St. Gallen. Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 334
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- e-codices
- Library
- St. Gallen. Stiftsbibliothek
- Shelfmark
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- Cod. Sang. 334
- Biblissima authority file
- Date
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- 12th century
- 13th century
- around 1200
- Language
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- Latin
- Title
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- Petrus Lombardus, Collectanea in epistolas Pauli
- Agent
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- Preferred form
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- Pierre Lombard (1095?-1160?)
- Role
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- Author
- Original form
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- Author: Petrus, Lombardus
- Other form
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- Pierre Lombard (1095?-1160?)
- Petrus Lombardus
- Petrus Lombardus (1095?-1160?)
- PETRUS LOMBARDUS
- PETRUS LOMBARDUS, Parisiensis ep.
- Petri Lombardi
- Pierre Lombard
- Peter Lombard, Bishop of Paris, approximately 1100-1160
- Peter Lombard
- Lombard, Peter, c 1100-1160, Bishop of Paris
- Peter Lombard, Bishop of Paris, approximately 1100-1160
- Peter Lombard, Bishop of Paris, approximately 1100-1160
- Petrus Lombardus, 1095?-1160
- Petrus Lombardus, 1095-1160
- Petrus<Lombardus>
- Petrus, Lombardus, 1095-1160
- Petrus <Lombardus> (1095-1160)
- Lombard, Peter, 1100-1160
- Peter Lombard (b. c. 1100, d. c. 1160), theologian and Bishop of Paris
- Peter Lombard, Bishop of Paris (approximately 1100-1160)
- Pierre Lombard (1100-1160) > Chancelier de l'Université de Paris
- Pierre Lombard (1100-1160)
- Petrus Lombardus, Obispo de París, 1095-1160
- Petrus
- Lombardus, Petrus, 1096-1164
- Lombardus, Petrus, 1096-1164 > , ant. bibliog.
- Petrus Lombardus - ca. 1095 - ca. 1160 - auteur
- Petrus Lombardus - ca. 1095 - ca. 1160 - oorspronkelijke auteur
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- Biblissima portal
- Biblissima authority file
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- Description
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- This manuscript contains the commentary on the Epistles of Paul (Collectanea in epistolas Pauli) by Peter Lombard (1095/1100-1160). On the spine label and on p. 1/2, it is falsely attributed to Pierre de Tarentaise (later Pope Innocent V). The codex is written in two columns; the left, often very narrow column gives the biblical text, the right one gives the commentary in lines of half the height. References to authors consulted by Peter Lombard are given in red in the margins. At the beginning of each letter, there are two initials (for the biblical text and for the commentary) painted in opaque colors on a gold background (p. 3, 5, 116, 202, 249, 287, 316, 334/335, 351, 371, 402, 409, 412). These exhibit features of the so-called "channel style", which was popular on both sides of the English Channel around 1200.
- Place
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- Preferred form
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- France, Northern (?)
- Original form
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- Northern France?
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- Rights
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- e-codices - Virtual Manuscript Library of Switzerland
- Digitisation