Hildebertus et alii | Kütüphane.osmanlica.com

Hildebertus et alii

İsim Hildebertus et alii
Yazar Dr Sarah Gilbert, Project Cataloguer for the Curious Cures in Cambridge Libraries project, Cambridge University Library
Konu Cooking, medieval; Medicine, medieval; Commentaries, Biblical; Eucharist; Religious poetry, Latin
Tür Belge
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Evet
Sayfa Sayısı 223
Fiziksel Boyutlar Codex: i + 316 | 10 | 20 | 58 + i leaves. Leaf height: 225 mm, width: 130 mm.
Kütüphane: Cambridge Dijital Kütüphanesi
Kayıt Numarası MS-SIDNEYSUSSEX-00051
Lokasyon Sidney Sussex College Muniment Room — Cambridge, Sidney Sussex College, MS 51
Notlar Cambridge, Sidney Sussex College, MS 51 is a composite manuscript, with all parts probably made in England (perhaps at the Cathedral Priory in Durham) in the twelfth century. The manuscript contains four parts: Part 1 is a collection of religious poetry attributed to Hildebert of Lavardin (c. 1056 - c. 1133); Part 2 is a treatise on the Eucharist once thought to be by Gerbert of Aurillac, but now more usually attributed to Heriger of Lobbes (c. 925 - 1007); Part 3 is a collection of medical recipes that also includes a small group of culinary recipes for sauces; and Part 4 is a gloss on the Psalms. Although the medieval origin of Sidney Sussex MS 51 is harder to establish, evidence within the volume indicates that all 4 parts were bound together and were part of the Durham library collection by the late 12th or early 13th centuries. There are two lists of the contents of the volume in Durham hands of this period on the medieval endleaves, ff. [i] recto and [iii] verso. In addition, the manuscript also appears in the 1391 'Spendement' Catalogue of the books belonging to the Durham Priory community where it is recorded as follows: 'P. Uersus Hildeberti de Exposicione Missae. Tractatus de corpore Christi. Regulae de Medicinale. Glosa in Psalterium. II fo. Neve superveniens' (see Botfield, Catalogi Veteres); the 'P' siglum is present in the manuscript in the upper outer corner on f. 1r. Sidney Sussex MS 51 received renewed attention in 2015 when an article by Professors Giles Gasper and Faith Wallis described a series of culinary recipies for sauces situated in the midst of the collection of medical recipes and charms in the third part of this manuscript. The culinary recipes in Sidney Sussex MS 51 are described as being 'Salsamenta pictavensium', i.e., 'sauces of the Poitevins', or 'sauces from Poitou', essentially a collection of sauces from a region in western France. The Gasper and Wallis article describes not only the significance of the culinary recipes in Sidney Sussex MS 51, but also discusses the medical recipe collection which surrounds the culinary recipes and explores the evidence for medical recipe collection and medical practice in 12th century England. During the preparation of this catalogue record for the Curious Cures project, further information was discovered which appears to confirm a theory about the identity of the donor of the manuscript to Sidney Sussex College. Samuel Ward (b. 1572, d. 1643, master 1610-1643), a former master of Sidney Sussex College and a donor of other books and manuscripts to the College library, has long been suspected to be the donor of Sidney Sussex 51. However, the book does not bear any of the typical indications of his ownership, nor is it explicitly described in any of the records of his donations to the College. Nevertheless, it seems very likely that Sidney Sussex MS 51 can be identified as a book seen in Ward's possession before 1625 by Ward's friend, the author and Archbishop of Armagh, James Ussher. In Ussher's An answer to a challenge made by a Iesuite in Ireland (1625), Ussher wrote (abbreviations expanded, spelling modernised): '[i]n the libraries of my worthy friends, Sir Robert Cotton, (that noble Baronett, so renowmed(!) for his great care in collecting and preserving all antiquities) and Dr Ward, the learned Master of Sidney Colledge(!) in Cambridge; I met with an ancient Treatise