A collection of two sermons of Nicolaus von Dinkelsbühl, "De decem praeceptis decalogi," and "De dilectione dei et proximi, sermones 6-12," plus other theological, philosophical, and devotional texts, from identified and unidentified authors.
Creator:
Nicholas, of Dinkelsbühl, approximately 1360-1433.
200 leaves : paper; 210 x 152 (174 x 115) mm bound to 218 x 154 mm
Personal Name:
Boethius,; Mary,; Albertus, Magnus, Saint, 1193?-1280.; Vincent Ferrer, Saint, approximately 1350-1419. De fine mundi.; Albertano, da Brescia, active 13th century. De amore et dilectione Dei et proximi et aliarum rerum et de forma vite.
Rights:
https://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Notes:
For the second work, "De fine mundi," there is a note at the end that the work is based on the edition "Impressus per Conradum Zenniger civem Nurmbergensem" [1481] (f. 32v).; Final folio (f. 200) has been torn, with modern repair [text incomplete?].; Origin: Written in Germany[?] between 1459 and 1499.; Title from f. 43r.; Ms. codex.; For the fifth work, "De dilectione dei et proximi," there is a list of the sermons at the end (f. 136r). This manuscript is unusual in that, although it begins with Sermon 6 (Incipit: Circa hoc mandatum de quo praecedenter locuti sumus...) it apparently includes a sermon not found in the majority of copies, Sermon 12, De accidia.; Foliation: Paper, i (modern paper) + 200 + i (modern paper); [1-42], 25-132, [151-200]; contemporary foliation in ink, lower center recto; modern foliation in pencil, upper right recto.; Script: Written in a variety of scripts ranging from bastarda to cursive by several hands; scribe who copied von Dinkelsbühl sermons (f. 43r-136r) is identified, (colophon, f. 136r): Per Mathiam p. de Pirnis scripta sunt precepte anno domini MCCCLIX [1459, Pirna in Saxony?].; Decoration: Some rubrics, capitals, initials, and underlining in red; many unfinished intiials. Marginal notes in different hands, some have been cut off in previous binding.; Binding: Modern binding in parchment leaf from a 15th-century manuscript breviary, with ties.; Latin, with short passages in German.
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