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The Earliest Books of Canterbury Cathedral: Manuscripts and Fragments to c. 1200
- Title:
- The Earliest Books of Canterbury Cathedral: Manuscripts and Fragments to c. 1200
- Author:
- Gameson, R.
- Location:
- London
- Notes:
-
- CCCC MS 19 Notes the complete copy of Decretum Ivonis from Christ Church, Canterbury, now CCCC MS 19, dating it to before c. 1127, no. 19
- CCCC MS 44 Notes the complete pontifical from Christ Church, Canterbury, now CCCC MS 44, which also contains glosses by a scribe from St Augustine’s, Canterbury, pp. 25-6, 49 n. 18, 124, 128
- CCCC MS 81 Reference to the note in CCCC MS 81 which states that Parker obtained the ms from a baker, pp. 39, 52 n. 69
- CCCC MS 94 Identifies CCCC MS 94 as a copy of Ivo of Chartres’s Panormia from St Augustine’s Abbey, Canterbury, p. 211
- CCCC MS 191 Identifies CCCC MS 191 as one of three bilingual copies of Chrodegang of Metz’s Regula canonicorum, dating it to Exeter, second half of the 11thc, pp. 130-1
- CCCC MS 197B Notes that CCCC MS 197B is part of a larger ms which appears to have been disassembled before the Dissolution of the monasteries. BL Royal 7 C.xii and BL Cotton Otho C.v were also part of the original ms, pp. 37, 51 n. 58
- CCCC MS 267 Identifies the initials in CCCC MS 267 as the work of the same artist as those in Canterbury Cathedral Lit.A.8 and BL Harley 652 and identifies the artist as associated with St Augustine’s, Canterbury, p. 194
- CCCC MS 322 Identifies CCCC MS 322 as one of four mss of the Old English Version of Gregory’s Dialogi, p. 87
- CCCC MS 373 Notes that the German-made CCCC MS 373 may have come to England when Princess Matilda returned to England after the death of her husband Emperor Henry V, p. 146
- CCCC MS 375 Identifies Canterbury Cathedral SB B 232, final page as the original front flyleaf for CCCC MS 375, p. 276
- CCCC MS 391 Collates two hymns found in CCCC MS 391 with a number of other mss, p. 123
- CCCC MSS 3 and 4 Notes that the Dover Bible (CCCC MS 3 and CCCC MS 4) was originally at Christ Church, Canterbury and, after 2 centuries use at Christ Church, passed to Dover, probably sometime between c. 1326 and 1389, pp. 36, 51 n. 56, 331
- CCCC MSS 184 and 187 Identifies CCCC MS 184 and CCCC MS 187 as copies of Eusebius Caesariensis’s Historia ecclesiastica from Kent, p. 384 Identifies CCCC MS 187 as owned by Christ Church, Canterbury, dating it to c. 1100, pp. 383, 384
- CCCC MSS 276 and 291 Describes the two-colour initials in Canterbury Cathedral Add. 172 as ’reminiscent of the secondary initials’ in CCCC MS 276 and CCCC MS 291, dating both to St Augustine’s Canterbury, late 11thc. One of the hands in CCCC MS 291 is tentatively identified as scribe I in Canterbury Cathedral U3/162/28/1, p. 162
- Reference Type:
- Book
- Manuscript:
- df920pp7276