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Preaching Apocrypha in Anglo-Saxon England / Brandon Hawk.
- Title:
- Preaching Apocrypha in Anglo-Saxon England / Brandon Hawk.
- Author:
- Brandon Hawk author
- Publication Info:
- University of Toronto Press, 2018, ©2018
- Series:
- Toronto Anglo-Saxon Series
- Location:
- Toronto
- Notes:
-
- CCCC MS 41 Contains a copy of the Apocalypse of Thomas in Old English. The source also discusses the potential sources of the marginalia in CCCC MS 41 and posits a relationhip betwen the Transitus Mariae in CCCC MS 41 and CCCC MS 198, pp. 60 - 65.
- CCCC MS 140 In addition to the Gospels, CCCC MS 140 contains the Sunday Letter in an 11th century hand, pp. 59-60.
- CCCC MS 162 Hawk dates this manuscript to the end of 10th century or the beginning of 11th and defines it as part of a temporale collection, 45 sermons for Sundays, 28 of which are Ælfrician, while the other 17 are anonymous. CCCC MS 162 also contains the Apocalypse of Thomas (the text here being related to Oxford, Bodleian Hatton MS 116) and the Sunday Letter. pp. 59 - 61, 121 - 126, and 132 -133, an image of p. 382 of this manuscript is found on p. 124.
- CCCC MS 198 Posits a relationhip betwen the Transitus Mariae in CCCC MS 41 and CCCC MS 198, p. 64 & 134n3.
- CCCC MS 302 Contains the Three Utterances Apocryphon, pp. 62 & 199 - 200n84.
- CCCC MS 367 Suggests that the Transitus Mariae in CCCC MS 41 drawsn upon a translation of the first part of the Gospel of Pseudo-Matthewfound in CCCC MS 367 (among others), pp. 64 - 5.
- CCCC MS 419 Contains two versions of the Sunday Letter and suggests that the anonymous Old English sermon, Larspell, found in this volume, draws from the Three Utterances Apocryphon and the Apocalypse of Paul , pp. 59 - 60.
- Reference Type:
- Book
- Manuscript:
- cg531kv2466