century (ff. 9, 29v, 62v, 69).The Benedictine abbey of Christ Church, Canterbury: Christ Church pressmark 'r' with a title 'Psalteriu[m] s[anc]ti Jeronimi glosatu[m]', 12th century (f. 8) and Christ Church script, 11th century (ff. 197-198, according to Ker, 1957).Thomas Cranmer
in plain red or blue. Office and Mass of the Dead (vol. 1) Apparently written for use in the cathedral church of St Lambert at Liège: includes the anniversary of the election of the bishop Everard de la Marck (d.
in plain red or blue. Office and Mass of the Dead (vol. 1) Apparently written for use in the cathedral church of St Lambert at Liège: includes the anniversary of the election of the bishop Everard de la Marck (d.
in plain red or blue. Office and Mass of the Dead (vol. 1) Apparently written for use in the cathedral church of St Lambert at Liège: includes the anniversary of the election of the bishop Everard de la Marck (d.
from the Greek by Abu l-Fath Abd Allah b. al-Fadl b. Abd Allah al-Mutran al-Antakie, deacon of the Melkite church of Antioch in the mid-eleventh century. This may be the earliest surviving manuscript of this translation. Headpieces in red (f.
Sanctorum." The Lives of Saints are in 194 chapters, beginning with St. Andrew and ending with the Dedication of the Church. The life of St. Dominio has the usual misleading reference (f. 95) to the French translator Jean de Vignay,
Two: Medieval Manuscripts from the Additional Manuscripts, Section B Manuscript Number 38666 Source Library British Library, London Description POEM ON CHURCH FESTIVALS, intended (see prologue, f., as a Life of Christ; written in alternate rhyme, arranged mostly in quastrains. Beg.
a hand of 12th-13th cont. 9 9 "Speculum Stultorum, " by Nigel, also called a Wircker, a monk of Christ Church, Canterbury, with introductory letter to William [Longchamp, bishop of Ely, 1189] and marginal illustrations. The text differs occasionally from