of the Sacrament (beginning thus: Sicut ante nos quidam sapiens dixit, cujus sententiam probamus, licet nomen ignoremus.) which is the same with that in the Iesuites Colledge(!) at Lovaine, blindely(!) fathered upon Berengarius'. This quotation matches the text of the treatise on the Eucharist in Sidney Sussex MS 51 ff. 17r-26v.The text that Ussher is referring to is the Dicta Herigeri abbatis de corpore et sanguine Domini now usually attributed to Heriger of Lobbes, but which was for a long time believed to be by Berengar of Tours. The Dicta Herigeri survives in very few manuscript copies, and the likelihood is that the one Ussher saw in Ward's hands is the same manuscript that came into the possession of Ward's former college. The only difficulty that remains is that Ward is known to have donated a number of manuscripts and printed books to the College library. A list of these is preserved in the college archives, but it does not appear to describe a manuscript identifiable as Sidney Sussex MS 51. It may be that Ward gave the manuscript as a separate donation, or that left Ward's possession and came to Sidney Sussex indirectly by some other route, as happened with many of Ward's personal papers (see Todd, 1985). The manuscript had certainly arrived at the College by c. 1697, when its presence was recorded in Bernard's Catalogi librorum manuscriptorum Angliæ et Hiberniæ (c. 1697), p. 104, no. 714. Dr Sarah Gilbert Project Cataloguer for the Curious Cures Project Cambridge University LibraryReferencesG. E. M. Gasper, and F. Wallis, ‘Salsamenta Pictavensium: Gastronomy and Medicine in Twelfth-Century England’, English Historical Review, 131.553 (2016), 1353–85J. Ussher An answer to a challenge made by a Iesuite in Ireland (1625)J. Raine, and B. Botfield (eds.), Catalogi Veteres Librorum Ecclesiae Cathedralis Dunelm. Catalogues of the Library of Durham Cathedral, at Various Periods, from the Conquest to the Dissolution, Including Catalogues of the Library of the Abbey of Hulne, and of the MSs. Preserved in the Library of Bishop Cosin, at Durham, Publications of the Surtees Society 7 (1834)M. Todd, 'The Samuel Ward Papers at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge', Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society 8.5 (1985), pp. 582-592
Edinme It has not been established with absolute certainty when or by what means Sidney Sussex College acquired MS 51, although a plausible argument can be made that the volume was an unrecorded donation by former master Samuel Ward. A list of Ward's donations is preserved in the college archives, but it does not appear to describe a manuscript identifiable as Sidney Sussex MS 51. It may be that Ward gave the manuscript as a separate donation, or that left Ward's possession and came to Sidney Sussex indirectly by some other route, as happened with many of Ward's personal papers (see Todd, 1985). The manuscript had certainly arrived at the College by c. 1697, when its presence was recorded in Bernard's Catalogi librorum manuscriptorum Angliæ et Hiberniæ (c. 1697), p. 104, no. 714. For an account of the early history of the library of Sidney Sussex College, see Rogers, 'Early History of Sidney Sussex College Library', esp. n. 53; Rogers points out that MS 51 is likely to have been given by Ward on the strength of MS 51's prior ownership by John Pilkington, who had also owned known Ward donation MS 55. N. Rogers, 'The Early History of Sidney Sussex College Library', in D. E. D. Beales and H. B. Nisbet (eds.), Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge: Historical Essays in Commemoration of the Quartercentenary (Woodbridge, 1996), pp. 75-88
Eklentiler On f. [i] recto, a former shelfmark 'K.3.6' in ink, struck out. On f. [i] recto, a former shelfmark 'Δ.3.6' in ink. On f. [i] recto, the M. R. James Catalogue number '51' in pencil. On f. [iii] verso, a former shelfmark 'K.3.6' in ink. On f. 1r the letter 'P' near the upper outer corner, this letter corresponds to the siglum for this manuscript in the Durham 'Spendement' catalogue of 1391.
