7 results

  • Thumbnail
    London. British Library, Add MS 16974
    Collection
    The British Library, Polonsky Pre-1200 Project
    Library
    London. British Library
    Language
    lat
    • Saint Jerome (b. 347, d. 420), priest and theologian
    • According to Bischoff, ff. 1-56 were written in North Eastern France in the 3rd-4th quarter of the 9th
  • Thumbnail
    London. British Library, Add MS 10459
    Collection
    The British Library, Polonsky Pre-1200 Project
    Library
    London. British Library
    Language
    lat
    • incorrectly bound together at some point before the 15th century.
  • Thumbnail
    London. British Library, Harley MS 3845
    Collection
    The British Library, Polonsky Pre-1200 Project
    Library
    London. British Library
    Language
    lat
    • France, perhaps in Lyon, during the Carolingian reform in the first half of the 9th century, according to
  • Thumbnail
    London. British Library, Harley MS 5041
    Collection
    The British Library, Polonsky Pre-1200 Project
    Library
    London. British Library
    Language
    lat
    • ) and uncials capitals (ff. 8v-78v).
  • Thumbnail
    London. British Library, Add MS 9046
    Collection
    The British Library, Polonsky Pre-1200 Project
    Library
    London. British Library
    Language
    lat
    • This is a shorthand that was attributed to Tiro (b. 94, d. 4 BC), a slave of Cicero (b. 106, d. 43 BC
  • Thumbnail
    London. British Library, Harley MS 2713
    Collection
    The British Library, Polonsky Pre-1200 Project
    Library
    London. British Library
    Language
    lat
    • Germany and Switzerland, Constance(?)
    • Italy and France (illumination)
    • The second part was originally bound together with Burney MS 238 (ff. 13r-29r, f. 37r) and Orléans, Bibliothèque
  • Thumbnail
    London. British Library, Harley MS 2688
    Collection
    The British Library, Polonsky Pre-1200 Project
    Library
    London. British Library
    Language
    lat, grc
    • Italy and France (illumination)
    • The manuscript is a composite miscellany made of five texts of different dates and origins (ff. 1-16;