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 authority file: https://data.biblissima.fr/entity/Q281816
IIIF manifest
Full digitisation
Papier (filigranes var. Briquet 2677: Reggio d’Emilie, 1416-1418; var. Briquet 15807: Bologne, 1420), XVe s., 68 ff. (f. 65-68 v° blancs), 293 x 213 mm. Quelques notes marginales de la main du copiste aux f. 1 v°-2.
Data Source: Persée - DER-IRHT, XXI
f. 1-2 v° (add. du XVIe-XVIIe s.): Probvs, Vita Persii.
titre: «Commentum Persii Nobilissimum ».
texte suivi de l’addition: «Persius hic diu dubitans utrum militiae an poetae... » - «...aliud uero significet» (éd. cf. supra, Pal. lat. 1708 f. 10-10v°).
f. 2 v°-64 v°: Ps. Cornvtvs, Commentarius in Persii Saturas.
(Prol.) titre: «Satira prima ».
inc.: «‹N›ec fonte labra prolui caballino. Quod Esodius dicit. Dicitur enim pegasus eqquum [sic] alatum ad heliconem montem... ».
expl.: «...et sic in infinitum cupiditatis desiderium extendit ut qui auaritie eius finem uoluerit imponere facile uideatur etiam sylogismum Chrisippi definire. Explicit Cornuti comentum in Persio » (éd. O. Jahn, Auli Persii Flacci Satirarum liber cum scholiis..., Leipzig, 1843, p. 245-350).
Origine: italienne, écriture gothico-humanistique semi-cursive. Le copiste a dessiné à l’encre sous l’explicit f. 64 v° deux cornes, allusion probable au nom de l’auteur du commentaire (cf. infra, Ross. 801, f. 40).
Possesseurs: aucune indication.
Data Source: Biblissima
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