İlişkili Ad(lar) Hildebert of Lavardin; Heriger of Lobbes; James Ussher; John Pilkington; James Pilkington
Bibliyografya Raine, James and Beriah Botfield (eds), Catalogi Veteres Librorum Ecclesiae Cathedralis Dunelm. Catalogues of the Library of Durham Cathedral, at Various Periods, from the Conquest to the Dissolution, Including Catalogues of the Library of the Abbey of Hulne, and of the MSs. preserved in the Library of Bishop Cosin, at Durham, Publications of the Surtees Society 7 (1834).James, M.R., A descriptive catalogue of the manuscripts in the library of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1895).Mynors, R.A.B., Durham Cathedral manuscripts to the end of the twelfth century (Oxford: Printed for the Dean and Chapter of Durham Cathedral at the University Press, 1939).Ker, N.R., Medieval libraries of Great Britain: a list of surviving books 2nd, Royal Historical Society guides and handbooks 3 (London: Offices of the Royal Historical Society, 1964).Rogers, Nicholas, "The Early History of Sidney Sussex College Library", in D. E. D. Beales and H. B. Nisbet (eds), Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge: Historical Essays in Commemoration of the Quartercentenary (Woodbridge, Suffolk: The Boydell Press, 1996) 75-88.Shrader, Charles R., "Heriger's Treatises on the Eucharist", in Uta-Renate Blumenthal, Dr Anders Winroth and Peter Landau (eds), Canon Law, Religion, and Politics: Liber Amicorum Robert Somerville (Washington: Catholic University of America Press, 2012) http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/cam/detail.action?docID=3134984 Accessed: 2023-11-08T17:04:02Z 147-162.Gasper, Giles E. M. and Faith Wallis, "Salsamenta pictavensium: Gastronomy and Medicine in Twelfth-Century England", English Historical Review 131 553 1353-1385 (2016) https://www.jstor.org/stable/26364416.Woolgar, C. M., The Culture of Food in England 1200-1500 (Yale University Press, 2016).
Cilt Fully bound in leather over paste- or mill-boards with matching decoration in blind to left and right covers. Covers are decorated at their perimeters with a narrow double-fillet frame, and directly inside that frame, an arcaded roll, with each arcade enclosing a fleur-de-lis. Three raised bands on spine. Spine is almost completely capped at head and tail, head and tail bands mostly covered, only a single line of stitching in a cream-brown yarn visible. Spine compartments except the one with the title label are decorated with a geometric roll of overlapping ovals and diamonds. Leather title label on spine with decorative gold fillets at its upper and lower perimeter and a title 'HILDEBERT: ET ALII M.S.' tooled in gold. Small printed paper label '51' fixed to the spine with an adhesive.Cover material over the head, fore, and tail edges of the boards decorated with a hatched roll. Modern parchment bifolia at each end of the volume used for the pastedowns and the outermost flyleaves (ff. [a] and [b]). The present f. 104 was perhaps a pastedown in a former binding or the outermost leaf in an unbound booklet as there is significant discoloration on f. 104v.
Harmanlama A composite manuscript with the quires and Parts arranged as follows: Three medieval parchment flyleaves (ff. [i]-[iii]) +Quires 1-28 (ff. 1r-16v) |Quire 310 (ff. 17-26) |Quires 4-510 (ff. 27-46) |Quires 6-98 (ff. 47-78)Quire 1010 (ff. 79-88)Quire 1112 (ff. 89r-100v)Quire 124 (ff. 101-104) Three medieval parchment flyleaves + 1-28 | 310 | 4-510 | 6-98 1010 1112 124No leaf signatures common to the entire manuscript.No quire signatures common to the entire manuscript.No catchwords common to the entire manuscript.
Veri Kaynağı This catalogue record draws on M. R. James, A Descriptive Catalogue of the Manuscripts in the Library of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1895), no. 51, pp. 36-37
Bağışçı(lar) Samuel Ward
Varyant Numaralandırma 20th century foliation sequence. [a] + [i]-[iii] + 1-16 | 17-26 | 27-46 | 47-104 + [b]Foliated in pencil in Hindu-Arabic numerals in the upper outer corner of the first recto of most quires, and occasionally on intermediary leaves. The endleaves that lacked official designations in this foliation sequence were assigned temporary folio designations enclosed in [square brackets] in this record in November 2023 in order to produce a functional TEI-XML catalogue record for this item.
