Toronto
1980), 176–7; Thorndike/Kibre 637 (De phlebotomia), 433 (De urinis),
1150 (De pulsibus), 1420 (Regimen sanitatis). The four parts are often
found separately.
-
UO1.60 (`Alexander Gerosophista'):
Alexander of Aphrodisias [early 3rd cent.]
Expositio libri meteorologicarum Aristotelis, tr. William of
Moerbeke
ed. A. J. Smet, Corpus latinum commentariorum in Aristotelem
graecorum 4 (Louvain 1968); Kaeppeli 1586.
-
UO1.†60 (`Alexander gerosofista'):
Alexander of Tralles [early 6th cent.]
De medicina
pr. Lyon 1504 &c.; tr. F. L. E. Brunet, Oeuvres
médicales d'Alexandre de Tralles (Paris 1933–7); Thorndike/Kibre 259.
-
UO1.61:
Galen [c129–?199]
De elementis, Latin tr.
pr. Venice 1490 (GW 10481), 2.
217r–235v; Thorndike/Kibre 1269.
-
UO1.62 (`tercius et quintus liber canonum A.'):
Avicenna (Abu `Ali al-Husain ibn `Abdallah Ibn Sina) [980–1037]
DSB 15. 494–501.
Canon medicinae, tr. Gerard of Cremona
pr. Milan 1473 (GW 3115,
CIBN A806), [Strassburg, not before 1473] (GW 3114, CIBN A807), &c.
-
UO1.63 (`Vincentius super libros Ypocratis'):
Vincentius [ unkn. ]
Commentary on Hippocrates
not identified.
-
UO1.64 (`Constantinus in pantegni'):
Constantinus Africanus OSB [c1015–1087], monk of Monte Cassino
Pantegni
pr. Lyon 1515, 2. 1r–57v (Theorica Pantegni), 58r–144r
(Practica Pantegni) (with the works of Isaac Iudaeus); Thorndike/Kibre 348,
1221. Manuscripts are listed in C. S. F. Burnett & D. Jacquart, Constantine the
African and `Ali ibn al-`Abbas al-Magusi (Leiden 1994), 316–51.
-
UO1.65 (`lilium Bernardi de Gordonio'):
Bernard de Gordon [† c1320]
Lilium medicinae
pr. Naples 1477 (GW 4080), &c.; Thorndike/Kibre
772.
-
UO1.66 (`Petrus Hispanus de pulsibus'):
Petrus Hispanus (later John XXI) [c1205–1277, sedit 1276–1277]
J. Meirinhos, `Les manuscrits et l'attribution d'oeuvres à Petrus
Hispanus', in Florilegium mediaevale. Études offertes à Jacqueline Hamesse
à l'occasion de son éméritat (Louvain-la-Neuve 2009),349–77.
Gloss on Philaretus, De pulsibus
unpr.; Diaz 1394; Thorndike/Kibre
1277, 1624.
-
UO1.67 (anon., 2nd fo.):
L. Annaeus Florus [early 2nd cent.]
Epitoma de Tito Liuio
pr. [Paris 1471] (GW 10092), &c.; ed.
E. Malcovati (Rome 19722).
-
UO1.67b (`cum arte medicine'):
Articella, a standard collection of medical works
pr. [Padua c. 1476]
(GW 2678), &c.
-
UO1.68 (anon., 2nd fo.):
L. Annaeus Florus [early 2nd cent.]
Epitoma de Tito Liuio
pr. [Paris 1471] (GW 10092), &c.; ed.
E. Malcovati (Rome 19722).
-
UO1.69 (`Serapion de simplicibus medicinis'):
Serapion the Younger [13th century]
Liber aggregationum in medicinis simplicibus, tr. Simon of Genoa and
Abraham of Tortosa
pr. Milan 1473 (Goff S467), &c.; Thorndike/Kibre 1077.
-
UO1.70 (`collectarium Aueroise'):
Averroes (Ibn Rushd) [1126–1198]
Colliget, tr. Armengaud Blasius
pr. Aristotelis omnia quae extant
opera (Venice 1573–6), 10. 1r–172v; Thorndike/Kibre 1171.
