Antwerpen, Hieronymus II Verdussen, 1643. ; Citation confidence: The work may be genuine, but there is a heightened possibility that this works could be a bibliographical ghost. An exemplar may survive in only a single copy, or there may be no known surviving copy. ; Citation/reference: IB: 45909
Brussels, excudebat Jan Mommaert y François Vivien, 1649. ; Citation confidence: The work may be genuine, but there is a heightened possibility that this works could be a bibliographical ghost. An exemplar may survive in only a single copy, or there may be no known surviving copy. ; Citation/reference: IB: 59127
The volume is containing the critical edition of 207 letters of pope Innocent III' addressed to recipients all over Europe and in the Middle East which were entered into the chancery registers of the 13th year of pontificate (1210/1211). It is the first of four volumes transmitted not as original but as a copy written at the Curia in mid-14th century and as print published in the 17th century. - Der Band beinhaltet die kritische Edition von 207 Schreiben Papst Innocenz' III. an unterschiedliche Empfänger in Europa und im Nahen Osten aus dem 13. Pontifikatsjahr (1210/1211), die in das Kanzleiregister aufgenommen wurden. Er ist der erste von vier Bänden, die nicht als Originalregister, sondern in einer an der Kurie gefertigten Abschrift aus der Mitte des 14. und als Druck aus dem 17. Jahrhundert überliefert sind.
A critical edition of the Aquitanian Office of the Holy Trinity with detailed commentary.0The Holy Trinity forms a cornerstone of Christian belief, and references to it abound in the liturgy. Every Psalm ends with the invocation of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost in the Doxology supplied as the final verse. But around the turn of the tenth century, clerics decided to devote the first Sunday after Pentecost to the veneration of the Trinity. They created a new liturgy for the day, and evidence suggests that Stephen, Bishop of Liège (?920) revised an earlier form of the Office into the version that saw wide dissemination in the Latin West from the end of the tenth century. The abbey of Saint Martial in Limoges exhibited considerable enthusiasm for the feast and its Office beginning in the early eleventh century. Its scriptorium prepared no fewer than five copies of the Office, including four fully neumed versions between ca. 1010 and 1050, including the earliest extant transcribable copy with music in the hand of Adémar de Chabannes, musician, scribe, homilist and historian. 0This edition presents a critical text of the Office as it was practised at Saint Martial during the first half of the eleventh century, beginning with Adémar?s version, but also considering the other witnesses from the abbey. It includes full critical and explanatory commentary with an Introduction that discusses the role of Stephen of Liège in the authorship of the Office, the witnesses from Saint Martial and their relationship to other early witnesses of the Office, and its musical and literary style
In: Studies in medieval and early modern canon law volume 17, book 1
Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Abbreviations -- Sigla -- Introduction -- 1 A background to the Hibernensis -- 1.1 Authorship -- 1.2 Date of composition -- 1.3 Structure -- 1.4 Sources: general discussion -- 1.5 Sources: the Bible -- 1.6 Sources: Irish synods -- 1.7 The late antique and early medieval canonical background -- 1.8 The Hibernensis and Irish vernacular law -- 1.9 Remarks on Latinity -- 2 Recensions and textual varieties -- 2.1 Distinguishing between the recensions: a formal approach -- 2.2 Different recensions, different sources -- 2.3 The recensions and their Irish sources -- 2.4 Vestiges of a pre-recensional text -- 2.5 An early secondary witness to the undivided text -- 2.6 Postulating an undivided text -- 3 Editing the Hibernensis -- 3.1 The present edition -- 3.2 The main copy -- 3.3 Principles of the present edition -- The main text -- Book, chapter, and other numbers -- Cited sources -- Grammar, orthography, and translation -- Variant readings and emendations -- 4 Manuscripts studied for the present edition -- A Orléans, Bibliothèque municipale, 221 (193) -- B Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, lat. 3182 -- D Monte Cassino, Archivio e Biblioteca dell'Abbazia, 297 -- H Oxford, Bodleian Library, Hatton 42 -- O London, British Library, Cotton Otho E. XIII -- P Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, lat. 12021 -- S St. Gall, Stiftsbibliothek 243 -- V Rome, Biblioteca Vallicelliana, T. XVIII -- Q Würzburg, Universitätsbibliothek, Mp. th. q. 31 -- Tables -- 1: Texts attributed to Sinodus Hibernensis and Hibernenses -- 2: Sinodus Romana and Romani in Hib.A and Hib.B -- 3: Texts attributed to Patrick -- 4: Irish sources not mentioned in previous tables -- 5: Q and the present edition - a synoptic table -- Editorial conventions -- Text of the Hibernensis.