Önceki Sahibi Samuel Ward
Fonlama Wellcome
Materyal Parchment of variable thickness and quality throughout.
Fiziksel Tanım 2r: Neue superueniens
Köken (Provenance) Perhaps made at, and certainly owned from an early stage by the Durham Cathedral Priory community. Sidney Sussex MS 51 is listed in the 'Spendement' Catalogue of 1391 and the updated catalogue of 1416where it is described as: '"P. Uersus Hildeberti de Exposicione Missae. Tractatus de corpore Christi. Regulae de Medicinale. Glosa in Psalterium. II fo. Neve superveniens"' (see Botfield, Catalogi Veteres). The 'P' siglum is recorded in the manuscript in the upper outer corner on f. 1r. Shrader, in his survey of the survivng copies of Heriger's works on the Eucharist seems to suggest that this MS (or perhaps the first part thereof) is among the books listed in the late 12th century catalogue of Durham Cathedral Library preserved in  Durham, Cathedral Library, MS B.IV.24 ('The Durham Cantor's Book') ff. 1r-2v and printed in Botfield, Catalogi Veteres, pp. 1-10, as the entry 'Epistolæ Hildeberti, iv paria' in MS B.IV.24, f. 1va (Botfield, Catalogi Veteres, p. 4), but this idea is considered independently and rejected by Wallis and Gasper who did not believe Sidney Sussex MS 51 was a close match for any of the volumes recorded in MS B.IV.24.B. Botfield (ed.), Catalogi Veteres Librorum Ecclesiae Cathedralis Dunelm, Surtees Society vii (1838), pp. 4 24, 101 F. Wallis, and G. E. M. Gasper, ‘Salsamenta Pictavensium: Gastronomy and Medicine in Twelfth-Century England’, English Historical Review, 131.553 (2016), pp. 1353–85, esp. p. 1354 Owned by John Pilkington who added the inscription '"Sum Iohannis Pilkingtoni Dunelmensis 1591"' to the volume twice on ff. 1r and 47r. John Pilkington was an Archdeacon of Durham from c. 1563-1602 and was the brother of James Pilkington (1520-1576), Bishop of Durham. In addition to his inscriptions in MS 51, Pilkington also added his name to Sidney Sussex MSS 30 and 55, and may have encountered MS 92. M. R. James, A Descriptive Catalogue of the Manuscripts in the Library of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1895)F. Wallis, and G. E. M. Gasper, ‘Salsamenta Pictavensium: Gastronomy and Medicine in Twelfth-Century England’, English Historical Review, 131.553 (2016), pp. 1353–1385Probably owned by former Master of Sidney Sussex (1572–1643, master 1610-1643), Samuel Ward. It seems very likely that MS Sidney 51 was seen in the possession of Samuel Ward by Ward's friend, the author and Archbishop of Armagh, James Ussher. In Ussher's An answer to a challenge made by a Iesuite in Ireland (1625), Ussher wrote (abbreviations expanded, typesetting modernised): '[i]n the libraries of my worthy friends, Sir Robert Cotton, (that noble Baronett, so renowmed(!) for his great care in collecting and preserving all antiquities) and Dr Ward, the learned Master of Sidney Colledge(!) in Cambridge; I met with an ancient Treatise of the Sacrament (beginning thus: Sicut ante nos quidam sapiens dixit, cujus sententiam probamus, licet nomen ignoremus.) which is the same with that in the Iesuites Colledge(!) at Lovaine, blindely(!) fathered upon Berengarius'. The quotation that Ussher gives, 'Sicut ante nos quidam sapiens dixit, cujus sententiam probamus, licet nomen ignoremus', matches the text of the treatise on the Eucharist in Sidney MS 51, ff. 17r-26v. The text that Ussher is referring to is the Dicta Herigeri abbatis de corpore et sanguine Domini now usually attributed to Heriger of Lobbes, but which was for a long time believed to be by Berengar of Tours. The Dicta Herigeri survives in very few manuscript copies and the likelihood is that the one Ussher saw in Ward's hands is the same manuscript that came into the possession of Ward's former college. J. Ussher, An answer to a challenge made by a Jesuite in Ireland (1625), pp. 17-18
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Hildebertus et alii

Yazar Dr Sarah Gilbert, Project Cataloguer for the Curious Cures in Cambridge Libraries project, Cambridge University Library
Konu Cooking, medieval; Medicine, medieval; Commentaries, Biblical; Eucharist; Religious poetry, Latin
Tür Belge
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Evet
Sayfa Sayısı 223
Fiziksel Boyutlar Codex: i + 316 | 10 | 20 | 58 + i leaves. Leaf height: 225 mm, width: 130 mm.