-
UO1.71 (`Serapion in practica'):
Serapion the Elder (Yuhanna ibn Sarabiyun) [late 9th cent.]
Practica, tr. Gerard of Cremona
pr. as Breuiarium medicinae,
Venice 1479 (Goff S465), &c.; Thorndike/Kibre 723.
-
UO1.72 (`Rasis ad Almansorem'):
Razes (Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakariyya al-Razi) [865–925]
Liber Almansoris, tr. Gerard of Cremona
pr. Milan 1481 (Goff
R175), fols. 7r–114r; &c.; Carmody, 134–5; Thorndike/Kibre 272, 679.
-
UO1.‡73 (`cirurgigia Brunii'):
Brunus Longoburgensis [13th cent.]
Chirurgia maior
pr. Venice 1498 (GW 11696), fols. 83r–102v;
Thorndike/Kibre 101, 1076, 1363.
-
UO1.74 (`Bartholomeus in practica'):
Bartholomew of Salerno [early 12th cent.]
Practica medicinae
ed. Renzi, 4. 321–406; Thorndike/Kibre 1080.
-
UO1.75 (`Ysaac de febribus'):
Isaac Iudaeus (Ishaq Ibn Suleiman) [9th cent.]
Liber febrium, tr. Constantinus Africanus
pr. Lyon 1515,
1. 203v–226v; Thorndike/Kibre 820, 1304.
-
UO1.76 (`Gerardus super uiaticum'):
Gerardus Bituricensis [13th cent.]
Wickersheimer, 203, 204–5, distinguishes Gerardus Bituricensis, i.e.
Gerard de Berry, from Gerard of Montpellier.
Commentary on Constantinus's Viaticum
pr. Venice
1505, 89r–192r; Thorndike/Kibre 324, 325; Wickersheimer, 203.
-
UO1.77 (`passionarium Theodori Presc''):
Theodorus Priscianus [4th cent.]
Gynaecia
ed. V. Rose, Theodori Prisciani Euporiston libri III,
Teubner (1894), 224–8; Thorndike/Kibre 755, 847, 884.
-
UO1.†78 (`expositio super nono Almazoris'):
Gerardus de Solo [early 14th cent.]
Practica super nono Almansoris
pr. with Razes' Liber Almansoris,
Padua 1480 (Goff R179), &c.; Thorndike/Kibre 220 &c.
-
UO1.79 (`Gerardus de modo medendi'):
Gerard of Montpellier [13th cent.]
Summa de modo medendi, inc. `Cum omnis scientia'
unpr.;
Thorndike/Kibre 327; Wickersheimer, 204–5. [See also Copho for a similar
text.]
-
UO1.81 (`Mesue de simplicibus et compositis'):
Iohannes Mesue (Masawaih al-Mardini) [†1015]
De consolatione medicinarum simplicium, also titled De simplicibus
medicinis
pr. in his Opera medicinalia, [Venice 1471] (Goff M508), fols.
1r–55v, &c.; Thorndike/Kibre 415, 1493.
-
UO1.82 (`Platearius de simplicibus'):
Matthaeus Platearius [†1161]
De simplicibus medicinae
pr. with the works of Serapion, Venice 1497
(Goff S466), &c.; VL2 1. 1282–5; Thorndike/Kibre 211, 84. [See also
John of Saint-Paul. There is a medieval French translation, ed. P.
Dorveaux (Paris 1913).]
-
UO1.83 (`Willelmus de Saliceto uel Placencia'):
Willelmus de Saliceto [c1210–c1280]
De salute corporis
pr. [Netherlands, not after 1472] (ISTC), Cologne
1495 (Goff S30), &c.; ¶*pr. London 1509 (STC 12512); Thorndike/Kibre 1165,
1370.
-
UO1.84 (`Plinius de naturis rerum'):
C. Plinius Secundus (Pliny the Elder) [AD 23–79]
Historia naturalis
ed. L. van Jan & K. Mayhoff, Teubner (1892–1906).
