Cambridge. Corpus Christi College, Parker Library MS 176

  • Other Form of the Shelfmark :
    • Cambridge. Corpus Christi College, Parker Library MS 176
    • CCCC MS 176
    • MS 176
    • Parker Library MS 176
  • Held at : Cambridge. Corpus Christi College, Parker Library
  • Languages : Latin, English, Old (ca.450-1100)
  • Author : Asser (08..?-0909) | Thomas Walsingham (1345?-1422?)
  • Date of Origin :
  • Support Material : Paper
  • Dimensions :
    • 195 x 297
  • Codicological details :
    • ff. a-b + pp. Ai-Axii + A1-A48 + Bi-Bxii + B1-B382 (383, 384 omitted) + B385-B418 + B418a + B418b + B419-B468 + Ci-Civ + C1-C38 + C38a + C38b + C39-C146 + C146a-f + C147-C199 + Cv-Cix + ff. c-d

Contents

Data Source: Parker on the Web

  • Résumé : CCCC "MS" 176 consists of three printed books bound together and, although the policy of the Parker on the Web project was not to image printed material, an exception was made in this instance because of the particular interest of the first and last items. All three parts were printed in 1574 and were edited by (or under the auspices of) Archbishop Matthew Parker from his own manuscript collections. Two were printed by the famous evangelical printer John Day (d. 1584), who produced Parker's most important publications, and one by John Bynneman (d. 1583), who was also patronised by Parker. Part A is Parker's important editio princeps of Asser's Life of Alfred, containing parallel Latin and Old English material, printed in a special Insular typeface. Because the only medieval manuscript of this work was completely destroyed in the Cottonian fire of 1731, modern editions have had to depend on transcripts and the early printed editions, most of which descend in some way from Parker's work. Parker interpolated Asser's life with material from the Annals of St Neots, and thus popularised the famous story of Alfred burning the cakes while hiding in the Somerset marshes. This book was an important part of the early modern cult of Alfred the Great. Parts B and C are Thomas of Walsingham's Historia breuis, and the Ypodigma Neustriae also often attributed to him. The latter is taken from the unique surviving copy in CCCC MS 240, which cannot be completely digitised due to the delicate state of its early modern binding. It consists of a chronicle of events in Normandy and England from 911 AD to 1416 AD and written, perhaps, as a flattery to Henry V's successful conquests in France. This book is mentioned in the Parker register and came to Corpus with the majority of Parker's collection. The three sections are also found bound together in the Cambridge University Library copy, in the three British Library copies, and in another which came into the possession of Corpus in the nineteenth century, suggesting that Parker had the three texts circulated together.


    Contenu :


    Langue(s) des textes : latin, anglais


    Intervenants :

    Asser - author

    Ai-A48 - Parker's edition of Asser, Ælfredi regis res gestae || Ælfredi regis res gestae, autore Asserio Menevensi; typis Saxonicis

    Note : Printed by John Day (1574). Sayle, Catalogue, no. 870. B. M. p. 32


    Intervenants :

    Thomas Walsingham - author

    Bi-B468 - Printed edition of Thomas Walsingham, Historia breuis || Historia brevis Thomas Walsingham, Londini 1574

    Note : Printed by Henry Bynneman, 1574. Sayle, no. 1479. B. M. p. 1566


    Ci-Cix - Printed edition of Thomas Walsingham, Ypodigma Neustriae || Ejusdem Ypodigma Neustriae, Londini 1574

    Note : Printed by John Day, 1574. Sayle, no. 844. B. M. p. 1566

Participants

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