Kütüphane Cambridge Dijital Kütüphanesi
Kayıt Numarası MS-SIDNEYSUSSEX-00051
Lokasyon Sidney Sussex College Muniment Room — Cambridge, Sidney Sussex College, MS 51
Notlar Cambridge, Sidney Sussex College, MS 51 is a composite manuscript, with all parts probably made in England (perhaps at the Cathedral Priory in Durham) in the twelfth century. The manuscript contains four parts: Part 1 is a collection of religious poetry attributed to Hildebert of Lavardin (c. 1056 - c. 1133); Part 2 is a treatise on the Eucharist once thought to be by Gerbert of Aurillac, but now more usually attributed to Heriger of Lobbes (c. 925 - 1007); Part 3 is a collection of medical recipes that also includes a small group of culinary recipes for sauces; and Part 4 is a gloss on the Psalms. Although the medieval origin of Sidney Sussex MS 51 is harder to establish, evidence within the volume indicates that all 4 parts were bound together and were part of the Durham library collection by the late 12th or early 13th centuries. There are two lists of the contents of the volume in Durham hands of this period on the medieval endleaves, ff. [i] recto and [iii] verso. In addition, the manuscript also appears in the 1391 'Spendement' Catalogue of the books belonging to the Durham Priory community where it is recorded as follows: 'P. Uersus Hildeberti de Exposicione Missae. Tractatus de corpore Christi. Regulae de Medicinale. Glosa in Psalterium. II fo. Neve superveniens' (see Botfield, Catalogi Veteres); the 'P' siglum is present in the manuscript in the upper outer corner on f. 1r. Sidney Sussex MS 51 received renewed attention in 2015 when an article by Professors Giles Gasper and Faith Wallis described a series of culinary recipies for sauces situated in the midst of the collection of medical recipes and charms in the third part of this manuscript. The culinary recipes in Sidney Sussex MS 51 are described as being 'Salsamenta pictavensium', i.e., 'sauces of the Poitevins', or 'sauces from Poitou', essentially a collection of sauces from a region in western France. The Gasper and Wallis article describes not only the significance of the culinary recipes in Sidney Sussex MS 51, but also discusses the medical recipe collection which surrounds the culinary recipes and explores the evidence for medical recipe collection and medical practice in 12th century England. During the preparation of this catalogue record for the Curious Cures project, further information was discovered which appears to confirm a theory about the identity of the donor of the manuscript to Sidney Sussex College. Samuel Ward (b. 1572, d. 1643, master 1610-1643), a former master of Sidney Sussex College and a donor of other books and manuscripts to the College library, has long been suspected to be the donor of Sidney Sussex 51. However, the book does not bear any of the typical indications of his ownership, nor is it explicitly described in any of the records of his donations to the College. Nevertheless, it seems very likely that Sidney Sussex MS 51 can be identified as a book seen in Ward's possession before 1625 by Ward's friend, the author and Archbishop of Armagh, James Ussher. In Ussher's An answer to a challenge made by a Iesuite in Ireland (1625), Ussher wrote (abbreviations expanded, spelling modernised): '[i]n the libraries of my worthy friends, Sir Robert Cotton, (that noble Baronett, so renowmed(!) for his great care in collecting and preserving all antiquities) and Dr Ward, the learned Master of Sidney Colledge(!) in Cambridge; I met with an ancient Treatise of the Sacrament (beginning thus: Sicut ante nos quidam sapiens dixit, cujus sententiam probamus, licet nomen ignoremus.) which is the same with that in the Iesuites Colledge(!) at Lovaine, blindely(!) fathered upon Berengarius'. This quotation matches