-
UO1.85 (`liber philosophorum Aristotelis comen''):
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.
-
UO1.86 (`afforismi Vrsonis cum commento'):
Urso of Calabria [late 12th cent.]
Liber aphorismorum
ed. G. von Jagow, diss. (Leipzig 1924);
Thorndike/Kibre 258.
-
UO1.87 (`tabula Belingam') = UO4.29:
Richard Billingham [† after 1361]
Tabula logicae et philosophiae
not known to survive.
-
UO1.88:
Aristotle [384–322 BC]
[pseud.]
De mundo, tr. Nicholaus Siculus
ed. W. L. Lorimer & L. Minio
Paluello, AL 11/1–2 (19652), 29–49; Thorndike/Kibre 891.
-
UO1.90 (`Auicenna et Albertus in diuersis philosophie contentis'):
Albertus Magnus OP [1193–1280]
DSB 1. 100–103.
[pseud.]
unspec.
-
UO1.*91x:
Albericus Remensis [13th cent.]
Philosophia
ed. R.-A. Gauthier in Revue des sciences philosophiques
et théologiques 68 (1984) 3–49 (text, 29–48).
-
UO1.92:
Albertus Magnus OP [1193–1280]
Commentary on Aristotle's Meteora
ed. P. Hossfeld AMO 6/1 (2003);
Fauser 16; Glorieux Rép. 6af.
-
UO1.93:
Albertus Magnus OP [1193–1280]
De animalibus
ed. A. Borgnet, Alberti Magni opera omnia (Paris
1890–99), vols. 11–12; ed. H. Stadler, BGPM 15–16 (1916); Fauser 29;
Glorieux Rép. 6bf.
-
UO1.*94:
Avicenna (Abu `Ali al-Husain ibn `Abdallah Ibn Sina) [980–1037]
Metaphysica, tr. Dominicus Gundisalvi
pr. in Auicennae opera
(Venice 1508), 70r–109v; Diaz 1026; Thorndike/Kibre 1068.
-
UO1.95 = UO4.17:
L. Annaeus Seneca [4 BC–AD 65]
Tragoediae
ed. O. Zwierlein, OCT (1986).
-
UO1.96a (`liber Alfragani'):
Alfraganus (Ahmad Ibn Muhammad al-Farghani) [† after 861]
Liber de aggregationibus scientiae stellarum, tr. Gerard of
Cremona
ed. R. Campani (Florence 1910); Thorndike/Kibre 960. Or the same
work, De scientia astrorum, tr. John of Seville and known as De
differentiis: pr. Ferrara 1493 (GW 1268); ed. F. J. Carmody (Berkeley,
CA, 1943); Carmody, 115; Diaz 970; Thorndike/Kibre 429, 960.
-
UO1.96b (`Alicen') ? = UO3A.6a:
Alhazen (Abu `Ali al-Hasan ibn al-Hasan ibn al-Haytham) [965–1038]
De aspectibus, tr. Gerard of Cremona
ed. F. Risner, Opticae
thesaurus Alhazeni (Basel 1572), 1–282; Carmody, 139–40; Thorndike/Kibre
803, 1208.
-
UO1.97 = UO3A.10:
Roger Bacon OFM [†1294]
DSB 1. 377–85.
[dub.]
`De celo et mundo'
unidentified.
-
UO1.†98–99 (`Haly Abenragel', `idem in secunda parte de eisdem'):
Haly ibn Regel (`Ali ibn abi 'r-Rijal) [† after 1040]
De iudiciis astrorum, tr. Aegidius de Tebaldis & Petrus de
Regio
pr. Venice 1485 (Goff H4), &c.; Carmody, 150–54; Thorndike/Kibre
475, 590.
-
UO1.100 (`Egidius de cometis'):
Gilles de Lessines OP [† after 1304]
DSB 5. 401–402.
De essentia motu et significatione cometarum
ed. L.
