Sacramentary (?)

Te Deum laudamus 909010 + Corpus orationum 4843

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek St. Gallen, Cod. Sang. 745

General Information

Title Te Deum laudamus 909010 + Corpus orationum 4843
Shelfmarks Cod. Sang. 745
Material Parchment

Original Condition

Page Height 100 mm
Page Width 275 mm
Height of Written Area at least 75 mm
Width of Written Area at least 175 mm
Number of Columns 1
Width of Columns at least 175 mm
Number of Lines at least 6
Line Height 10 mm

Book Decoration and Musical Notation

  • Musical Notation German Plainsong Notation
  • Content

    • Content Item
      • Text Language latin
      • Title Te Deum laudamus 909010 + Corpus orationum 4843
      • Content Description

        The pastedown consists in a bifolium and the cover in a trimmed folio from the same manuscript. On the cover is visible the last verse of the Te Deum laudamus gregorian chant (909010: [quemad]modum [speravimus in te. In te Do]mine s[peravi: non confundar in aeter]num.) and on the pastedown also the Te Deum on the left (verso) side (from Pleni sunt caeli to Apostolorum [chorus]) and the Oratio 4843 from the Corpus orationum ([a con]tagiis mortalitatis exutam, in aeter[nae] salvationis partem restitue) on the right side.

      • rotated_pastedown_csg745

    Host Volume

    Title Johannes de Deo: Liber iudicum · Bonus Johannes: Ordo iudiciarius · Manfredus de Arriago: Tabula decretalium · Dinus de Mugello: Super regulis iuris Libri Sexti
    Date of Origin/Publication middle of the 13th / beginning of the 14th century (Part I), 14th century (Part II)
    Place of Origin/Publication Italy
    Shelfmark Cod. Sang. 745
    Remarks

    This two-part manuscript was written in Italy in the period between the middle of the 13th and the beginning of the 14th century. It preserves writings concerning procedural law, among them the little known Ordo iudiciarius Quoniam ut ait apostolus, as well as finding aids and surveys on decretal law. The manuscript probably came into the possession of the St. Gall citizen Johannes Widembach († 1456) from a Canon from Zurich, and has been held by the Abbey Library at least since the 16th century

    Description on e-codices.