the text of the treatise on the Eucharist in Sidney Sussex MS 51 ff. 17r-26v.The text that Ussher is referring to is the Dicta Herigeri abbatis de corpore et sanguine Domini now usually attributed to Heriger of Lobbes, but which was for a long time believed to be by Berengar of Tours. The Dicta Herigeri survives in very few manuscript copies, and the likelihood is that the one Ussher saw in Ward's hands is the same manuscript that came into the possession of Ward's former college. The only difficulty that remains is that Ward is known to have donated a number of manuscripts and printed books to the College library. A list of these is preserved in the college archives, but it does not appear to describe a manuscript identifiable as Sidney Sussex MS 51. It may be that Ward gave the manuscript as a separate donation, or that left Ward's possession and came to Sidney Sussex indirectly by some other route, as happened with many of Ward's personal papers (see Todd, 1985). The manuscript had certainly arrived at the College by c. 1697, when its presence was recorded in Bernard's Catalogi librorum manuscriptorum Angliæ et Hiberniæ (c. 1697), p. 104, no. 714. Dr Sarah Gilbert Project Cataloguer for the Curious Cures Project Cambridge University LibraryReferencesG. E. M. Gasper, and F. Wallis, ‘Salsamenta Pictavensium: Gastronomy and Medicine in Twelfth-Century England’, English Historical Review, 131.553 (2016), 1353–85J. Ussher An answer to a challenge made by a Iesuite in Ireland (1625)J. Raine, and B. Botfield (eds.), Catalogi Veteres Librorum Ecclesiae Cathedralis Dunelm. Catalogues of the Library of Durham Cathedral, at Various Periods, from the Conquest to the Dissolution, Including Catalogues of the Library of the Abbey of Hulne, and of the MSs. Preserved in the Library of Bishop Cosin, at Durham, Publications of the Surtees Society 7 (1834)M. Todd, 'The Samuel Ward Papers at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge', Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society 8.5 (1985), pp. 582-592
Edinme It has not been established with absolute certainty when or by what means Sidney Sussex College acquired MS 51, although a plausible argument can be made that the volume was an unrecorded donation by former master Samuel Ward. A list of Ward's donations is preserved in the college archives, but it does not appear to describe a manuscript identifiable as Sidney Sussex MS 51. It may be that Ward gave the manuscript as a separate donation, or that left Ward's possession and came to Sidney Sussex indirectly by some other route, as happened with many of Ward's personal papers (see Todd, 1985). The manuscript had certainly arrived at the College by c. 1697, when its presence was recorded in Bernard's Catalogi librorum manuscriptorum Angliæ et Hiberniæ (c. 1697), p. 104, no. 714. For an account of the early history of the library of Sidney Sussex College, see Rogers, 'Early History of Sidney Sussex College Library', esp. n. 53; Rogers points out that MS 51 is likely to have been given by Ward on the strength of MS 51's prior ownership by John Pilkington, who had also owned known Ward donation MS 55. N. Rogers, 'The Early History of Sidney Sussex College Library', in D. E. D. Beales and H. B. Nisbet (eds.), Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge: Historical Essays in Commemoration of the Quartercentenary (Woodbridge, 1996), pp. 75-88
Eklentiler On f. [i] recto, a former shelfmark 'K.3.6' in ink, struck out. On f. [i] recto, a former shelfmark 'Δ.3.6' in ink. On f. [i] recto, the M. R. James Catalogue number '51' in pencil. On f. [iii] verso, a former shelfmark 'K.3.6' in ink. On f. 1r the letter 'P' near the upper outer corner, this letter corresponds to the siglum for this manuscript in the Durham 'Spendement' catalogue of 1391.
