Documents: 2918, displayed: 2501 - 2520

All Libraries and Collections

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1026
Parchment · 190 pp. · 13.5 x 8.5 cm · 13th century
Latin Sermons

The parchment bookblock (pp. 5162) contains in its core on pp. 8162 a collection of Latin sermons on the feasts of the ecclesiastical year (temporale and sanctorale) in a small gothic minuscule of the thirteenth century. At the top of p. 7 is a table with Greek letters as item numbers and below an incipit in red majuscules, that is partially covered by the library stamp of Abbot Diethelm Blarer from the period 1553–1564. The single leaf p. 5/6 contains a table of contents of the sermons from the beginning of the codex to the Assumption of the Virgin, which probably was added in the second half of the fourteenth century. The collection begins with the sermons for Advent (p. 8) and runs through the Exaltation of the Cross (p. 109) and to the Assumption of the Virgin (p. 112). Additional sermons follow, including an Ad populum (p. 157, 162), before the text breaks off at the end of p. 162. The sermons are mostly introduced by a two-to-three-line decorative initial in the colors red, blue, and green. The binding, as well as the paper flyleaves (pp. 14, 163190), probably come from the end of the seventeenth or the eighteenth century. (len)

Online Since: 04/25/2023

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1027
Parchment · 216 ff. · 13.5 x 9 cm · second half of the 13th century or first half of the fourteenth century
Latin Sermons of Berthold of Regensburg

The manuscript was written in a textualis probably in the second half of the thirteenth or the first half of the fourteenth century. The old foliation runs from I to CLXXXIII and from CCLXV to CCLXXX (pencil foliation: 184–209). The current foliation is AB in pencil and then ICLXXXIII in red ink, and finally 184216 in pencil. The table of contents, inserted in the fourteenth century on the last, separate gathering (fol. 211r214v) uses Roman numerals from I to CCLXXVIII without gaps. This shows that several quires were lost at some point after the production of the table of contents, a fact that was already noted on the table of contents in the fifteenth century with “vacat”. The surviving leaves transmit, in the first place, sermons of Berthold of Regensburg († 1272) on Sundays and the Feasts of Saints (fol. IrCLXXIIIIv) and then – owing to the mentioned loss of leaves – only the end of his sermon on the common of saints (fol. 184r184v). In between and afterwards are other sermons (Sermones ad religiosos, Sermones ad speciales) or spiritual texts by the same hand, although at the end (fol. 209r210r) by another hand. According to the table of contents, there follow (fol. 214r215v) further entries, probably from the fourteenth century, including a few in the German language. According to the ownership mark Liber sancti Galli on fol. Br, the codex was in the Abbey of St. Gall in the fifteenth century at the latest. (len)

Online Since: 04/25/2023

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1029
Parchment · 80 pp. · 16–16.5 x 11–11.5 cm · 13th/14th century
Sermons, Letters, and other texts

This small-format manuscript contains for the most part sermons (pp. 349). They have been numbered (1–39) in the margin by a later hand, which also wrote the title Sermones de tempore and the ownership mark Liber s. Galli on p. 3. According to Schneyer, Repertorium der lateinischen Sermones des Mittelalters für die Zeit von 1150–1350, II.766 und IV.49 and Hamesse, Repertorium initiorum manuscriptorum latinorum medii aevi, No. 31477, the authors of these sermons include Lothario dei Segni (Innocent III), Hugh of Saint-Cher, and Nicholaus de Gorran. A wide range of texts follows on p. 49: seven short letters or letter formularies on pp. 4951 (including from the Abbot of Isny to the Abbot of Blaubeuren, from the Duke of Bavaria to two bailiffs, from parents to their son, studying in Padua, and from the student to his parents); mnemonic aids on the Eucharist, the duties of a confessor, the seven sacraments, etc. (p. 51); an additional sermon (p. 52) (by Lucas de Bitonto; Schneyer, Repertorium, IV.56, No. 88); the Fifteen Portents of the Last Judgment (p. 53); Odo of Cheriton’s Parabola De rustico et eius domino (p. 54); a Tractatus naturalis, inc: Cum alterius nature sit truncus, alterius surculus (pp. 5562); a commentary on Aristotle’s De anima, inc: Bonorum honorabilium noticiam [...] subiectum huius libri de anima est anima prout est coniuncta corpori (p. 63-77). The manuscript, bereft of ornamentation, is bound in an early-modern cardboard binding that has been covered in fragments of a printed missal. (sno)

Online Since: 04/25/2023

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1032
Parchment · 688 pp. · 17 x 11–11.5 cm · 14th century
Legenda aurea; Exempla

This manuscript contains around a third of the text of Jacobus of Voragine’s Legenda aurea, where some texts appear twice. The first part (pp. 1267) begins with Advent and ends with All Souls’ Day and the consecration of a church. The title written over the first text (Sermo de adventu domini, p. 1) is misleading and has led to the misidentification of the manuscript’s contents as sermones. The second part (pp. 271665) begins with Matthias (24 February) and ends with Thomas (21 December). This collection has been supplemented with a few texts from the so-called Provincia-Appendix (Oswald, Ulrich, Pelagius, Verena, Gallus, Otmar, Konrad), which have been added at the appropriate place in the ecclesiastical year. Between the two parts (pp. 267270) can be found seven short exempla, the first three of which are based on texts from the Verba seniorum. Two scribes took part in producing the manuscript. The change in hand on p. 382/383 (at the end of a quire, but in the middle of a word) is accompanied by a change in decoration; while in the preceding part only a few multi-line red initials are adorned with simple red pen-flourishes, in the following part the pen-flourishes are two-color (red/blue), more luxuriant and finer. The pen-flourishes resemble those in the manuscript Fribourg, BCU, ms. L 34, but in comparison is somewhat less refined. Noticeable in the first part are found multi-color decorative stitching and holes filled with needlework (p. 55/56, 75/76, 115/116, 123/124, 131/132, 143/144 und 147/148). On the upper margin of pp. 7664 can be found an old foliation (III–CCCXXXI). The cardboard binding, covered in blank parchment and adorned with green-silk ribbons as clasps, dates from the eighteenth/nineteenth century. (sno)

Online Since: 04/25/2023

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1066
Paper · 327 ff. · 31 x 21 cm. · St. Gall, Dominican Convent of St. Katharina · probably 1484
German Sermons (Meister Eckhart, Johannes Tauler, Nikolaus von Straßburg et al.)

This manuscript, which originated probably in 1484 in the Convent of the Dominican Sisters of St. Katharina in St. Gall, constitutes the first (remaining) half-volume of a collection which, as indicated in the table of contents, originally comprised 151 sermons, organized according to the church year, and in all likelihood meant to be read daily at mealtime. Among others, it contains sermons by Meister Eckhart, Johannes Tauler, Nikolaus von Straßburg, Rudolf Goltschlacher, Meister Wilhelm, Felix Fabri (?), Jordan von Quedlinburg and several from the corpus of the „St. Georgener“ and „Engelberger Predigten“. Remarkably, regarding the inventory of “Engelberger Predigten”, Cod. Sang. 1066 is exactly complementary to Cod. Sang. 1919 and Wil M 42, which also originated in the Convent of the Dominican sisters of St. Katharina in St. Gall. Cod. Sang. 1919 and Wil M 42 are directly or indirectly based on the same model *C to which also cod. Sang. 1004 and Wil M 47, created 50 years ealier in the St. Gall Benedictine Monastery, owe their selection of Engelberger Predigten; in contrast, Cod. Sang. 1066 is based on a manuscript from text group *Y3, close also to Cod. 752(746) from the library of the Benedictine Monastery of Einsiedeln. (nem)

Online Since: 04/09/2014

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1067
Paper · IV + 245 ff. · 28.5 x 21 cm · Alemannic linguistic region · 15th century
Sermons of Rulmann Merswin and Johannes Tauler

This folio-volume contains an extensive sermon cycle, introduced by a sermon presumably by Rulmann Merswin (ff. 1ra5vb: Leben Jesu / Von der geistlichen Spur), which here is ascribed to Tauler (as in Cod. Sang. 1015). The sermons that follow (ff. 5vb235ra) are actually by Tauler. On ff. 85va93va, under the rubric Von der drivaltikait, is the pseudo-Eckhartian composite treatise Von dem anefluzze des vaters; on ff. 235ra241va are four letters of Henry Suso (Letters 3, 4, 6 and 7 of the Little Book of Letters), followed by another sermon. The manuscript, arranged in two columns, is carefully written, corrected in many places, and rubricated throughout. Each sermon is introduced by an ornate initial, usually five lines high, with very simple red and blue pen flourishes; a few initials are someone larger and more elaborately presented (e.g., f. 190vb). Well preserved late-fifteenth-century leather binding with decorative lines, five bosses on each side (only one on the back is missing) and two clasps. Two owner’s marks on the front pastedown attest to the ownership of the book by the sisters of St. Leonhard cloister, and later by those of St. Georgen in St. Gall. (mat)

Online Since: 09/22/2022

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1075
Parchment · 415 (416) pp. · 26.5 x 17 cm · end of the 12th century / beginning of the 13th century
Honorius Augustodunensis, Speculum ecclesiae; Verses about virtues and vices; Mauritius de Sulliaco, Sermones

This manuscript predominantly contains sermons. It begins (pp. 1279) with the Speculum ecclesiae by Honorius Augustodunensis (around 1080 – 1150/1151). This is followed by 20 verses each on virtues and vices in Leonine hexameter (pp. 279281), each followed by a brief explanation in prose. On the otherwise blank p. 282, there is a pen and ink drawing of the Apostle Paul. Following on pp. 283411, there are the Sermones by Mauritius de Sulliaco (Maurice de Sully, around 1120 – 1196), with a list of chapters and a prologue on p. 283. On pp. 411-414, there is a commentary on the Apostles' Creed (Inc. Quo nomine vocatur hec doctrina apostolica symbolum, Expl. latine dicitur vere fideliter fiat). The very short text on p. 415 deals with Communion for the excommunicated (Inc. Communicans excommunicato, Expl. ad correctionem communicabis excommunicato). (sno)

Online Since: 03/22/2018

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1084
Paper · 338 pp. · 28-28.5 x 20.5-21 cm · Heidelberg · 15th century
St. Gall Abbot Ulrich Rösch's book of heraldry

St. Gall Abbot Ulrich Rösch's (1462-1491) book of heraldry, containing 1,626 coats of arms of prominent people from the laity and the clergy, mostly from the southern region of Germany. This heraldic book was probably prepared in the Heidelberg workshop of Hans Ingeram for an unknown customer from the area between the Neckar River and the Upper Rhine. In the 1480s St. Gall Abbot Ulrich Rösch purchased the volume and had numerous coats of arms from Swiss and German border areas added in the back pages; these were drawn by Winterthur artist Hans Haggenberg. One of the most important heraldic record books of the 15th century. (smu)

Online Since: 12/23/2008

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1085
Paper · 554 pp. · 31-31.5 x 20.5-21 cm · between 1530 and 1572
Book of heraldry by the universal scholar Aegidius Tschudi

Book of heraldry by the universal scholar Aegidius Tschudi (1505-1572) of Glarus, produced at some point between 1530 and 1572. It contains more than 2,000 coats of arms of the aristocratic families of the Old Swiss Confederacy. Many of the coats of arms include genealogical explanations in Tschudi's hand. (smu)

Online Since: 12/23/2008

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1091
Wood and wax · IV + 14 + IV pp. · 14.8 x 10.5 cm · St. Gall (?) · 15th century (?)
Book of wax tablets

Seven wooden tablets, bound together each between two later-added front and back paper guard leaves; the first tablet is filled only on the verso side with black-dyed wax, the following five are filled on both sides, the last is not filled. The format of the wooden tablets without the paper reinforcements is 14.8 x 8 cm. According to Wilhelm Wattenbach (in: Anzeiger für Kunde der deutschen Vorzeit 1873, p. 79f.), the tablets probably are “Bruchstücke des Taschenbuchs eines Klosterbeamten aus dem 15. Jahrh.” (pieces of the broken pocket book of a monastery official from the 15th century); several Latin and German words (partly upside-down) can be guessed. (sno)

Online Since: 10/08/2015

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1092
Parchment · 1 f. · ca. 112 x 77.5 cm · Reichenau / St. Gall · 819 or about 827/830 / end of the 12th century
Plan of Saint Gall

The Carolingian Plan of St. Gall is the oldest surviving architectural drawing of the Western world, and thus it is a monument of European cultural history. It consists of five pieces of sheep parchment, sewn together, and later folded to quarto format. On the front, there is an orginal plan of a monastery complex with 52 buildings, 333 explanatory annotations in Latin, and a letter of dedication. Probably based on models, it was created at Reichenau under Abbot Heito or Erlebald for (Abbot?) Gozbert of St. Gall (819 or around 827/830); annotations were added by the Librarian Reginbert and a younger brother. On the formerly blank back side (and on the erasure at the lower left on the front), was added the Vita beati Martini episcopi based on Sulpicius Severus (created in St. Gall at the end of the 12th century). (tre)

Online Since: 03/20/2014

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1093
Parchment · 1 f. · 419.5 x 11.5 cm · end of the 14th century
Mirabilia Romae; Indulgentiae ecclesiarum urbis Romae

This manuscript has the form of a parchment scroll; it consists of six narrow strips of parchment, each about 60-80 cm long, sewn together lengthwise. It is a pilgrims’ guide through the city of Rome und consists of two texts: mostly in the form of a list, the Mirabilia Romae describe the structures of the city of Rome – walls, temples, palaces, squares, thermal baths, theaters, etc. In this version, this part begins with a short historical introduction from the Chronicle of Martin of Opava. It is followed by the Indulgentiae ecclesiarum urbis Romae as a second part, an enumeration of the churches of Rome with their relics and the indulgences to be obtained there. (sno)

Online Since: 12/20/2012

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1102
Paper · 146 ff. · 28.8 x 21.5 cm · P. Mauritius Enk, OSB St. Gall in Paris · 1567
University Lecture Notes from the Parisian Collège de Clermont: Petrus Christinus, Aristotle’s Metaphysics; Jacobus Valentinus, Metaphysics

This study notebook, written in 1567, contains two transcriptions of lectures written by the St. Gall monk Mauritius Enk († 1575), who was studying in Paris: 1) fol. 1r53r: lectures by Petrus Christinus SJ on Aristotle’s Metaphysics, 2) fol. 56r130r: lectures by Jacobus Valentinus de Borrasa SJ († 1581) on Metaphysics. (smu)

Online Since: 10/08/2015

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1103
Paper · 275 pp. · 30 x 20 cm · Paris · 1568-1569
Mauritius Enk, notes on lectures by Jacobus Valentinus on Aristotle

A study notebook used by the St. Gall monk Mauritius Enk († 1575) containing notes on lectures given by the Jesuit Jacobus Valentinus (also known as Jacobus de Borrasa; † 1581) on Aristotle's De physica, De caelo et mundo, Tractatus de elementis, De ortu et interitu and De anima, written in 1568/69 while Enk was a student at the Jesuit-run Collège de Clermont in Paris. (smu)

Online Since: 04/15/2010

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1111
Paper · 528 pp. · 28.5 x 20.5 cm · Southwestern Germany · third quarter of the 15th century
Konrad von Megenberg, Das Buch der Natur

This codex, written by multiple hands, contains a nearly complete copy of Conrad of Megenberg’s natural history (Das Buch der Natur); only a few chapters are missing, some of which are due to a loss of pages. Quires 17 (pp. 371394) and 18 (pp. 395418) are bound in the wrong order. A contemporary table of contents introduces each of the parts of the third book (on animals) and of the fourth book (on trees). The numbers of the leaves given there correspond to the individual parts' foliation, which frequently starts over. On the back paper pastedown there is an ownership mark written in the hand that numbered the leaves: sint der bletter CClxxvj bletter vnd ist dz ůrrich [Ulrich] von fulach. This note indicates that a total of 12 leaves have been lost. As the dedication to Abbot Joseph von Rudolphi (Abbot 1717–1740) on the front pastedown shows, this volume was in the Abbey Library of St. Gall by the eighteenth century at the latest. (sno)

Online Since: 04/25/2023

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1115
Paper · 272 + 8 pp. · 20 x 14 cm · Paris, Jesuit Collège de Clermont · 1570
University Lecture Notes from the Jesuit College de Clermont in Paris

Transcriptions, prepared by Mauritius Enk (1538-1575) of the Abbey of St. Gall, of lectures about the Holy Scripture (Isagoge in sacram scripturam) presented by the Spanish Jesuit Johannes Marianus (Juan de Mariana, 1536–1624). This text is on pp. 33269. In addition, the volume contains excerpts from Augustine (pp. 1921 from letter 28 to Jerome, with an alphabetical index on pp. 112; pp. 2728 from the Confessiones), as well as a short treatise about confession before the Eucharist, Num confessio necessaria sit ante sumptionem Eucharistiae (pp. 270271, not written by Enk). (sno)

Online Since: 06/23/2016

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1116
Paper · 436 + 76 pp. · 20.5 x 15.5 cm · Paris, Collège des Cholets · 1566
University Lecture Notes from the Collège des Cholets in Paris

Transcriptions, prepared by Mauritius Enk (1538-1575) of the Abbey of St. Gall, of lectures by Hubertus Morus (Hubert Meurier, 1535–1602) on the third and fourth book of the Libri magistri sententiarum (Peter Lombard’s Sentences). The lectures on the third book (pp. 7109) took place from April 22 until June 27, 1566; those on the fourth book (pp. 199433) from May 7 until August 14 (19?), 1566. This transcription of lectures has a Parisian calfskin binding bearing an owner's mark embossed in gold. (sno)

Online Since: 06/23/2016

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1117
Paper · 500 pp. · 20 x 15 cm · Paris, Jesuit College de Clermont · 1565-1569
University Lecture Notes from the Jesuit Collège de Clermont in Paris

Transcriptions, prepared by Mauritius Enk (1538-1575) of the Abbey of St. Gall and an unknown fellow student, of lectures presented by the Spanish Jesuit Johannes Maldonatus (Juan Maldonado, professor of philosophy from 1564 to 1565 and of theology from 1565 to 1569 at the College de Clermont) and Jacobus Valentinus (Jacques Valentin, professor of theology at the College de Clermont from 1565 to 1569). In addition to an introduction to theology, the lecture notes include a commentary on Aristotle by Jacques Valentin (Annotationes in libros Ethicorum) and other material. The volume has a Parisian calfskin binding bearing an owner's mark embossed in gold. (sno)

Online Since: 04/15/2010

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1118
Paper · 464 pp. · 20 x 15.5 cm · Paris, Collège des Cholets · 1565/1566
University Lecture Notes from the Collège des Cholets in Paris

Transcriptions, prepared by Mauritius Enk (1538-1575) of the Abbey of St. Gall, of lectures by Hubertus Morus (Hubert Meurier, 1535–1602) on the first and second book of the Libri magistri sententiarum (Peter Lombard’s Sentences). The lectures on the first book (pp. 7178) took place from October 15 (?) 1565 until January 31, 1566, those on the second book (pp. 279401) from February 4 until April 10, 1566. In between (on pp. 181189) is a short text De Unione Hypostatica Verbi, pp. 181183 not written by Enk (his hand begins again with the last three words on p. 183). This transcription of lectures has a Parisian calfskin binding bearing an owner's mark embossed in gold. (sno)

Online Since: 06/23/2016

Preview Page
St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 1119
Paper · 226 + 82 pp. · 19.8 x 155 cm · Paris, Collège de Navarre · 1565/1566
University Lecture Notes from the Collège de Navarre in Paris Paris, Collège de Navarre

This volume contains four texts: 1. (pp. 1149) Transcriptions of lectures by Michael Dionysius about the Libri magistri sententiarum (Peter Lombard’s sentences), prepared by Mauritius Enk (1538-1575) of the Abbey of St. Gall. Dionysius began the lectures on 10 December 1565 (p. 1) and discontinued them on 4 February 1566 for want of auditors (p. 149; ob defectum auditorum). 2. (pp. 153195) Annotationes de immortalitate animae by the Spanish Jesuit Johannes Maldonatus in a transcription by Johannes Ruostaller († 1575) of the Abbey of St. Gall. 3. (pp. 197203) Notes by Mauritius Enk. 4. (pp. 205226) Canon law treatise about priests living in relationships similar to marriage (Quid sit sentiendum de concubinariis), written by a later (?) scribe. On p. 220 a short poem in distichs, addressed to priests, (Ad quemvis sacerdotem, Inc. Huc age, tende gradus) with the exhortation to read the booklet repeatedly and to follow the text’s indications. (sno)

Online Since: 03/17/2016

Documents: 2918, displayed: 2501 - 2520