714 research outputs found
Collation Model for Ms. Codex 1237: [Notarial documents]
A collection of 16 notarial documents dealing with property and political matters, including real estate, wills, and elections, for the city of Piacenza, Italy. The documents, originally separate, are several different sizes.Written in Piacenza, Italy, 1457-1546.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1106/thumbnail.jp
Collation Model for LJS 457: Loyca parva ... [etc.].
Work on scholastic logic used in universities in the late 15th century by Paolo Veneto, professor of logic in Padua, Siena (1420-1424), and Perugia (1424-1428); member of the community of Hermits of Saint Augustine in Perugia.. Followed by a brief logical work by Paolo della Pergola, a student of Paolo Veneto.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1120/thumbnail.jp
Collation Model for Ms. Codex 761: [Cosmographies].
Four ancient Greek cosmographies in Latin translation: Plato\u27s Timaeus translated and with a commentary by Calcidius, Aristotle\u27s De mundo translated by Ioannes Argyropoulos, Philo\u27s De incorruptione mundi probably translated by Lilius Tifernas, and Cleomedes\u27s De mundo translated by Carolus Valgulius.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1145/thumbnail.jp
Collation Model for Ms. Codex 1047: [Liber tastharium domini Batide Rolandi et Polafoli].
Inventory of properties in southeast France.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1147/thumbnail.jp
Collation Model for Ms. Codex 729: [Libellus super electionibus faciendis et earum ordinandis].
Two unbound quires from a work dealing with a section of canon law, with Mandagot\u27s own gloss on his work and some details relating to the church at Toulouse, where the author was provost for a time.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1113/thumbnail.jp
Collation Model for LJS 64: [Illustrations to Georg von Peurbach\u27s Novae theoricae planetarum].
Diagrams, many with moving parts, designed to accompany the work Theoricae novae planetarum by 15th-century Austrian astronomer Georg von Peurbach, who taught at the universities in Padua and Ferrara. The diagrams demonstrate increasingly complex planetary motion. An early 17th-century inscription on the first flyleaf refers to an edition of Peurbach published in Venice in 1616.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1138/thumbnail.jp
Collation Model for Ms. Codex 829: Renaissance miscellany.
Miscellany of materials from Renaissance and classical authors, including Leonardo Bruni, Poggio Bracciolini, Cicero, and Livy.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1146/thumbnail.jp
Collation Model for Ms. Codex 1156: Epithome artis epistolaris ... [etc.] [manuscript].
Epithome artis epistolaris, the predominant work, is a treatise on rhetoric and letter writing based on authors and sources ranging from classical antiquity to the Renaissance. Rhegius draws strongly on Cicero, Quintilian, and Poliziano, but also references Aristotle, Plutarch, Pliny the Younger, Ovid, Juvenal, Terence, Vergil, Horace, Lucretius, Caesar, Livy, Augustine, passages from Psalms and Exodus, Albertus Magnus, Erasmus, Giorgio Valla, Ermolau Barbaro, Heinrich Bebel, Franciscus Niger, and Ulrich Zasius; many of these references are noted in the margins. The treatise explores the classical tenets of rhetoric, including inventio, dispositio, exordium, and elocutio; marginal annotations also make reference in Greek to various tools of rhetoric, including metaphor and periphrasis. Although the authorship of Epithome artis epistolaris was originally uncertain, it has been attributed to Urbanus Rhegius early in his career (Rhegius\u27 name appears multiple times throughout the manuscript in both Hebrew and Roman letters: see f. 6r-v, 8v, 9r, 16v). The predominant work is preceded by an excerpt from a medieval comedic poem, several pages of which have been removed, and several brief writings concerning rhetoric and philosophy.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1043/thumbnail.jp
Collation Model for Oversize Ms. Codex 1147: Textus tertius libri sententiarum
Contains most of Book III (De incarnatione Verbi) of Peter Lombard\u27s Sentences. A table of contents at the beginning lists all the chapters from all forty disputations, but the text breaks off in the middle of Disputation 35, Chapter 3, leaving a blank verso and another empty folio. Erased pencil page numbers, lack of a title page, and the finding tab all suggest that this manuscript may once have included Books I-II.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1042/thumbnail.jp
Collation Model for LJS 223: Questiones logicales ... [etc.] [manuscript].
Collection of Aristotelian works and other philosophical works, including works on logic; short tracts (some incomplete) on Aristotle\u27s Categories, De interpretatione, and Posterior analytics; and several works on Aristotle\u27s Physics (including commentaries by Antonius Carpentier on both the Physics and the introduction to the Physics by Jacques Lefèvre d\u27Etaples published in 1492), this last group (f. 148v-206r) being more decorated than the rest of the manuscript. The beginning of the Reportata in Logicam Aristotelis has a marginal commentary (f. 22r-29v); in the rest of the manuscript, headings and notes are written in the margins.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1052/thumbnail.jp
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