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/Q91029
IIIF manifest
Digitisation:
Papier, sauf f. II, 11-12 et 21 en parchemin (filigrane: échelle ? à peine visible), XVe s. (a. 1458), II + 125 ff. + 2 ff. (+ fol. 48 bis ; f. II, ‹126 v°-127› blancs ; foliotation ancienne), f. I-I v°: 2 col., 235 x 160 mm.
Data Source: Persée - DER-IRHT, XXI
f. I-I v°: Nonivs Marcellvs, De compendiosa doctrina (extraits).
titre: «Quedam uocabula collecta ex Nonio Marcello in fabulis Plauti 2 primo (?)».
inc.: «Capulum dicitur quicquid aliquam [sic] rem capit inter [sic] se. Nam sacrofagum [sic] id est sepulcrum capulum dicitur...» (I - éd. W. M. Lindsay, 1, p. 7, ligne 17...) «Examusim dicitur examinate ad regulam...» (I - éd. cit, 1, p. 14, l. 3).
expl.: «... Perire et interire plurimum dicere (?) habent quod perire leuior res et habet inuentionis spem et non omnium rerum» (V - éd. cit., 3, p. 682, l. 4-6).
~ f. I v°: ‹Definitiones› (?).
texte «Victi pro uictus
fidele pro fideliter
Mansoleum [sic] id est sepulcrum
Inedia id est fames
Nauseat id est fastidium facit» (non identifié).
~ f. II v°: Ambrosivs Traversarivs, Epistula ad Leonardum ‹Iustinianum› (Epistulae VI, 25).
~ f. 1-‹126›: Diogenes Laertivs, Vitae et Sententiae philosophorum (transl. lat. Ambrosii Trauersarii).
Origine: italienne, écriture humanistique cursive, de la main du copiste Pollio, (de 29 Todi ?), podestat de Volterra, qui signe et date au f. 125 v°: «... liber decimus explicit feliciter die XXI septembris 1458 dum ego Pollio ll. (= «legum» ?) doctor et comes potestas eram Vulterrarum. Deo gratias».
Possesseurs: les Théatins de S. Silvestre au Quirinal à Rome dont le timbre est estampillé au f. I (cf. supra, Reg. lat. 349).
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