Fulgentius Ruspensis, De epiphania deque innocentum nece et muneribus mag. (CPL 0831)
Sermo IV, cap. 5, linea 86 - cap. 6, linea 123
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General Information
The school of Leodium (Liège)?
Original Condition
Current Condition
Book Decoration and Musical Notation
1-line red lombrad initials, rubrics
Content
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Content Item
- Text Language latin
- Title De epiphania deque innocentum nece et muneribus mag.
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Content Description
back cover [De epiphania, cap. 5, linea 85:] ǁ mundo. Ipse est enim sapientia Dei, que dicit in [proverbiis: „Per me reges] regnabant. [rubro:] Feria IIIIa. [in the margin: I] <P>uer iste verbum [Dei est, puer iste vir]tus et sapientia Dei est. Si potes contra [Dei sapientiam, cogita]. In tuam perniciem versaris et nescis: tu enim regn[um nullatenus habuisses], nisi ab isto puero…II. <I>te, inquit, interrogate diligen[ter de puero et cum in]veneritis renunciate michi… >< front cover [cap. 6, linea 123:] …fugit non necessitate sed potestate. [Ideo autem] dignatus est effugere in Egyptum, ut postea c[rucem dignaretur ascen] dere et illa potestate puer latuit in egy ǁ[pto]
History
The manuscript was probably written in the Leodian workshop in the turn of the 11th and 12th centuries.
The host volume comes from the collection of David Bläsing (1660-1719), a student of the University in Leipzig, professor of mathematics and philosophy at the University in Königsberg, who donated his collection to the University Library (see also fragments Ob.6.II.519, 760, 906, 2389-2393, Pol.6.II.724-732, 992-1039).
In the years 1827-1944 the volume belonged to the Royal (then State) and University Library in Königsberg. Then, as a result of the evacuation of the most valuable collections of the library and the change of state borders after the second world war, the evacuated books (among them the host volume) found themselves in the territory of the Polish state. In July 1946, by the decision of the Ministry of Education, they were transferred to the University Library in Toruń.
Host Volume
The date is embossed with golden numbers on the front cover: "1605"