İlişkili Ad(lar) Hildebert of Lavardin; Heriger of Lobbes; James Ussher; John Pilkington; James Pilkington
Bibliyografya Raine, James and Beriah Botfield (eds), Catalogi Veteres Librorum Ecclesiae Cathedralis Dunelm. Catalogues of the Library of Durham Cathedral, at Various Periods, from the Conquest to the Dissolution, Including Catalogues of the Library of the Abbey of Hulne, and of the MSs. preserved in the Library of Bishop Cosin, at Durham, Publications of the Surtees Society 7 (1834).James, M.R., A descriptive catalogue of the manuscripts in the library of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1895).Mynors, R.A.B., Durham Cathedral manuscripts to the end of the twelfth century (Oxford: Printed for the Dean and Chapter of Durham Cathedral at the University Press, 1939).Ker, N.R., Medieval libraries of Great Britain: a list of surviving books 2nd, Royal Historical Society guides and handbooks 3 (London: Offices of the Royal Historical Society, 1964).Rogers, Nicholas, "The Early History of Sidney Sussex College Library", in D. E. D. Beales and H. B. Nisbet (eds), Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge: Historical Essays in Commemoration of the Quartercentenary (Woodbridge, Suffolk: The Boydell Press, 1996) 75-88.Shrader, Charles R., "Heriger's Treatises on the Eucharist", in Uta-Renate Blumenthal, Dr Anders Winroth and Peter Landau (eds), Canon Law, Religion, and Politics: Liber Amicorum Robert Somerville (Washington: Catholic University of America Press, 2012) http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/cam/detail.action?docID=3134984 Accessed: 2023-11-08T17:04:02Z 147-162.Gasper, Giles E. M. and Faith Wallis, "Salsamenta pictavensium: Gastronomy and Medicine in Twelfth-Century England", English Historical Review 131 553 1353-1385 (2016) https://www.jstor.org/stable/26364416.Woolgar, C. M., The Culture of Food in England 1200-1500 (Yale University Press, 2016).
Cilt Fully bound in leather over paste- or mill-boards with matching decoration in blind to left and right covers. Covers are decorated at their perimeters with a narrow double-fillet frame, and directly inside that frame, an arcaded roll, with each arcade enclosing a fleur-de-lis. Three raised bands on spine. Spine is almost completely capped at head and tail, head and tail bands mostly covered, only a single line of stitching in a cream-brown yarn visible. Spine compartments except the one with the title label are decorated with a geometric roll of overlapping ovals and diamonds. Leather title label on spine with decorative gold fillets at its upper and lower perimeter and a title 'HILDEBERT: ET ALII M.S.' tooled in gold. Small printed paper label '51' fixed to the spine with an adhesive.Cover material over the head, fore, and tail edges of the boards decorated with a hatched roll. Modern parchment bifolia at each end of the volume used for the pastedowns and the outermost flyleaves (ff. [a] and [b]). The present f. 104 was perhaps a pastedown in a former binding or the outermost leaf in an unbound booklet as there is significant discoloration on f. 104v.
Harmanlama A composite manuscript with the quires and Parts arranged as follows: Three medieval parchment flyleaves (ff. [i]-[iii]) +Quires 1-28 (ff. 1r-16v) |Quire 310 (ff. 17-26) |Quires 4-510 (ff. 27-46) |Quires 6-98 (ff. 47-78)Quire 1010 (ff. 79-88)Quire 1112 (ff. 89r-100v)Quire 124 (ff. 101-104) Three medieval parchment flyleaves + 1-28 | 310 | 4-510 | 6-98 1010 1112 124No leaf signatures common to the entire manuscript.No quire signatures common to the entire manuscript.No catchwords common to the entire manuscript.
Veri Kaynağı This catalogue record draws on M. R. James, A Descriptive Catalogue of the Manuscripts in the Library of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1895), no. 51, pp. 36-37
Bağışçı(lar) Samuel Ward
Varyant Numaralandırma 20th century foliation sequence. [a] + [i]-[iii] + 1-16 | 17-26 | 27-46 | 47-104 + [b]Foliated in pencil in Hindu-Arabic numerals in the upper outer corner of the first recto of most quires, and occasionally on intermediary leaves. The endleaves that lacked official designations in this foliation sequence were assigned temporary folio designations enclosed in [square brackets] in this record in November 2023 in order to produce a functional TEI-XML catalogue record for this item.
Önceki Sahibi Samuel Ward
Fonlama Wellcome
Materyal Parchment of variable thickness and quality throughout.
