1,721,715 research outputs found

    Collation Model for Ms. Codex 918: [Regulae de longis et brevibus syllabis].

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    Didactic poem outlining the rules of syllabic usage in composition with marginal and interlinear commentary, and an anonymous treatise of prosody. The author, Theobaldus Episcopus, was also known as Tebaldus Placentinus, a cleric and noted verse writer, who may also have been Abbot of Montecassino from 1022 - 1035, the author of the Physiologus.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1132/thumbnail.jp

    Collation Model for LJS 56: [Logica parva].

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    Compendium by the author of his own Logica magna, a presentation of terminist logic, including consideration of propositions and relationships between propositions and meaning. This early copy of this text was completed by the German Carmelite Johannes de Beylario, who was from Cologne and studied philosophy and theology in Padua, during the author\u27s tenure in Padua. Later in the century the Logica parva became a required element of the curriculum at Padua, Venice, and Ferrara.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1075/thumbnail.jp

    Collation Model for Ms. Codex 103: Libellus super electionibus faciendis et earum processibus ordinandis.

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    Work dealing with a section of canon law. Also contains some details relating to the church at Toulouse, where the author was provost for a time. The author, Guillaume de Mandagot, was successively Archdeacon of Nimes, Archbishop of Embrun and of Aix and Cardinal-Bishop of Palestrina. He was an authority on canon law and was chosen by Pope Boniface VIII to assist with the sixth volume of the Decretals.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1125/thumbnail.jp

    Collation Model for Ms. Codex 729: [Libellus super electionibus faciendis et earum ordinandis].

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    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 Oversize Ms. Codex 76: De sacramentis ... [etc.]

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    Text of De sacramentis by Guillermus Parisiensis (f. 1r-229v), followed by De poenitentia, by the same author (f. 230r-257v, with a register on f. 258r-260v); De interdictis, etc., by Georg Pfeuffer (f. 261r-307r); and two works on the Waldensians, Tractatus contra errores Waldenses (Cum dormirent homines), by Peter Zwicker (f. 308r-345v), and Refutatio errorum (f. 345v-362r).https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1063/thumbnail.jp

    Collation Model for Ms. Codex 64: Forme romane curie super beneficiis et questionibus... [etc.]

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    Papal formulary (f. 8r-79r), with a table of rubrics (f. 1r-7v), followed by the text of another formulary, Forme romane curie ... super casibus penitentie, of Thomas of Capua (f. 80v-104r), with 179 entries and a table of rubrics (f. 79v-80v), with rubrics and entries marked with corresponding roman numerals. The author is identified in the opening rubric of the second formulary (f. 80v).https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1123/thumbnail.jp

    Distributed Repositories of Medieval Calendars and Crowd-Sourcing of Transcription

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    Presentation at Open Repositories 2014, Helsinki, Finland, June 9-13, 2014General Track Papers and PanelsThe session was recorded and is available for watching (this presentation starts at 0:00:38)This paper discusses the use of IIIF image and metadata APIs to access, display and record the transcriptions of medieval manuscripts. The focus is on calendars, as relatively easy and ubiquitous features that can significantly help with dating and locating the origin of the manuscript. The IIIF APIs are discussed, along with the Mirador front end, and the extensions that enable distributed transcription via the W3C Open Annotation specification.Sanderson, Robert (Los Alamos National Laboratory)Albritton, Benjamin (Stanford University)Emery, Doug (University of Pennsylvania)Noel, William (University of Pennsylvania)Porter, Dot (University of Pennsylvania

    Collation Model for Ms. Codex 86: De casibus conscientiae ... [etc.]

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    Contains text of a work entitled De casibus conscientiae (f. 1r-364v). There is no indication of the identity of the author. Also contains the text of Pope Clement VIII\u27s bull Pastoralis Romani Pontificis vigilantia (commonly referred to as In coena Domini; f. 366r-378v). This appears to have been copied from a version printed in 1596, though the heading bears the date 1598. Also contains a commentary on Clement\u27s bull, titled De casibus reservatis, et nominatim de iis qui reservatur in bulla Coenae domini.https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1013/thumbnail.jp

    Collation Model for Ms. Codex 60: De descriptione terre s[an]c[t]e ... [etc.].

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    Contains the text of De descriptione terre sancte, of Burchardus of Monte Sion (f. 1r-42v). The author\u27s name is given in the text as Brocardus Theotonicus [i.e. Teutonicus] (f. 42v, col. 1). Also contains 4 shorter texts: De modo recuperationis terre sancte, of Marino Sanudo (f. 42v-49v.), composed in 1307 (prologue, f. 42v); In libro monachorum de temporalibus contempnendis (f. 49v); Metra moralium philosophorum de virtutibus [consisting of eight short poems] (f. 50r); and Iystoria [i.e. Historia] Beati Albani (f. 51r-56v).https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_models/1122/thumbnail.jp
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