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The Liturgy in Medieval England: a History
- Title:
- The Liturgy in Medieval England: a History
- Author:
- Pfaff, R.
- Location:
- Cambridge
- Notes:
-
- CCCC MS 9 On the calendar of CCCC MS 9 as evidence for the Worcester sanctorale, as part of a comprehensive account of medieval liturgy, pp. 161, 212, 222
- CCCC MS 41 Mentions the liturgical marginalia in CCCC MS 41, as part of a comprehensive account of medieval liturgy, p. 66
- CCCC MS 44 Discusses CCCC MS 44, treating it as made at Christ Church Canterbury, p. 92
- CCCC MS 53 Contains reference to St Bonitus; a miscellaneous volume from around the turn of the twelfth century; of considerable liturgical interest, p. 206
- CCCC MS 93 CCCC MS 93 is a fourteenth-century martyrology and ordinal which reflects Exeter use, pp. 335, 393, 400, 404
- CCCC MS 141 On the Syon medieval library catalogue in CCCC MS 141 , pp. 536-7
- CCCC MS 146 Mentions CCCC MS 146 with regard to the feast of St Cuthbert, saying it is likely to have been made at Canterbury, p. 122
- CCCC MS 173 On the cult of St Kenelm, p. 174
- CCCC MS 191 CCCC MS 191 is perhaps Bishop Leofric’s copy of the Regula canonicorum, p. 130
- CCCC MS 201 On Wulfstan’s Canons of Edgar, as found in CCCC MS 201, in a discussion of prescriptions for the secular clergy, p. 67
- CCCC MS 265 On AElfric’s instructions for the monks at Eynsham, as found in CCCC MS 265, p. 86
- CCCC MS 270 CCCC MS 270 was written for St Augustine’s, Canterbury and has been much altered and augmented; dates to 1093 on liturgical grounds; argues that the prayers for a queen might refer back to Matilda I (queen of William the Conqueror) rather than to Edith-Matilda (queen of Henry I), pp. 93, 113-17, 118, 122, 149, 154, 161, 162, 163, 185-6, 283
- CCCC MS 286 Liturgical material may have been removed from CCCC MS 286, p. 37
- CCCC MS 367 Discussed in an examination of the liturgy of Norwich, pp. 203-8
- CCCC MS 391 CCCC MS 391 is Wulfstan’s Portiforium, from the third quarter of the eleventh century; datable to 1064-9, probably 1064 or 1065, pp. 121, 126-9, 134, 136, 150, 161, 163, 175, 212, 214, 226-7, 382, 383
- CCCC MS 391 On evidence in the Parker Chronicle for the state of Canterbury Cathedral after the fire of 1067, p. 103
- CCCC MS 422 CCCC MS 422 was probably written in the 1060s; it may be associable with secular worship, pp. 94-6, 176, 178, 362, 382, 491
- CCCC MS 465 Contains similar illustration to Aberystwyth, National Library of Wales, MS 15536E, p. 441
- CCCC MS 470 Mentioned in a discussion of Winchester liturgy, p. 85
- Reference Type:
- Book
- Manuscript:
- cr485km1781