Fiziksel Tanım 2r: Neue superueniens
Köken (Provenance) Perhaps made at, and certainly owned from an early stage by the Durham Cathedral Priory community. Sidney Sussex MS 51 is listed in the 'Spendement' Catalogue of 1391 and the updated catalogue of 1416where it is described as: '"P. Uersus Hildeberti de Exposicione Missae. Tractatus de corpore Christi. Regulae de Medicinale. Glosa in Psalterium. II fo. Neve superveniens"' (see Botfield, Catalogi Veteres). The 'P' siglum is recorded in the manuscript in the upper outer corner on f. 1r. Shrader, in his survey of the survivng copies of Heriger's works on the Eucharist seems to suggest that this MS (or perhaps the first part thereof) is among the books listed in the late 12th century catalogue of Durham Cathedral Library preserved in  Durham, Cathedral Library, MS B.IV.24 ('The Durham Cantor's Book') ff. 1r-2v and printed in Botfield, Catalogi Veteres, pp. 1-10, as the entry 'Epistolæ Hildeberti, iv paria' in MS B.IV.24, f. 1va (Botfield, Catalogi Veteres, p. 4), but this idea is considered independently and rejected by Wallis and Gasper who did not believe Sidney Sussex MS 51 was a close match for any of the volumes recorded in MS B.IV.24.B. Botfield (ed.), Catalogi Veteres Librorum Ecclesiae Cathedralis Dunelm, Surtees Society vii (1838), pp. 4 24, 101 F. Wallis, and G. E. M. Gasper, ‘Salsamenta Pictavensium: Gastronomy and Medicine in Twelfth-Century England’, English Historical Review, 131.553 (2016), pp. 1353–85, esp. p. 1354 Owned by John Pilkington who added the inscription '"Sum Iohannis Pilkingtoni Dunelmensis 1591"' to the volume twice on ff. 1r and 47r. John Pilkington was an Archdeacon of Durham from c. 1563-1602 and was the brother of James Pilkington (1520-1576), Bishop of Durham. In addition to his inscriptions in MS 51, Pilkington also added his name to Sidney Sussex MSS 30 and 55, and may have encountered MS 92. M. R. James, A Descriptive Catalogue of the Manuscripts in the Library of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1895)F. Wallis, and G. E. M. Gasper, ‘Salsamenta Pictavensium: Gastronomy and Medicine in Twelfth-Century England’, English Historical Review, 131.553 (2016), pp. 1353–1385Probably owned by former Master of Sidney Sussex (1572–1643, master 1610-1643), Samuel Ward. It seems very likely that MS Sidney 51 was seen in the possession of Samuel Ward by Ward's friend, the author and Archbishop of Armagh, James Ussher. In Ussher's An answer to a challenge made by a Iesuite in Ireland (1625), Ussher wrote (abbreviations expanded, typesetting modernised): '[i]n the libraries of my worthy friends, Sir Robert Cotton, (that noble Baronett, so renowmed(!) for his great care in collecting and preserving all antiquities) and Dr Ward, the learned Master of Sidney Colledge(!) in Cambridge; I met with an ancient Treatise of the Sacrament (beginning thus: Sicut ante nos quidam sapiens dixit, cujus sententiam probamus, licet nomen ignoremus.) which is the same with that in the Iesuites Colledge(!) at Lovaine, blindely(!) fathered upon Berengarius'. The quotation that Ussher gives, 'Sicut ante nos quidam sapiens dixit, cujus sententiam probamus, licet nomen ignoremus', matches the text of the treatise on the Eucharist in Sidney MS 51, ff. 17r-26v. The text that Ussher is referring to is the Dicta Herigeri abbatis de corpore et sanguine Domini now usually attributed to Heriger of Lobbes, but which was for a long time believed to be by Berengar of Tours. The Dicta Herigeri survives in very few manuscript copies and the likelihood is that the one Ussher saw in Ward's hands is the same manuscript that came into the possession of Ward's former college. J. Ussher, An answer to a challenge made by a Jesuite in Ireland (1625), pp. 17-18
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