Documents: 110, displayed: 81 - 100

Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 54
Parchment · II + 80 ff. · 31.5 x 22 cm · around 1420
The "Conspiracy of Catilin" and the "Jugurthine War" by Sallust

This manuscript dates from about 1420 and contains the "Conspiracy of Catilin " and the "Jugurthine War" by Sallust. Miniature illuminations in grisaille were added by Bedford-Meister and assistants in his workshop, followed by a commentary by Jean Lebègues, who wrote a guide to the illustration of historical scenes in the above-named works of Sallust in 1417. During the 17th century the manuscript was owned by the Petau family. In 1720 Ami Lullin of Geneva purchased the codex and donated it to the Bibliothèque de Genève. (jeg)

Online Since: 12/09/2008

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 55
Wood and wax · 4 + 6 + 2 ff. · 35.8/36 x 15.7/15.8 cm · France · 1306-1309
Record of expenditures for the Hôtel of Philip IV the Fair, King of France, for the years 1306-1309, written on wax tablets

The Bibliothèque de Genève’s Ms. lat. 55 is an exceptional document because it consists of six wax tablets listing the expenditures for the royal household of the French King Philip IV the Fair for the years 1306-1309. Over time, the wax turned black and hard, which makes it harder to read. But the images of the tablets are accompanied by a transcription and by a facsimile prepared in 1720-1742 by the Genevan Gabriel Cramer. Preserved as „Ms. lat. 55 bis“, this handwritten facsimile makes it possible to access the content of the tablets and to compare the current state with that of 1720-1742 and thus to recognize the loss of pieces of the wax. (jeg)

Online Since: 03/17/2016

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 55 bis
Paper · 8 + 6 ff. · 39.3 x 24.8 cm · Geneva · 1720-1742
Transcription and facsimile of Ms. lat. 55 from the Bibliothèque de Genève

The Bibliothèque de Genève’s Ms. lat. 55 is an exceptional document because it consists of six wax tablets listing the expenditures for the royal household of the French King Philip IV the Fair for the years 1306-1309. Over time, the wax turned black and hard, which makes it harder to read. But the images of the tablets are accompanied by a transcription and by a facsimile prepared in 1720-1742 by the Genevan Gabriel Cramer. Preserved as „Ms. lat. 55 bis,“ this handwritten facsimile makes it possible to access the content of the tablets and to compare the current state with that of 1720-1742 and thus to recognize the loss of pieces of the wax. (jeg)

Online Since: 03/17/2016

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 57
Parchment · 98 ff. · 20.2 x 14.5 cm · Abbey of Saint-Denis (near Paris) ? · 1452
Gautier Burley (attr.), Liber de vita et moribus philosophorum veterum

“Lives of philosophers” constitute a subcategory of the ancient literary genre of “lives of illustrious men” that was considered anew beginning in the 12th century. The Latin text of this manuscript, the Liber de vita et moribus philosophorum veterum, attributed to Gautier Burley (actually an anonymous Italian author from the early 14th century), consists of a collection of moral maxims from various philosophers, whose names are indexed at the end of the work (f. 93r-94r). This copy, dated 1452, may be from the Abbey of Saint-Denis and later was the property of Paul and Alexandre Petau, before becoming part of the holdings of the Bibliothèque de Genève as part of the bequest of Ami Lullin. (rou)

Online Since: 10/10/2019

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 60
Parchment · II + 342 + II ff. · 47.5 x 30 cm · Bologna, Master of 1346 and l'Illustratore · around 1346
Decretum Gratiani with glosses by Bartholomaeus Brixiensis

This manuscript contains the Decretum Gratiani with the Glossa ordinaria by Bartholomäus Brixiensis. It is a distinctive testimony to the masterly page layout of legal texts, where the main text is usually framed on all sides by its commentary. This copy is signed by the scribe, brother Adigherio (fol. 341v). The manuscript also is sumptuously decorated with large miniatures that introduce the main parts of the text as well as the various legal cases; in addition, there are numerous historiated initials, often very humorous (e.g. f. 2r, 127v), and figure initials. Two book illustrators from Bologna, the Master of 1346 and l'Illustratore, are the creators of this decoration that was carried out in the 1340s. In 1756, the Decretum Gratiani became part of the Bibliothèque de Genève with the bequest of Ami Lullin, who had purchased this copy from the collection of Paul and Alexander Petau. (rou)

Online Since: 06/14/2018

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 62
Parchment · 16 ff. · 34.6 x 27 cm · Geneva · 1483-1490
Statuta et ordinationes ecclesie Gebennensis (Statutes and ordinances of the Church of Geneva)

This document, carefully written on parchment in the years 1482-1490, contains the 148 articles that define the statutes of the Church of Geneva. In 1484, they were approved by Pope Innocent VIII. They contain regulations concerning the ritual of the religious ceremonies of the canons of St. Pierre Cathedral in Geneva as well as regulations concerning their canonical life. (jeg)

Online Since: 04/09/2014

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 70
Parchment · I + 110 ff. · 21.5 x 14.3 cm · Paris · middle of the 13th century
Digestum vetus

This manuscript, produced in a Parisian workshop during the mid-13th century, contains books I through XVIII of the Digestum vetus by Justinian, in a textual variant different from that found in the version of the Digest most common at that time. An illustration in the form of a vertical band depicts the Emperor Justinian, standing among the five most important jurists of the early 3rd century, who are frequently quoted in the Digest. (jeg)

Online Since: 04/15/2010

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 74
Parchment · IV + 80 + IV ff. · 23.7 x 16.5 cm · first half of the 16th century
Lazare de Baïf, De re vestiaria

The humanist Lazare de Baïf (1496-1547), ambassador of Francis I, is the author of the Latin treatise De re vestiaria, which in 1526 was the first monograph on antique clothing. This text, written in Latin and interspersed with Greek quotations - a language Baïf studied with Giovanni Lascaris in Rome - was widely distributed through editions printed, for example, in Basel by Froben (1537) or in Paris by Charles Estienne (1535). This handwritten copy in the Bibliothèque de Genève presents the complete text of the De re vestiaria, divided into 21 chapters and with numerous marginal notes, probably by the hand of Lazarus de Baïf (f. 79v), making it a particularly valuable textual witness. (rou)

Online Since: 06/18/2020

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 76
Parchment · I + 334 + I ff. · 30.8 x 21 cm · Paris · around the end of the 13th century
Aristotle · Moses Maimonides, De uno deo benedicto

This manuscript was produced in a Parisian workshop around the end of the 13th century. It contains the Latin version of thirteen critiques written by, or generally thought to have been written by, Aristotle. The book ends with a fragment of De uno deo benedicto by Moses Maimonides. Forty decorated initials adorn the text, and a large drawing of Christ on the cross with Mary and John has been added on the last folio. (jeg)

Online Since: 04/15/2010

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 78
Parchment · 315 + II ff. · 23 x 16.5 cm · 13th century and end of the 13th - beginning of the 14th century
Composite manuscript containing medical texts

This manuscript contains three medical texts translated from Arabic and Greek into Latin. It begins with a small medical encyclopedia in ten books, the Kitâb al-Mansuri by Rhazes (ff. 4-126), in the translation attributed to Gerard of Cremona (d. 1187); this is immediately followed by a treatise on fever (ff. 126-144v) inspired by Johannitius (Latin name of the doctor and translator Hunain ben Ishāq al-Ibādī from Baghdad, 808-873). The collection concludes with the text Twelve books of medicine by the Byzantine physician Alexander of Tralles, divided here into three books and followed by the Treatise on fever (ff. 146-289v). The extensively annotated manuscript is adorned with decorated initials from which very beautiful red and blue "Italian extensions" emerge. (rou)

Online Since: 12/12/2019

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 80
Paper · (I-II) + 62 + (III) ff. · 28.5 x 20.5 cm · end of the 15th century or beginning of the 16th century
Collection of ten treatises on astronomy, physics, mechanics, etc. (in Latin and French)

This collection, dated to the end of the 15th century or the beginning of the 16th century, contains ten scientific treatises (astronomy, physics, mechanics, etc.) written in Latin or French and accompanied by several technical drawings. While four texts remain anonymous, the others were written by Christian of Prague, Petrus Peregrinus, Franco de Polonia, Philo of Byzantium, Marbod of Rennes and Jean Fusoris. The topics cover various areas, such as the astrolabe, magnetism, precious stones,the clavichord, etc. (jeg)

