Church and Chronicle in the Middle Ages: Essays Presented to John Taylor

Church and Chronicle in the Middle Ages: Essays Presented to John Taylor

Language: English

Pages: 296

ISBN: 1852850469

Format: PDF / Kindle (mobi) / ePub


Book by Wood, Ian, Wood, Wood, Eleanor

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

'Medievalism' in Counter-Reformation Sicily A.D. Wright 233 17 The First Medievalist in Leeds: Ralph Thoresby, F.R.S., 1658-1725 G.C.F. Forster 25'1 List of Subscribers 271 List of Illustrations John Taylor viii Between pages 22 and 23 1 2 3 4 London, British Library, MS Royal 7.D.XXIV, fo. 85v London, Lambeth Palace Library, MS 200, fo. 68v London, Lambeth Palace Library, MS 200, fo. 69r London, Lambeth Palace Library, MS 200, fo. 80v Between pages 103 and 104 5 6 Florence,

Innocentius PP HI. This page intentionally left blank Chapter 7 An Unknown Thirteenth-Century Manuscript oflanua Robert Black It has long been recognized that in later medieval Italy the fundamental text of elementary education was not Donatus's Ars minor but a manual spuriously attributed to Donatus which Sabbadini christened lanua after the first word of its verse prologue.1 Seventeen Italian manuscripts of the lanua have been identified by Bursill-Hall, whose catalogue lists twentyseven

formation of participles at the end of the active and passive conjugations of each of the paradigm verbs; e.g. 'Amans. Unde formatur? A prima persona [presentis et] preteriti [imjperfecti indicativi modi. Quomodo? Amabam. bam in ns fit amans. Amaturus. Unde? Ab ultimo suppino. Quomodo? Amatum, amatu addita rus fit amaturus'.65 But the manuscript with which Laurenziano Strozzi 80 has the most in common is Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, MS 15972.66 Like Laurenziano Strozzi 80, this manuscript

(1906-7), 327-351. 104 Ibid., 333. 105 Archivio di Stato, Arezzo, Deliberazioni del magistrato dei Priori e del Consiglio Generale, (henceforth ASA, Prow.) 7, fos.33v-34r (8 March 1439 ab inc.). ice Manacorda, Storia, i, pp. 180-83; F. Gabotto, Lo stato sabaudo, iii (Turin, 1895), pp.274-76; V. Rossi, Dal rinascimento al risorgimento (Florence, 1930), pp. 14-15; M. Battistini, II pubblico insegnamento in Volterra (Volterra, 1919), pp.49-50; A. Zanelli, Del pubblico insegnamento in Pistoia (Rome,

course have their own seals, but many lesser people would sign with a seal that the clerk, or perhaps a friend, supplied. The seal-owning proportion of the population indeed increased in the early part of the thirteenth century, but by, say, 1320 it was probably much smaller than a hundred years earlier. This is one reason why the proportion of heraldic seals rose so sharply from the thirteenth to the fourteenth century, in DL25 and DL26 from a tenth to a third of the total, as the table above

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