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The Production and Use of English Manuscripts 1060 to 1220 icon

The Production and Use of English Manuscripts 1060 to 1220

58 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 20

with other English records of Christ Church, Canterbury , of s. xi 1 , to the margins of a s. ix continental gospel-book which Æthelstan donated to Christ Church . OE written at Christ Church . The same text is

Some additions relate to Kentish affairs and especially to Christ Church and the archbishops. Some entries are textually almost identical to additions to the Parker Chronicle made at Christ Church. There are a few additions in Latin in a hand

in a s. xi 2 hand. Ker notes 'This is certainly a manuscript described in the medieval catalogue of Christ Church, Canterbury' ( Ker 1957 , p. 248) Fols 174-76v contain an OE translation of parts of the Regularis Concordia

of Christ Church, Canterbury ( Willetts 1966 ). This portion of the manuscript is made up of two parts: Part A (fols 120-41), s. xi 2 , contains notes on computus and the calculation and observance of church services; a

on the Origins and Progress of this the Church of Durham , Oxford Medieval Texts (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000) Stevenson, Joseph, 'A History of the Church of Durham', in The Church Historians of England, 5 vols. (London, 1853-1858), III

text was probably written at Christ Church, Canterbury (p. 48). Located at Christ Church, Canterbury . According to Ker 1957 , it is identifiable in a medieval catalogue of the library at Christ Church, Canterbury . Owned by Lord John

cover. According to Doane (2007) the manuscript was probably produced at Christ Church, Canterbury , as fol. 23v was executed in the known hand of the Christ Church scribe Eadui Basan (fl. 1012- 1020s), though St. Augustine's is a possibility

two hands almost contemporarty to the main hand, s. xi med (p. 171). Calendar and litany are localizable to Christ Church, Canterbury . x - x xx - x xx - x xx - x xx - x xx xx

parts of the text ( Ker 1957 , p. 197). The manuscript seems to have been in use at Christ Church, Canterbury . x - x xx - x xx - x xx - x xx - x xx xx

of Manuscripts Containing Anglo-Saxon (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1957; repr. 1990), item 235 Thorpe, B., ed., The Homilies of the Anglo-Saxon Church: The First Part, Containing the Sermones Catholici, or Homilies of AElfric (London: ~x00e6~lfric Society, 1844; repr. New York: Johnson

the episcopate of its first bishop, A.D. 1050-1072. Together with some account of the Red book of Derby, the Missal of Robert of Jumièges, and a few other early manuscript service books of the English church (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1883)

xii further Latin additions were made to Latin lists of English archbishops and bishops in the manuscript. Manuscript at Christ Church, Canterbury , by c. 1070. x - x xx - x xx - x xx - x xx -

two to Distichia Catonis . Written in one hand. Ker (1957, p. 138) notes that James localised it to Christ Church, Canterbury x - x xx - x xx - x xx - x xx - x xx xx x

two to Distichia Catonis . Written in one hand. Ker (1957, p. 138) notes that James localised it to Christ Church, Canterbury x - x xx - x xx - x xx - x xx - x xx xx x

main text, a s. xii 1 Latin chronicle. Ker 1957 (p. 418) suggests that the leaves may be from Christ Church, Canterbury . x - x xx - x xx - x xx - x xx - x xx xx

2006 , p. 117). Unknown. Gneuss (1998) and Pilch (1997) suggest that the fragment may have belonged to the collegiate church of Jechaburg , near Sondershausen in Thuringia ( Bremmer and Dekker , p. 117). Unknown. Short description by Hollie

also a note from s. xi med on fol. 198v referring to Christes cyrcan , associating the manuscript with Christ Church, Canterbury . Old English glosses , s. xii, are on fols 9r, 29v, 62v and 69r, over erasures of

; Hemming's Cartulary , s. xi ex Hemming's Cartulary consisting of five separate sections which may have come from separate church documents ( Ker 1948 , pp. 55-57; Herold 2008 , pp. 172-78). Three texts from s. xi ex are

in the Table of Contents - Bede, History of the English Church and Nation Latin 1225-1250 Tremulous Hand Interlinear Latin glosses. fols 8v/1-99r/10 Bede, History of the English Church and Nation History fol. 8v/1-4 GIORIOSISSIMO REGI CEOLƿULFO BEDA FAMULUS XPIˉ

(1957) identifies it as the copy of Regula canonicorium among the Libri anglici in the early 14th-century catalogue of Christ Church, Canterbury , but James says that this entry presumably refers to 'the Rule of St. Augustine ' (See Doane

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