An entry point to the written heritage of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance in Western Europe, from the 8th to the 18th century.
A search engine of interoperable digitized manuscripts and rare books
Collaborative platform to manage and publish Biblissima authority data
Help for reading and learning classical languages, XML editing tools and environments
Expertise service around IIIF standards
Biblissima+ Identifier: https://data.biblissima.fr/entity/Q98082
IIIF Manifest
Digitisation:
Parch., XVe s., I + 85 ff. (f. 80v° et 83v°-85v° blancs), 254 x 144 mm. Initiales d’or à «bianchi girari», celle du f. 1 ornée d’un «putto » et d’un oiseau. Gloses marginales contemporaines de plusieurs mains, surtout aux f. 1-9v°.
Data Source: Persée - DER-IRHT, XXI
f. 2: //Et ueniant
f. 1-80: Propertivs, Elegiae.
titre: «INCIPIT MONOBYBLOS PROPERTII AVRELII NAVTAE AD TVLLVM FELICITER VEL ELEGIARVM SECVNDVM NONIVM MARCELLVM ».
la plupart des élégies ont des titres (cf. P. de Nolhac, op. cit. infra).
(gloses) f. 1 inc. en marge: «Atlantam Iasi filiam Minalion amauit. Hic post multos labores quos in amore passus est... » (cf. 1, 9).
(texte) expl.: «... Quoius [sic] honoratis ossa uehantur aquis (corrigé au dessus: “uel e‹quis›”). VALE. PROPERTI [sic] AVRELI NAVTAE MONOBYBLOS FELICITER EXPLICIT VEL LIBER ELEGIARVM PROPERTI FINIT ».
~ f. 81-83: Antonivs Beccadellvs Panormita, Elegia ad Iohannem Lamolam.
Titre: «ANTONII PANORMITAE ELEGIA AD LAMOLAM, Quod lacrimis Elegiae motus fractusque ex Bononia nequiuerit recedere. LEGE FELICITER».
Origine: italienne, petite écriture humanistique ronde. Le copiste serait l’humaniste Antonio Beccadelli Panormita (vers 1394-1471), selon l'inventaire de Fulvio Orsini (cf. infra) confirmé par A. Campana et G. Resta, contredit par R. Hanslik, op. cit. infra, qui date le manuscrit de la fin du XVe s. et mis en doute par Simar et Ullman (op. cit. infra), mais le manuscrit a peut-être été exécuté sous la direction de Panormita, puis annoté par Pontano, d’après M. Buonocore (op. cit. infra, 1995).
Possesseurs: Fulvio Orsini († 1600).
These bibliographical references have been processed and may include links to online versions.
These bibliographical references have been retrieved as is from the source data.
RDF exports to come…
You can view and manipulate this document directly on this site, compare it to others using the Mirador viewer, or drag and drop this icon into the IIIF viewer of your choice. Read more about IIIF This Manifest is enriched and includes: - annotations - a full-text search - an index