Thorndike, Latin Treatises on Comets (Chicago, IL, 1950), 103–184;
Thorndike/Kibre 1286, 1527; Kaeppeli 44; Weijers, 2. 63.
-
UO1.101 (`Zael de iudiciis astrorum'):
Zahel (Sahl ibn Bishr al-Isra'ili) [†822/50]
Introductorius ad scienciam iudiciorum astrorum in
interrogationibus, tr. John of Seville
pr. with Ptolemy's works, Venice
1493 (Goff P1089), sig. P8v–Q4r; Carmody, 40–43; Thorndike/Kibre
1411. [The Latin Zahel is usually in five books, not exactly corresponding
to the Arabic original. The five are Introductorius, Quinquaginta praecepta
(sig. Q4r–Q5r), De interrogationibus, De significatore temporis, and
Liber electionum. The fifth is a separate work in the Arabic.]
-
UO1.102 (`Albamazar in magno introductorio'):
Albumasar (Abu Ma`shar Ja`far) [787–886]
D. E. Pingree in DSB 1. 32–9.
Maius introductorium in scientia astrorum, tr. John of Seville
(1133)
pr. Augsburg 1489 (GW 840), &c.; ed. R. Lemay, Kitab al-madkhal
al-kabir ila ilm ahkam al-nujum. Liber introductorii maioris ad scientiam
iudiciorum astrorum (Naples 1995–6), vols. 4–6; Carmody, 89–90;
Diaz 973; Thorndike/Kibre 116. [Among classical or 12th-cent.
philosophical texts, the translation by Hermann of Carinthia (1140) is
more likely; ed. Lemay, vols. 7–8.]
-
UO1.104 (`Zael de uita hominis'):
Zahel (Sahl ibn Bishr al-Isra'ili) [†822/50]
De significatore temporis in interrogationibus, tr. John of
Seville
pr. with Ptolemy's works, Venice 1493 (Goff P1089),
sig. S3v–S5v; Carmody, 40–43; Thorndike/Kibre 1411.
-
UO1.106 (`liber Almagesti'):
Claudius Ptolemaeus (Ptolemy) [fl. 127–148]
Almagesta, tr. Gerard of Cremona
pr. Venice 1515, Venice 1547;
Carmody, 15; Thorndike/Kibre 180, 1245. On the manuscripts, see P. Kunitzsch,
Der Almagest (Wiesbaden 1974), 87–112. [The Latin title derives from the
Arabic form of the Greek ̔Η μεγίστη.]
-
UO1.107 (`liber Thebet', identified from 2nd fo.):
Thebit ben Corat (Thabit bin Qurra) [830–901]
De quantitate stellarum, Latin tr.
ed. F. J. Carmody,
The Astronomical Works of Thabit b. Qurra (Berkeley, CA, 1960), 145–8;
Carmody, 119–21; Thorndike/Kibre 1147.
-
UO1.108 (`summa astronomie Aschlyndon'):
John Ashendon [† after 1365]
Summa de accidentibus mundi
pr. Venice 1489 (GW 9392);
Sharpe, Latin Writers, 206–207.
-
UO1.109 (`tripertitum Tholomei'):
Claudius Ptolemaeus (Ptolemy) [fl. 127–148]
Quadripartitum, tr. John of Seville
pr. Venice 1484 (Goff P1088),
Venice 1493 (Goff P1089), &c.; Carmody, 18–19.
-
UO1.111 (`panegericon Porphyrii') = UO4.5:
Publilius Optatianus Porphyrius [4th cent.]
Panegyricus Constantini
ed. E. Kluge, Teubner (1926); ed. G.
Polara, Carmina Publilii Optatiani Porfirii (Turin 1973); id. Ricerche
sulla tradizione manoscritta di Publilio Optaziano Porfirio (Salerno
1971).
-
UO1.112 (`oraciones Tullii', 2o fo.):
M. Tullius Cicero [106–43 BC]
Oratio pro Roscio Amerimo
ed. A. C. Clark, OCT (1918).
