Cambridge. Corpus Christi College, Parker Library MS 125

Go to viewer chevron_right
Source
Parker Library On the Web (Cambridge)
Library
UK, Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, Parker Library
Shelfmark
  • MS 125
Biblissima authority file
Date
  • 1500 - 1599
Language
  • Latin
Title
    • Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, MS 125: Martin Bucer, Constans defensio. Hermann von Wied, Archbishop of Cologne, Apologia, Appellatio contra capitulum Coloniense
    • Martin Brem, Dedicatory letter to Matthew Parker || Epistola dedicatoria Martini Brem ad M. Parker
    • Matthew Parker, Testimonium of Hermann von Wied's Apologia || Testimonium Parkeri de hoc opere
    • Hermann von Wied, Archbishop of Cologne, Apologia || Apologia scripta nomine Hermanni
    • Martin Bucer, Constans defensio || Martini Buceri responsio ad anti(di)dagma Coloniense
    • Hermann von Wied, Archbishop of Cologne, Appellatio contra capitulum Coloniense || Appellatio Hermanni archiepiscopi Coloniensis contra capitulum Coloniense, 1545
    • see more
Agent
Description
  • Summary: MS 125 contains sixteenth-century copies of Apologia and Appellatio contra capitulum Coloniense by Hermann von Wied, Archbishop of Cologne (d. 1551) and Martin Bucer's Constans defensio. The entire volume is probably in the hand of Martin Brem, Bucer's amanuensis, who also added a dedication to Matthew Parker. Martin Bucer (1491-1551) was a German Reformation theologian who moved to England in 1549 as a result of Archbishop Cranmer's invitation and Bucer's refusal to accept the Augsburg Interim (the temporary agreement brokered between the Catholics and Protestants at the Diet of Augsburg in 1548). Hermann von Wied was Archbishop of Cologne from 1515 to 1546. Initially hostile to Luther and the reformers, he eventually became sympathetic to the reformers' cause and was forced to resign his archbishopric.


    Contents :


    1r-2r - Martin Brem, Dedicatory letter to Matthew Parker || Epistola dedicatoria Martini Brem ad M. Parker

    Note: Hic Martinus amanuensis fuit D. Martini Buceri, post cujus obitum Mattheus Parker Magister Collegii Corporis Christi Cantabrigiae eum fovit in collegio suo, qui hunc librum de Germanico transtulit et exaravit A.D. 1550


    2r-2v - Matthew Parker, Testimonium of Hermann von Wied's Apologia || Testimonium Parkeri de hoc opere

    Note: In hoc commentario condendo tantum elaboravit D. Martinus Bucerus, ut aliquoties D. Mattheo Parkero viva voce Cantabrigiae testatus sit, se totum hoc opere (si unquam vel ingenio valuerit vel diligentia vel eruditione) exhibuisse. Cujus rei periculum si diligens lector facere velit, primum in manum sumat eum librum quern ipse nomine Hermanni Coloniensis archiepiscopi scripsit, cui titulum fecit Reformatio Coloniensis ecclesiae, secundo legat Coloniensium scriptum quod Anti(di)dagma vocant, postremo hoc responsum evolvat diligenter conferat et judicet.


    3r-370r - Hermann von Wied, Archbishop of Cologne, Apologia || Apologia scripta nomine Hermanni

    Note: There is a red chalk pagination at the beginning from 30 to 83: these pages contain Hermann's Apologia and Table. The Apologia follows the title-page immediately. There is an erasure on the title-page


    370v-379v - Martin Bucer, Constans defensio || Martini Buceri responsio ad anti(di)dagma Coloniense

    Note: The Antididagma was printed in 1544 and 1549. I do not find that this reply was ever printed


    380r-391v - Hermann von Wied, Archbishop of Cologne, Appellatio contra capitulum Coloniense || Appellatio Hermanni archiepiscopi Coloniensis contra capitulum Coloniense, 1545

    Note: The printed Appellatio Hermanni at the end occupies 12 leaves

Rights
  • Images courtesy of The Parker Library, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. For higher resolution images suitable for scholarly or commercial publication, either in print or in an electronic format, please contact the Parker Library directly at parker-library@corpus.cam.ac.uk
License
Digitisation
Manifest URL
Biblissima portal
Library logo