Description
Alternative title
Ivonis Epistolae, etc.
Type of resource
mixed material
Extent
ff. 2 + 51 + 70
Date created
[ca. 1200 - 1299]
Language
Latin
Material
Vellum
Layout
double columns of 32 and 31 lines
Height (mm)
260
Width (mm)
175
Collation
a(2) 1(8) (+1) 2(8)-5(8) 6(10) || I(8)-VIII(8) IX(6).
Writing
in good upright narrow script. Two hands appear (e.g. on f. 42r)
Foliation
ff. a-b + i-ii + 1-107 (108 missing) + 109-123 + c-d
Provenance
At top of f. 1r erased: De perquisito ffratris Johannis Tille ordinis ffratrum predicatorum a. d. 1405 scilicet epistole Yuonis Carnotensis et epistole beati Anselmi.
This, compared with an inscription in MS 306, where the name of John Tille also occurs, shows that this book belonged to the Dominicans of London. See also Trinity College MS. O.2.50, given by John Tille to his convent in 1421.
Additions
On f. iv: Ut ualeat uiuatque diu persona prioris, det deus et uicium uelit omnis demere moris: amen and two old titles.
Abstract/Contents
- Summary
- An inscription in this thirteenth-century manuscript, CCCC MS 299, identifies it as having belonged to John Tille OP (d. 1410). Tille donated this manuscript to the Dominicans of London, of which convent he was a member. He also donated CCCC MS 306 and Cambridge, Trinity College MS O.2.50 to the same house. The manuscript contains the letters of Anselm of Canterbury OSB (d. 1109) and of Ivo of Chartres (c. 1040-1115).
- Contents
- Letter -- De ecclesiasticis sacramentis, sermo 5 -- Epistolae (95 plus one from Pope Urban) -- An English Lament on the Death of St Anselm -- Epistolae
Access conditions
- Use and reproduction:
- Images courtesy of The Parker Library, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. For higher resolution images suitable for scholarly or commercial publication, either in print or in an electronic format, please contact the Parker Library directly at parker-library@corpus.cam.ac.uk
- License:
- This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC).