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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 942
Paper · 410 pp. · 21.7 x 15.5 cm · Monastery of St. Gall · 15th century, probably around 1423/1436
15th century Composite Manuscript from the Monastery of St. Gall containing, among other items, alphabetical excerpts of writings by the Church Fathers, Bonaventure’s work Soliloquium, and the 10th/11th century Consuetudines Fuldenses

This composite manuscript from the Monastery of St. Gall, written and compiled by several hands in the 15th century, contains (in addition to shorter texts and numerous blank pages): excerpts in alphabetical order of Latin writings by church fathers regarding various theological concepts (De abiectioneDe voto; pp. 3179); the work Soliloquium by the Franciscan theologian and philosopher Bonaventure (1221−1274; pp. 181266); a copy of the anonymous work Stella clericorum that was often adopted in the 15th century (pp. 291319); the work Speculum peccatoris falsely attributed to Augustine (pp. 339354); the sermon Corde creditur ad iustitiam by Thomas Ebendorfer (pp. 355361); the Capitulare monasticum III of 818/819 (pp. 363367); a not quite complete copy of a letter from Theodomar, Abbot of Montecassino, to Charlemagne (pp. 369373); and the Consuetudines Fuldenses from the 10th/11th century in the Redactio Sangallensis-Fuldensis (pp. 374404). The wood binding is covered with red leather; on p. 361 three is a note by the scribe: per me syfridum pfragner. (smu)

Online Since: 10/08/2015

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 944
Paper · 534 pp. · 21.5 x 15 cm · Western-High-Alemannic linguistic area · 1497
Interpretation of the Song of Songs, inc. Meliora sunt ubera tua vino

This volume contains a single text, a German-language intepretation of the Song of Songs, of which 25 manuscript witnesses are currently known. This extensive text is probably not based on a Latin model and its structure becomes decreasingly systematic. Although it is based on passages from the Song of Songs, it does not contain an actual commentary, but is divided into three books: teachings on faith (Book 1, pp. 8241), a monastic doctrine of virtue (Book 2, pp. 241431), and discussions of sins, penance, etc. (Book 3, pp. 443512). An extensive table of contents precedes the text (pp. 57). A colophon at the end of the second book (p. 431) states that this part of the manuscript was completed in 1497. The whole manuscript is written and rubricated in the same hand. According to an entry on p. 1, the manuscript came from a convent in Freiburg (Liber S. Galli Emptus 1699 Friburgi); Scarpatetti suggests Adelhausen (Dominican nuns). On an inserted piece of paper can be read a note about the profession of Sisters Margret Boshartin, Kattrin Ferberin and Anna Branwartin in Constance in 1511 and 1514; on the back there is a fragment of a letter (?). Half-leather binding contemporary to the text, with striped and stamped decoration and clasps. To the headband is affixed a braided, two-colored bookmark. (mat)

Online Since: 09/22/2022

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 946
Paper · 189 pp. · 22.5 x 15 cm · 14th century
Collection of spiritual texts

This paper manuscript, copied in the fourteenth century by many hands, is a collection of spiritual texts. It has two fifteenth-century ex libris of the Abbey Library (p. 1), as well as the stamp of Abbot Diethelm Blarer, from between 1553 and 1564 (p. 64). On the top pastedown appears a table of contents contemporary to the fifteenth-century half binding in red leather. An excerpt from the Stimulus amoris (III, 17) starts the book (pp. 1-9). It is followed by a widely-copied book by the Franciscan Bonaventure, De triplice via, also known under the title Incendium amoris (pp. 10-25), and then a treatise on the eight beatitudes (pp. 25-36). Passages from John Chrysostom’s De reparatione lapsi appear in two different places in this manuscript (pp. 41-54 and 186-193). Hugh of Saint Victor’s Soliloquium de arra animae, also widely copied in the Middle Ages, follows on pages 54-64 (Goy 1976, n° 94). Finally, this volume contains the Speculum humanae salvationis (pp. 65-171), extended with two of its three non-typological chapters, De septem stationibus passionis Christi (pp. 171-177) and De septem tristitiis B. V. Mariae (pp. 177-185). Contrary to normal practice, this text is not illustrated; even the fact that it is rhymed is hardly observable, since it is copied continuously. (rou)

Online Since: 05/31/2024

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 947
Paper · 112 pp. · 21.8 x 15 cm · Monastery of St. Gall (?) · 15th century
Composite manuscript containing, among others, alphabetically ordered excerpts of texts by church fathers and a characterization of peoples in Medieval Latin verses

This manuscript in its original limp vellum binding contains as its main part (pp. 1-88; index p. 93) alphabetically ordered excerpts in Latin from writings by church fathers on various theological concepts (De abiectione – De voto). These are followed by shorter texts. On p. 89 there is a little-know characterization of peoples and tribes (especially from regions within Germany) in Medieval Latin verses; it is titled Versus de provinciis and it begins with Roma potens, reverenda Ravenna, Britannia pauper. Pp. 90-92 preserve a letter from a Parisian university teacher (Epistola cuiusdam egregii magistri parisiensis) about the evil of property, followed by an interpretation of the Lord's Prayer in Latin (pp. 94-100) and by more spiritual-ascetic texts in Latin (pp. 106-112) and in German. The table of contents on the inside front cover was written by Fr. Jodocus Metzler (1574−1639), longtime abbey librarian. (smu)

Online Since: 09/23/2014

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 949
Paper · 192 pp. · 21.5 x 14 cm · Wil · 30 April 1388
Speculum humanae salvationis and De passione domini

This paper copy of the Speculum humanae salvationis (pp. 1-174), dated 30 April 1388, was produced in Wil by Johannis Phister de Gossow, who stated in the colophon (p. 174ab) that, having finished his work, he was off to play (ludere eat). A second text (pp. 178a-190b), produced by a scribe contemporary to the first, bears the rubric title De passione domini and finishes the manuscript. Before entering the possession of the Abbey Library of Saint Gall, at the latest during the abbacy of Diethelm Blarer (whose stamp from between 1553 and 1564 appears on p. 192), the codex belonged to Ulrich Varnbüler, burgomaster and imperial bailliff of Saint Gall from 1481 to 1490, as indicated by the ex libris written on the first page of the volume. On the front and back pastedowns of the original leather binding can be found the offsets of a manuscript, from which narrow strips of parchment served to protect the quires of the codex. (rou)

Online Since: 05/31/2024

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 955
Paper · 354 pp. · 21 x 14.5 cm · Upper Rhine/Rhenish Franconia area (?) · 15th century, more likely the first half
Composite manuscript of religious content with numerous spiritual theological texts and sermons

This composite manuscript likely is from Rhenish Franconia or from the Upper Rhine area and came into the possession of the Abbey of St. Gall in 1699, probably from the Convent of Poor Clares in Freiburg im Breisgau (like, for example, Cod. Sang. 985). The manuscript contains a large number of different sermons and mystical-ascetic texts, especially from the 13th and 14th centuries. Among them are, for instance, the treatise Von der Minne (pp. 719) attributed to Johannes Hiltalingen from Basel, the so-called sünde-version of the pseudo-Albert work Paradisus animae (pp. 6268 and pp. 195196), ten sermons passed down under the name of Bertold of Regensburg (pp. 70104), the interpretation of the Lord's Prayer Adonay, gewaltiger herre (pp. 109192), or the allegory Es ist ein hoher Berg (pp. 211250) attributed to Johannes Tauler. (smu)

Online Since: 06/22/2017

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 957
Paper · 240 pp. · 21 x 15.5 cm · Kirchberg (near Ulm) · 1469
Reformatio Sigismundi

This manuscript contains the so-called Reformatio Sigismundi, a document about the reform of church and empire that was written anonymously in German in 1439 during the Council of Basel by an author who until today has not been reliably identified. The text was printed for the first time in 1476. The treatise presents reform proposals that emphasize the importance of pastoral care and that promote releasing secular clergy from obligatory celibacy and releasing bishops from exercising temporal power. The treatise also reports Emperor Sigismund’s alleged vision, according to which a priest-king Frederick is said to have appeared to him with plans for the reform. In a colophon on p. 234, the writer gives his name as Petrus Hamer von Weissenhorn, chaplain in Kirchberg. He begins the chapters with red initials and decorates two of them with caricatures of bearded faces (p. 158 and 212). (nie)

Online Since: 12/14/2018

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 958
Paper · 222 pp. · 22 × 15 cm · Southern Germany / Northern Switzerland · 1521
Frau Tugendreich

This only surviving copy of the prose story Frau Tugendreich was written by an unknown author in the circle of Emperor Maximilian I in the second decade of the 16th century. The text is a mixture of a ‘Zeitroman’ (a novel giving a critical analysis of an age) and a debate about the value of women or the lack thereof. An external narrative frame presents a discussion between a young narrator beholden to the courtly ideal and his more experienced master, who clings to a traditional view of women, about the value, significance and conduct of women. Unfortunately from p. 196 on, essential parts of the text have been lost due to missing pages. This copy, written in East Swabian dialect by scribe A. S. (p. 219), is dated 1521. (smu)

Online Since: 09/23/2014

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 961
Paper · 428 pp. · 20.7 x 15 cm · Community of Benedictine nuns at St. Georgen near St. Gall · 1465, 1467
15th century composite manuscript with ascetic-mystical texts

This manuscript, dated in two places to the years 1465 (p. 393) and 1467 (p. 181) and perhaps written by eight different hands, belonged to the Benedictine Convent of St. George near St. Gall and became part of the Abbey Library of St. Gall as part of an exchange around 1780/82. The codex, written entirely in German, contains the explanation of the Decalogue by Marquard of Lindau (pp. 3176); the song Ain raine maid verborgen lag from Spiegelweise by Heinrich Frauenlob (pp. 177181); instructions regarding attention during prayer, attributed to Thomas Aquinas (pp. 182186); the Büchlein der ewigen Weisheit by Henry Suso (pp. 195393); reflections on consecration (pp. 394399) and on the Sunday (pp. 399402); as well an anonymous treatise on death (pp. 405422). Several parchment fragments from an 11th/12th century St. Gall liturgical manuscript containing neumes were used in order to reinforce this manuscript. (smu)

Online Since: 06/25/2015

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 965
Paper · 484 pp. · 21.2 x 14.7 cm · community of the sisters of St. Georgen above St. Gall; Friedrich Kölner (or Colner); other (three?) scribes · 1430/36 (parts by Kölner); 15th century (other parts)
15th century composite manuscript containing ascetic-mystical texts

This composite manuscript in Northeastern Swiss-Alemannic dialect was probably written for the community of the sisters of St. Georgen above St. Gall; it contains numerous shorter and longer texts by known and unknown authors, among them: pp. 1106: Thomas à Kempis, 3rd book of the Imitatio Christi; pp. 106123: Bonaventure, excerpts from the work De triplici via; pp. 124126: preacher of St. Georgen, sermon Geistliche Blume; pp. 126134: Meister Eckhart (attributed), treatise Von der Vollkommenheit; pp. 135166: Johannes Tauler, sermon on Mt 13,8 and other sermon excerpts; pp. 167181: two anonymous sermons Vom Leiden und Meiden; pp. 184259: treatise from the “Schwester Katrei"; pp. 259268 anonymous didactic dialog with Timothy’s questions to Paul; pp. 271372: Johannes of Neumarkt, excerpts from the 3rd so-called Jerome letter; pp. 377407: Marquard of Lindau, Job-treatise; pp. 409434 and pp. 472481 (wrongly bound together by a bookbinder): Das Buch des Lebens by an anonymous author; pp. 435442: excerpts from Meister Wichwolt (Cronica Alexandri des grossen Königs); pp. 446448: Ps.-Bertold of Regensburg, Bertold’s ten lessons for a spiritual sister. About half of the texts were written by the Reformist monk Friedrich Kölner from Hersfeld, who was active at St. Gall Abbey from 1430 until 1436; the other parts were written in the 15th century by three other hands. (smu)

Online Since: 03/17/2016

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 966
Paper · 235 pp. · 21 x 14.5-15 cm · St. Gall · around 1450
Composite manuscript

A compilation of religious and ascetic content from the 15th century containing dicta, exhortations and sermons from saints and doctors of the church, treatises on the Sacrament, the Lord's Prayer etc. (by Meister Eckhart, David von Augsburg, Berthold von Regensburg and the Engelberg homilist, among others), the so-called St. Gall Christmas Play (St. Galler Weihnachtsspiel, also known as St. Galler Spiel von der Kindheit Jesu) as well as a commentary on the book of Daniel by Nicolaus of Lyra. (smu)

Online Since: 12/12/2006

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 967
Paper · 496 pp. · 20.5 x 14 cm · Quasi-monastic community of women of St. Georgen above St. Gall; Friedrich Kölner (or Colner) and other scribes · 1430/36 (parts by Kölner); 15th century (other parts)
15th century composite manuscript containing mystical-ascetic and catechetical texts

This composite manuscript was written for the quasi-monastic community of women of St. Georgen above St. Gall (see ownership note on p. 3); it contains numerous shorter and longer texts by Marquard von Lindau and other authors known by name as well as anonymous authors, among them: pp. 5-13: Marquard von Lindau, Deutsche Predigt; pp. 25-46 and 51-69: Marquard von Lindau, Von der Geduld; pp. 76-102: anonymous catechetical treatise Von einem christlichen Leben; pp. 149-260: Rulman Merswin, Neunfelsenbuch; pp. 261-262: Volmar, sermon; pp. 262-263: Stimulus amoris, German (excerpt); pp. 268-379: Marquard von Lindau, Auszug der Kinder Israel; pp. 381-404: Marquard von Lindau, De fide, German; pp. 405-447: Heinrich von St. Gallen, sermon cycle on the Acht Seligkeiten. About one third of the pages were written by the reform monk Friedrich Kölner (or Colner) from Hersfeld Abbey in Hesse, who was active at St. Gall Abbey from 1430 to 1436. He was the confessor for the sisters of St. Georgen. The remaining parts were written by several other hands in the 15th century. (sno)

Online Since: 10/08/2020

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 969
Paper · 224 pp. · 20.2 x 15 cm · probably the community of female Capuchins of the third order at Wonnenstein · 1465, 1467
Composite Manuscript with various ascetic-mystical treatises from the Women’s Convent of Wonnenstein

This undecorated manuscript in Swabian–Alemannic was written by two hands and contains numerous German-language ascetic-mystical texts, among them the treatise De contemptu mundi (pp. 36), various sermons (pp. 7-33), salutations to Mary, prayers, exempla and sentences by church teachers (pp. 33-46), the legend of St. George (pp. 69-105), the first eight fables from the collection Edelstein by Ulrich Boner (pp. 116-129), the treatise Die besessene Schwester Agnes (pp. 131-215), and a mention of the ten commandments, each accompanied by a humorous rhyme (p. 108). The manuscript probably originated in the convent of the female Capuchins of the third order in Wonnenstein near Teufen; it became part of the Abbey Library of St. Gall in 1782 (cf. Cod. Sang. 1285, p. 12). (smu)

Online Since: 10/08/2015

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 973
Paper · 730 pp. · 17 x 11.8 cm · community of nuns at Wonnenstein, Teufen · 1498
Composite manuscript from Wonnenstein Convent containing edifying literature and the convent’s oldest list of books

This manuscript, written around 1500 by the Sisters of the third order of St. Francis at Wonnenstein near Teufen, not far from St. Gall, contains as an introduction a register (pp. 19) of manuscripts and printed works held in the convent library, compiled around 1500; it has a total of 110 entries. The majority consist of ascetic-edifying treatises; among them are Brother Conrad Nater’s German translations of Bonaventure’s Regula novitiorum (pp. 15107), the German version of David of Augsburg’s De exterioris et interioris hominis compositione (pp. 109188), the Ermahnung zu einem wahren klösterlichen Leben by the Franciscan monk Heinrich Vigilis of Weissenburg (pp. 190223), the treatise Die besessene Nonne Agnes (pp. 225404), a treatise on the passion attributed to Bernardino of Siena (Lernung das lyden unsers lieben heren zu betrachten; pp. 406475), revelations by the mystics Gertrude of Helfta and Christine Ebner (pp. 476486), Bonaventure’s Soliloquium in a shortened German version (pp. 496713), as well as the treatise Vom Reuer, Wirker und Schauer by the so-called Kuttenmann (pp. 717727). On 11 February 1782, the St. Gall Abbey librarian Johann Nepomuk Hauntinger (1756−1823) acquired this manuscript, together with four other manuscripts (today Cod. Sang. 972a, Cod. Sang. 976, Cod. Sang. 977 and Cod. Sang. 991) from the community of Capuchin nuns at Wonnenstein. (smu)

Online Since: 06/25/2015

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 976
Paper · 522 pp. · 15 x 10.5 cm · community of sisters at Wonnenstein near Teufen · 1499
Ascetic-mystical manuscript

This manuscript was written in 1499 (cf. dates p. 174 and 519) by a Sister of the Third Order of St. Francis at Wonnenstein near Teufen, not far from St. Gall. It contains a copy of the Schürebrand, a 14th century spiritual treatise from the circle of the Friends of God of Strasbourg (pp. 2-174); the first and third parts of the treatise Von dreierlei Abgründen (pp. 176-313), attributed to St. Bonaventure; and the Passion treatise Extendit manum by Heinrich von St. Gallen (pp. 315-519). The scribe asks for an Ave Maria on p. 519. In 1782, St. Gall Abbey librarian P. Johann Nepomuk Hauntinger (1756-1823) acquired the manuscript together with four other manuscripts (today Cod. Sang. 972a, Cod. Sang. 973, Cod. Sang. 977 and Cod. Sang. 991) from the Community of Capuchin nuns of Wonnenstein. (sno)

Online Since: 10/08/2020

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 977
Parchment and paper · 396 pp. · 15 x 10.5 cm · Alemannic linguistic area · 15th century
Devotional and prayer book

This extensive prayer book, probably completed over time by a single hand, contains a treatise on the canonical hours (pp. 34224) as well as a Marian office (the German version of the Officium parvum Beatae Mariae Virginis, pp. 225343). These are accompanied by sermons and shorter treatises: at the beginning, texts on the sufferings of Christ, structured according to the seven petitions of the Lord’s Prayer (pp. 133, the first page is missing); at the end of the manuscript appear the short treatise Von der seligen Dorfmagd (pp. 344346), a fragmentary treatise on the twelve virtues of the sacraments (pp. 347352), a sermon by Johannes Nider (pp. 352362), another sermon (In unser Capel die erst bredig von gehorsami, p. 363384), as well as shorter texts and textual fragments (pp. 385396). A late-medieval entry (p. 390) gives a name (das buch hadt hanns petris auch ze len). Fifteenth-century red-leather binding, detached bosses, and missing clasps; the hand-marbled pastedowns attest to a modern restoration. (mat)

Online Since: 09/22/2022

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 981
Paper · 146 pp. · 29.5 x 21.5 cm · 14th century
Richard of Saint Victor, Benjamin maior and Benjamin minor