-
UO1.113 = UO4.22:
Nicolas de Clamanges [c1355–1437]
C. M. Bellitto, Nicolas de Clamanges: Spirituality, Personal Reform, and
Pastoral Renewal on the eve of the Reformation (Washington, DC, 2001).
Epistolae
pr. in his Opera omnia, ed. J. M. Lydius (Leiden 1613).
-
UO1.114 (`opera xxii Tullii in magno uolumine') = UO4.21:
M. Tullius Cicero [106–43 BC]
Opera
-
UO1.*115 (`epistole Tullii ad Quintum fratrem'):
M. Tullius Cicero [106–43 BC]
Epistulae ad Quintum fratrem
ed. D. R. Shackleton Bailey (Cambridge
1980).
-
UO1.116a (`bellum Troie'):
`Dares Phrygius'
De excidio Troiae historia
ed. F. Meister, Teubner (1873).
-
UO1.116b:
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.]
-
UO1.117 (`epistole Collusii'):
Coluccio Salutati [1331–1406]
Epistolae
ed. F. Novati (Rome 1891–1911).
-
UO1.118 (`epistole Tullii familiares'):
M. Tullius Cicero [106–43 BC]
Epistulae ad familiares
ed. D. R. Shackleton Bailey (Cambridge 1977).
-
UO1.119 (`Quinctillianus de institucione oratoris'):
M. Fabius Quintilianus [† c100]
Institutio oratoria
pr. Rome 1470 (Goff Q24), &c.; ed. M.
Winterbottom, OCT (1970).
-
UO1.120 (`Macrobius Saturnalium'):
Macrobius [fl. 400]
Saturnalia
ed. J. Willis, Teubner (19702); ed. R. A. Kaster
(Oxford, 2011).
-
UO1.121a (`Verrine Ciceronis'):
M. Tullius Cicero [106–43 BC]
Orationes in C. Verrem
ed. A. Klotz, Teubner (1923).
-
UO1.121b:
M. Tullius Cicero [106–43 BC]
Orationes philippicae
ed. A. C. Clark, OCT (19182); ed.
P. Fedeli, Teubner (1982).
-
UO1.122 (`rhetorica Tullii', 2o fo.):
M. Tullius Cicero [106–43 BC]
[pseud.]
De ratione dicendi ad Herennium
ed. F. Marx, Teubner (1894); ed. G.
Achard (Paris 1989).
-
UO1.123:
Giovanni Boccaccio [1313–1375]
Genealogia deorum gentilium
pr. Venice 1472 (Goff B749), &c.;
ed. V. Romano (Bari 1951); ed. V. Zaccaria in Tutte le opere di Giovanni
Boccaccio, ed. V. Branca (Milan 1964–98), 7–8. 7–1583.
-
UO1.125 (`Apuleius de asino aureo') = UO4.10:
L. Apuleius [c123–after 161]
Metamorphoses
ed. R. Helm, Teubner (19313); ed. D. S. Robertson
(Paris 1940–45).
-
UO1.126 (`catholicon Ianuensis'):
John of Genoa OP [† after 1286]
Catholicon
pr. [Mainz ?1460] (GW 3182), Augsburg 1469 (GW
3183), &c.; Kaeppeli 2199. [Usually anonymous in lists.]
-
UO1.127 (`P. in maiori'):
Priscian [fl. 500]
Institutiones grammaticae I–XVI
CPL 1546; GL 2. 1–597, 3. 1–105.
-
UO1.128:
Aulus Gellius [c130–c180]
Noctes atticae
ed. P. K. Marshall, OCT (1968).
-
UO1.129:
Dionysius de Burgo S. Sepulchri OESA [†1342]
Commentary on Valerius Maximus' Memorabilia
pr. Strassburg [not
after 1475] (GW 8411); CTC 5. 326–8.
-
UO1.*135x:
Theophilus [7th cent.]
Liber urinarum, Latin tr.
pr. in Articella, [Padua c. 1476]
(GW 2678), &c.; Thorndike/Kibre 393; Lexicon der Ärzte, 5. 549.
151 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).