Collection name. Medieval and early modern manuscripts.
Found in 229 Collections and/or Records:
Manuscript of an incomplete copy of 'De Actibus Apostolorum' by Arator.
Manuscript of an incomplete copy of the Jónsbók.
Manuscript of 'Ane Abbregement of Roland Furious translait out of Ariost togither with sum rapsodies of the author's youthfull braine. And last, ane schersing out of trew felicitie composit in Scotis meitir’ by John Stewart of Baldynneis, written in his own hand.
The text is enclosed in red double straight lines: proper names and titles are also in red ink.
Manuscript of 'Anticlaudianus' by Alain de Lille, written in England or northern France.
Manuscript of 'De oratore' and the 'Orator' by Cicero.
Manuscript of 'De remediis utriusque fortunae' of Petrarch, written in 1442.
Manuscript of 'Etymologiae' by Isidore of Seville.
The manuscript contains: a list of chapters (folio 1); the six letters between Isidore, Braulio and Sisebutus (folio 5); and the complete text (folio 7 verso).
Subscription (folio 268): `Liber [ ] qui uocat(ur) Ysidorus ethimologiarum. Studio fr(atr)is arnulfi. Si quis illi abstulerit anathema sit`.
Headings and some initials are in red. Notes for the rubricator occasionally survive in the margin at right angles to the text.
Manuscript of ‘Historia Romana’ by Paulus Diaconus and ‘Index commentariorum G. Julii Caesaris’ by Raimundus Marlianus, probably written by Robert Braidfut.
Manuscript of 'Oculus Sacerdotis' by William of Pagula.
Manuscript of 'Secretum secretorum' by Pseudo-Aristotle, 'De excidio Troiae' by Dares Phrygius, and 'Historia regum Britannie' by Geoffrey of Monmouth; written by a 13th- or 14th-century hand of uncertain origin.
Manuscript of the 'Bartasias' of Adrian Damman de Bystervelt, a translation of 'La premiere sepmaine' of Guillaume de Saluste du Bartas.
Manuscript of the complete works of Catullus, written in the Italic bookhand of Lodovico Regio of Imola.
Manuscript of the 'Epistolae ex Ponto' by Ovid, written in Italy.
Manuscript of the ‘Historia Ecclesiastica’ by Bede, probably from Exeter Cathedral.
Manuscript of the late 11th and early 12th century containing: the 'Paradisus' of Heraclides; the 'Historia persecutionis Africanae provinciae sub Geiserico et Hunrico regibus Wandalorum' of Victor Vitensis; 'De corpore et sanguine Domini' of Paschasius Radbertus (attributed to Rabanus Maurus); 'De corpore Domini contra Berengarium' of Guitmund; and two sermons of St Augustine of Hippo.
Manuscript of the 'Liber phisionomie' of Michael Scot.
Manuscript of the translation by Jacobus Venetus of the 'Analytica Posteriora' by Aristotle, with contemporary and later gloss.
Manuscript of the 'Viaticum' of Constantinus Africanus, from the south of France, later in England.
Manuscript, of uncertain origin written in the 12th or 13th century, containing medical treatises.
Manuscript of uncertain origin written in the late 15th or early 16th century, in Greek, containing liturgies and other religious works.
Manuscript, possibly 11th century, of the Gospels of Saints Mark and Luke, and part of the prologue of Saint John.
Manuscript, possibly from Mount Athos, of St Dorotheus and the sermons of Isaias, with an account of the miracle performed by the Virgin at Blachernae.
Manuscript, probably from Normandy, of the complete works of Horace.
Manuscript, probably of the 15th century, written in England, containing various works on canon law, including: the 'Casus decretalium' of Johannes Burgundus de Maioricis; a summary of the 'Decretales - Liber Sextus' of Pope Boniface VIII; the 'Apparatus ad Constitutiones Clementinas' possibly by Gulielmus de Monte Lauduno; and short extracts by other authors.
Manuscript, probably Scottish, of the 'Vitae Caesarum’ of Suetonius.
The final lines, ‘pro certo habuisse’ etc., are lost.
Before the text is placed without heading Ausonius, `Caesares` (XXI Monosticha 6-41 in Karl Schenkl`s edition), which is found in other 15th-century manuscripts of Suetonius, and a list of chapters.
Ornamental initials in blue and red.
Marginalia throughout in the hand of Archibald Whitelaw, secretary to James III.