Coming from the women’s convent near the church of Sankt Leonhard in Saint Gall (p. 4), this paper manuscript transmits two works by Richard of Saint Victor (ca. 1110-1173), considered as forerunners of fourteenth-century “speculative mysticism”. The first text, Benjamin maior (pp. 4a-97a), is also known under the name of De contemplatione [eiusque commendatione], as it appears on the label glued to the spine of the codex. Each of the five books starts with a painted initial that is larger than those introducing the paragraphs and extends into the margins. Then follows the same author’s Benjamin minor (pp. 97a-144a). The volume was copied by a single scribe who, while not leaving a name, copied a colophon common to many manuscripts: Explicit iste liber sit scriptor crimine liber. The last two columns of this volume (pp. 144b-145a) were copied by a different hand, which transcribes two chapters from the De spiritu et anima (inc.: Nobilis creatura est anima…, PL 40, col. 807-809), a text that was for a long time attributed to Augustine, but in fact dates to the twelfth century. The gothic binding dates from the 14th or 15th century. The wooden boards were covered with reused pieces of leather. (rou)

Online Since: 05/31/2024

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 983
Paper · 367 pp. · 32 x 22.7 cm · St. Gall, St. Leonhard (?) · 1464
Otto von Passau, Die 24 Alten

At the time this work, Die 24 Alten, which was completed in 1386, was written, the Franciscan Otto von Passau was a member of the Minorite convent in Basel. This piece, a form of guide to the Christian life, was widely used in women's convents for reading aloud during meals. This manuscript was written by a swester Endlin, probably at the Franciscan nuns' convent of St. Leonhard in St. Gall. (ber)

Online Since: 11/04/2010

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 985
Paper · 507 pp. · 27.8 x 20.2 cm · most likely Freiburg i. Br. · 1467
Spiegelbuch (Book of the Mirror) and other instructive tracts in German translation

This manuscript from 1467, which first belonged to the convent of the Poor Clares at Freiburg in Breisgau and was transported to the Abbey of St. Gall in 1699, contains, in addition to some Latin texts, many tracts for spiritual instruction in German translation. These include an Ars moriendi, the Cordiale de quattuor novissimis by Gerard van Vliederhoven, the so-called Hieronymus-Briefe(Letters of Jerome) translated by John of Neumark (ca. 1315-1356), the Spiegelbuch, a dialogical text in rhymed verses on living life properly, the trials of worldly life and everyday tribulations, with about twenty colored pen sketches, and a version of the legend of the Three Kings by John of Hildesheim (1310/1320-1375). The manuscript also contains some additional pen sketches: a unicorn (p. 87), images representing two Apostles (p. 107; Paul and John?), a man and a woman in secular dress, and a stag and a wild boar (p. 513). There are imprints in Carolingian minuscule on front and rear inside covers (rear inside cover: Hrabanus Maurus, De computo). (sno)

Online Since: 10/04/2011

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St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 987
Paper · 602 pp. · 28.5 x 21 cm · region of Lake Constance, community of lay brothers of the Monastery of St. Gall · 1454
Illustrated composite manuscript of edifying texts from the community of lay brothers of the Monastery of St. Gall with three edifying treatises in German

This manuscript contains three substantial treatises in German. At the beginning there is the life of Archbishop Johannes of Alexandria (pp. 583), written by Anastasius Bibliothecarius. It is followed by the edifying treatise Die vierundzwanzig Alten oder der goldene Thron der minnenden Seele by Otto of Passau (pp. 87544) and the History of the Three Kings (Historia trium regum) by John of Hildesheim (pp. 546602). The treatise by Otto of Passau is illustrated with 25 colored pen and ink drawings, outlined in red and extending the width of the column. The History of the Three Kings begins with a full-page miniature (p. 546), which shows the three Magi visiting the infant Jesus. The scribe and the illustrators of this manuscript, which possibly originated in the circle of the community of lay brothers of St. Gall, are unknown; stylistic characteristics suggest the Konstanz book illumination of Rudolf Stahel. The manuscript is dated to the year 1454 in three places (p. 93 as an inscription in a picture; p. 544; p. 602). In the 15th century the manuscript was the property of the community of lay brothers of the Monastery of St. Gall (who did not know Latin); in 1618 the manuscript was still in the library of the community of lay brothers. At least since 1755 it has been attested in the main library of St. Gall Abbey. (smu)

Online Since: 06/25/2015

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