Franklin

Provinciale secundum provincias.

Publication:
[Germany], [between 1400 and 1450?]
Format/Description:
Manuscript
12 leaves : paper ; 135 x 98 (103 x 77) mm bound to 138 x 103 mm
Status/Location:
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Details

Other Title:
Provinciale omnium ecclesiarum cathedralium.
Subjects:
Catholic Church -- Dioceses -- Registers.
Catholic Church -- Ecclesiastical geography -- Registers.
Catholic Church.
Ecclesiastical geography.
Science.
History.
Dioceses.
Natural history -- Pre-Linnean works.
Natural history.
Science -- History -- Early works to 1800.
Form/Genre:
Registers (Lists)
Codices.
Registers (lists)
Tables of contents.
Manuscripts, Latin.
Manuscripts, Medieval.
Manuscripts, Renaissance.
Language:
Latin.
Summary:
List of all Catholic dioceses and archdioceses in Europe and the Near East (f. 1r-10v). Followed by a table of contents, with chapter titles and folio numbers, for an unidentified book on natural sciences (f. 11r-11v) . This book seems to have consisted of 26 chapters and at least 267 folios.
Notes:
Ms. codex.
Title from f. 1r. Title Provinciale omnium ecclesiarum cathedralium written in pencil in a much later hand on f. [i]r (at the front of the manuscript).
Incipit and explicit: (f. 1r) In civitate Roma sunt quinque [?] ecclesie patriachales et sunt haec In primis [?] Sancti Ioannis ecclesia ... (f. 10r) in curia in episcopos et fuit hoc missum pallium quod esset pro successore rebus [?].
Collation: Paper, ii (modern paper) + 12 + ii (modern paper); 1¹²; [1-12]; modern foliation in pencil, upper right recto. Link to collation model at end of record.
Script: Written in a Gothic cursive script.
Decoration: Red initial and rubrication (f. 1r).
Binding: Paper over cardboard with vellum spine.
Origin: Probably written in Germany, in the first half of the 15th century.
Penn Provenance:
Acquired, 1953.
Cited in:
Described in Zacour, Norman P. and Hirsch, Rudolf. Catalogue of Manuscripts in the Libraries of the University of Pennsylvania to 1800 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1965), p. 148 (Ms. Lea 11).
Cited as:
UPenn Ms. Codex 66
OCLC:
155962948