Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, MS 156: Miscellaneous Treatises and Sermons on Indulgences and Confession (Vols. II, III). Petrus Aureoli OFM, Compendium litterale totius scripture (Vol. IV). John of Genoa OP, Catholicon (Vol. V)
Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, MS 156: Miscellaneous Treatises and Sermons on Indulgences and Confession (Vols. II, III). Petrus Aureoli OFM, Compendium litterale totius scripture (Vol. IV). John of Genoa OP, Catholicon (Vol. V)
Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, MS 156: Miscellaneous Treatises and Sermons on Indulgences and Confession (Vols. II, III). Petrus Aureoli OFM, Compendium litterale totius scripture (Vol. IV). John of Genoa OP, Catholicon (Vol. V)
Summa de quaestionibus Armenorum (excerpt de indulgentiis)
Commentary on the Lombard's Sentences (excerpt from book 4, dist. 45, de indulgentiis)
De indulgencia
De potestate ligandi et soluendi
Quodlibet 14, De indulgentiis
Utrum principi terrenorum necessaria sit peritia literarum
De indulgentiis
De subiectione principatus
Sermon on the Pardon of Syon
Epistola ad Constantinum
De instructione confessoris
Tractatus de restitutione
Meditationes (Contemplationes)
Sermon preached before Innocent IV at Lyon
Letter to the archdeacon of Canterbury
Epistola 128
Disputatio super potestate praelatis ecclesiae atque principibus terrarum commissa (Disputatio inter clericum et militem)
Compendium litterale totius scripture
Catholicon (Alma - Cautela)
Description:
The miscellany of twenty-four texts in CCCC MS 156 was originally in four separate volumes of differing dates The first is a printed book of the sixteenth century containing the Collations of John Cassian (c. 360-430/35). The other three sections date variously to c. 1400-1450 and c. 1425-1475. Several of the texts are Franciscan and Dominican and perhaps these three sections were compiled for the use of mendicants. They include works on indulgences and confession by François de Meyronnes OFM, Richard FitzRalph (d. 1360) and Richard of Saint-Victor OSA (d. 1173), and letters and sermons by Robert Grossesteste (d. 1253).