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/Q210327
IIIF manifest
Full digitisation
Data Source: Parker on the Web
Résumé : The writing in CCCC MS 538 is much faded and its contemporary binding was in a very damaged state but was repaired in the twentieth century. It was probably written at some time after 1396/7 in Bohemia. On f. 13r the ownership is recorded of Johannes Mokelburg B.A. who had studied at Prague. A Heinrich Mokelburg of Elbing is recorded in 1419 as a student at Leipzig. The book contains one work, a summa of catholic doctrine by Conradus of Soltau (Zolco or Zolto, c. 1350-1407), the Commentary on Firmiter credimus (Summa de trinitate et fide catholica). At the end of this work is a colophon attributing it to Zolto, doctor of Prague, who compiled it in 1396/97. The text is also in CCCC MS 529. This volume is part of the Elbing collection, a group of manuscripts which belonged to the Brigittine convent at Elbing (Elblag), near Gdansk. The collection was donated to Corpus Christi College by either Richard Pernham (1583?-1628) or his wife Mary, whose name is in many of these books.
Contenu :
Langue(s) des textes : latin, allemand
Intervenants :
Conrad of Soltau (Zolco) - author
1r-120v - Conrad of Soltau (Zolco), Commentary on Firmiter credimus (Summa de trinitate et fide catholica) || Summa de trinitate et fide catholica per mag. Zoltonem
Note : (1r) Beginning imperfectly
Note : Ending
explicit : (116r) leticiam nos perducat trinitas indiuidua in secula seculorum. benedicta (Amen)
rubric : (116r) Explicit summa de trinitate et fide katholica magistri Zoltonis egregii doctoris prage compilata anno domini mill. ccco nonagesimo sexto (?) (or septimo)
Note : (116r) In larger letters, the same as far as the word millesimo
Note : In red
rubric : (116r) Omnipotens domine tibi laus tibi gloria deturEx quo nunc finis libri presentis habetur.portas celorum stanslae pater polonorumTis precibus resera capit hos ne pessima fera.Trinum persona quem gentes nunc fateanturHuic laudis dona per me semper tribuantur
Note : Below
Note : (116r) liber Joh. Mekelburg quem comparauit (?) in studio Pragensi
Note : The words de Elbinge follow in the old list; they are not legible in the MS.
Note : Some German rubrics occur
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