Magister Stephanus super quattuor libros Regum. Magister Nicholaus de Tornaco super Iudith et super Parabolas Salomonis et textus earum. Honorius super Cantica Canticorum
Agent
Preferred form
Étienne Langton (1150?-1228)
Role
Author
Original form
Stephen Langton - ca. 1155 - 1228 - auteur
Other form
Stephanus Langton
Langton, Stephanus (1150?-1228)
Stephanus Langton( ?)
Étienne Langton
[STEFANUS LANGTON]
Etienne Langton
Langton, Étienne (1150?-1228)
STEPHANUS LANGTON card.
STEPHANUS LANGTON, card.
Author: Langton, Stephanus
Langton, Stephen
Langton, Stephen, d 1228, Archbishop of Canterbury
Langton, Stephen (1150?-1228)
Stephen Langton
Langton, Stephen, -1228
Stephen Langton (1155-1228)
Langton, Étienne (1150?-1228) > Archévêque
Étienne Langton (v. 1150 - 1228), Archevêque de Canterbury et cardinal
Stephen Langton - ca. 1155 - 1228 - auteur (dubium)
Stephen Langton - ca. 1155 - 1228 - auteurauteur (dubium)
Summary:
Manuscript 29 is closely related to manuscript 28. Firstly they
share the same major texts: three commentaries on books of the
Bible, written by Stephen Langton (d. 1228), archbishop of
Canterbury and one of the driving forces behind the Magna Carta:
Super quattuor libros Regum (ff. 1v-52v); Super librum Iudith (ff.
52v-65v and ff. 67r-68v); and Super librum Salomonis (ff.
69r-124v). The last two texts are erroneously attributed by the
scribe to the thirteenth-century French Dominican Nicholas of
Gorran (Nicolaus de Tornaco). They also both contain two anonymous
sermons (ff. 65v-67r) on the Virgin Mary and on the Annunciation.
The type of script and layout in both manuscripts correspond to
such extent, that they were likely copied at the same location,
possibly the scriptorium of Ten Duinen. This manuscript also
contains the biblical book of Proverbs (ff. 125r-135r); a fragment
of the first two books of Kings (ff. 135v-136v); and a commentary
of Honorius of Autun (d. 1154) on the Song of Songs (ff.
137r-188v). The manuscript is written in two columns, with initials
in mostly red ink present at each chapter. The manuscript is bound
in an early Cistercian binding from the twelfth or thirteenth
century. [Summary by Dr. Mark Vermeer] Title:
Magister Stephanus super quattuor libros Regum. Magister Nicholaus
de Tornaco super Iudith et super Parabolas Salomonis et textus
earum. Honorius super Cantica Canticorum [titel fenestra] Note:
'Super librum Iudith' en 'Super Parabolas Salomonis' zijn
foutievelijk toegeschreven aan Nicholas de Tornaco
Het voorste dekblad is een fragment uit een missaal uit de 14de
eeuw, het bevat een deel van de Canon van de Mis (o.a. het
Onzevader)
Volgens Lieftinck (1953, p. 73) zijn ms. 28 en ms. 29 afgeschreven
uit hetzelfde model, door zeer verwante handen; ze zouden beiden
uit het scriptorium van Ten Duinen afkomstig zijn Topic general subdivision:
Godsdienst Material:
Perkament Extent:
188 ff. Dimensions:
35 x 25 cm Decoration and binding:
lombarden
gedecoreerde initialen
Vroege cisterciënzerband (12de-13de eeuw) Provenance:
Cisterciënzerabdij Ter Doest (S.O.Cist.)
Cisterciënzerabdij Ten Duinen (S.O.Cist.)