Glossed Bible
Epistle of St Paul to the Romans 9-12, with commentary by Ambrosius, Augustinus, Cassiodorus and Haimo Altissiodorensis
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Additonal notes by Roos in't Velt, Vlaamse Erfgoedbibliotheken, 2023.
General Information
Northern gothica textualis formata, in two different sizes.
Fragments were part of the same manuscript as Antwerpen, FelixArchief, 2201 # 64 (F-6eod on Fragmentarium).
Original Condition
Columns are numbered in Arabic numerals.
Running titles, mentioning the exact chapters as well as which commentators are used on the page.
Current Condition
Lower margin of fol. [2]-[3] has been completely trimmed away, resulting in text loss. One leaf of each bifolia has been trimmed vertically as well, leading to half a column of text loss in both cases.
The strip contains a partial offset of the original text, and is therefore a mirror image.
Book Decoration and Musical Notation
Pen-flourished initials with marginal extensions, alternately in red and blue ink. Plain versals alternately in red and blue ink. Rubrication (red, underlined).
Content
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Content Item
- Persons Ambrosius (commentator), Augustinus (commentator), Cassiodorus (commentator), Haimo Altissiodorensis (commentator)
- Text Language Latin
- Title Glossed Bible
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Content Description
Epistle of St Paul to the Romans 9-12, with commentary by Ambrosius, Augustinus, Cassiodorus and Haimo Altissiodorensis.
- Fol. [1]r, col. 126-127: Epistle of St Paul to the Romans 9: 19-23.
- Fol. [1]v, col. 128-129: Epistle of St Paul to the Romans 9: 24.
- Fol. [2]r, col. 133-134: Epistle of St Paul to the Romans 10: 5-10.
- Fol. [2]v, col. 135(?)-136(?): Epistle of St Paul to the Romans 10: 11-16.
- Fol. [3]r, col. 136-137: Epistle of St Paul to the Romans 11: 22-28.
- Fol. [3]v, col. 138-139: Epistle of St Paul to the Romans 11: 29-33.
- Fol. [4]r, col. 143-144: Epistle of St Paul to the Romans 12: 3-10.
- Fol. [4]v, col. 146-147: Epistle of St Paul to the Romans 12: 10-19.
Host Volume
The fragments were used as flyleaves in a register of the assizes of beer in the city of Antwerp kept between 1 August and 31 October 1572.
A modern paper slip with the inscription '1572-1' can be found alongside the fragments, referring to this origin.