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P., Description of the Saxon Manuscript of the Four Gospels in the Library ofYork Minster (York: Printed to the order of A.H. Barron, Chapter Clerk ofYork, 1925) Gneuss, Helmut, Handlist of Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts: A List of Manuscripts and
of New York Press, 1986), pp. 109-27 ---, 'The Relationship between the O.E. MSS. of King Alfred's Translation of Gregory's Pastoral Care ', Anglia , 91 (1973), 153-69 Kendrick, T. D. , Anglo-Saxon Art (1938) Ker, N. R., Catalogue
J. P., 'The Library of Henry Savile, of Banke', Transactions of the Bibliographical Society , 9 (1908), 126-210 Gullick, Michael, 'The Two Earliest Manuscripts of the Libellus de Exordio ', in Symeon of Durham: Historian of Durham and the North
binding leaves of fols 1-209: the opening words of fol. 210 are copied on fol. 209v in a hand of s. xv and a pattern of wormholes runs through fols 180-212. There are marginal notes or pen-trials of the later
leaves of which are now bound into Lambeth Palace MS 427 ( Roberts 2008 ). 176 130-133 160-166 84-88 Dimensions of size of leaves include extra width of 4-5 mm from the mending strip applied to the outer margin of
of em1060to1220_Cat/EMXML Template_TEI/EM template/em_final.xml created by ODR. Oxford Bodleian Library Auct. F. 4. 32 Classbook of St. Dunstan , s. ix-s. xi 2 The manuscript is composite, made up of four independent parts: Part 1: fols 1-9 contain part
line. The endleaf recto contains: In the name of Gregory Pryse , son of John Prise (1502/3-1555). Names on the verso of the front flyleaf include Edmond North . The bottom margin of fol. 1 recto has the inscription Liber
tan of ƿulftan in Me aƿritan het ƿulfstan bisceop (fol. 1r/8) in a hand of the second half of the 11th century ( Sisam 1953 , p. 202). Sisam notes that the original reading could be Wulfsige , bishop of
representation of Christ Church's waterworks, and a full page visual memorialisation of Eadwine , the prince of scribes. At least 13 scribes appear to have been employed in the construction of this manuscript. Many of these scribes are part of
and Second Series of ~x00e6~lfric 's Sermones Catholici and ~x00e6~lfric 's homilies for the common of Saints and the dedication of a church from the Second Series . Folio 65 contains an exortation against the worship of idols and the
the incipits and explicits of thirteen Old English homilies which appeared on fols 202-216: 'Collectio Sermonum sive Homiliarum Normanno-Saxonice, circa tempora Henrici II. scripta'. Ker (1957) also notes that Richard James transcribed a selection from four of the homilies and
in the top margin of fol. 1r and eganne dryb (eye drop?) on the right margin of fol. 10r seem of the same 17th-century hand. The other additions consist of curatorial interventions. Stamping: the ownership of the manuscript by the
York Psalter . As there are a number of Northern saints' days marked in the calendar, it has been traditionally ascribed a Northern provenance. The presence of John of Beverley (Archbishop ofYork , d. 721) and Paulinus (Bishop
Cuthbert's letter of Bede's Death-Song on fol. 15. Ker ( 1957 , pp. 456-57) notes: 'This copy of the letter belongs to the Digby group , but the abnormal word-divisions, characteristic of the Death Song in other manuscripts of the
quires consist of 8 leaves except for the final quire 23, which consists of 4 leaves. Catchwords are partly visible at the end of Quires 8 (fol. 64v) and 10 (fol. 80v). Whether they are in the hand of the
of his manuscripts at Lambeth Palace , 1612 (fol. 85) ( Ker 1957 , p. 341). Manuscript described and encoded by Mary Swan with the assistance of Hollie Morgan (August 2010). Gneuss, Helmut, Handlist of Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts: A List
2 (?) Fragments of the homilies on 'Stephen' and 'The Assumption of St. John' from ~x00e6~lfric's First Series of Catholic Homilies , found in the binding of a cartulary. Parchment 260 151 224 151 188 108 Part of the preliminary
modified version of em1060to1220_Cat/EMXML Template_TEI/EM template/em_final.xml created by ODR. New York Pierpont Morgan Library G. 63 Lord's Prayer , s. xii/xiii Two fragmentary and two complete leaves which contain part of the Old English Heptateuch . Place of production not
of relationships occuring in verse memoranda in illustration of a table of consanguinity. fols 16-21v: Names of the months in a calendar. f ol. 71v: Names of the days of the week written in the margin opposite chapter 8
blank spaces of the pontifical and enlarged by the addition of four bifolia (fols 78-85) into Quire 5. Quire 18 contains the hand of an unlocalised scribe of the late eleventh-century. Probably bound together under the direction of Robert Cotton