Online Since: 10/08/2015

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 81
Parchment · 10 ff. · 28.8 x 20.5 cm · Ancona or Venice · 1476
Andrea Benincasa, Atlas of nautical charts

This portolan by Andrea Benincasa is signed and dated 1476 on the last chart, which is glued to the inside back cover. The five nautical charts, each occupying a double page of the atlas, describe the Eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea (chart 1), the coasts between Sicily and the Aegean Sea (chart 2), the Mediterranean Sea from Gibraltar to Rome with Corsica and Sardinia (chart 3), the coasts of the Atlantic between England and Ireland to the Strait of Gibraltar (chart 4), and finally the coasts between Gibraltar and Cape Bojador, including the Canary Islands and other islands (chart 5). The star-shaped rhumb lines with wind roses indicate the compass directions, while the scales, here marked in the corners of the leaves, make it possible to estimate distances. The precise course of the coasts highlighted with color and the elegant script of the toponyms are characteristic of maps from the Benincasa studio, which were intended as objects for book lovers, but not for navigation. Among the numerous inscriptions on these maps, those on the Atlantic islands are the most surprising, as they seem to anticipate the discovery of the American archipelago like “Antilia,” or the island of “Brazil”; these names were adopted by Christopher Columbus and his successors to name certain territories in the New World. (vag)

Online Since: 12/12/2019

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 84
Parchment · I-II + 44 f. + III-IV ff. · 25.8 x 23 cm · Fulda (?) · 9th century
Nonius Marcellus, De compendiosa doctrina, liber quartus

This manuscript from the 9th century contains Book IV of the De compendiosa doctrina by Nonius Marcellus, a Latin grammarian who lived in the 4th century AD. The corrections which have been added to the text are ascribed to Lupus von Ferières. The existence of a brief text in Tironian notes and of a book catalog (a list of 21 titles) led earlier researchers to believe that the manuscript originated in Fleury-sur-Loire, but the most recent investigations indicate a connection with the cloister of Fulda in Germany (jeg)

Online Since: 06/22/2010

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 85
Parchment · (I-III) + 94 + (IV-V) ff. · 25 x 6.5 cm · 9th century
Dictionary of Tironian notes

This manuscript is remarkable because of its contents as well as its age: it is a dictionary of Tironian notes, copied in the 9th century. While puzzling at first glance, this dictionary is written as lists of signs, the "Tironian notes", accompanied by their Latin meanings. This shorthand from antiquity supposedly survived until the Carolingian era. (jeg)

Online Since: 10/08/2015

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 88
Paper · II + 121 + II ff. · 28.5 x 21 cm · 15th century
Cicero, De officiis

Cicero’s De officiis of is a political work on ethics, used throughout the Middle Ages, from Augustine, to the compilers of his moral sequences, to Christine de Pizan in her Chemin de long estude. Numerous commentaries have been written on this work, as attested by this 15th century paper manuscript. On the last double page (f. 120v-121r) the ethical theme of the Ciceronian text is continued as a schema of virtues. This manuscript was in the possession of the regent of the Collège de Genève, Hugues Lejeune (1634-1707), who donated it to the Bibliothèque de Genève. (rou)

Online Since: 10/08/2020

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 91
Parchment · 327 ff. · 20.5 x 14.2 cm · France · end of the 15th century (cf. A. Dufour) or around 1460 (cf. B. Gagnebin)
Policraticus (The government of the state) by John of Salisbury

With a beautiful binding à la "Du Seuil", this 15th century manuscript contains the Policraticus (The government of the state), a work of reflections on the vanities of courtiers, written by John of Salisbury (1115/1120-1180). It was copied in a careful hand, and the text was decorated with a large miniature showing an author reading his text before the king of France. (jeg)

Online Since: 12/18/2014

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 92
Paper · I + 170 + I ff. · 30.2 x 21.8 cm · 1460-1480
Aegidius Romanus, De regimine principum; Aesop, Life, Fables

This manuscript, copied in the years 1460-1480, contains De regimine principum by Aegidius Romanus, decorated with a miniature in which the author (Aegidius Romanus) dedicates the book to the king of France. The last leaves contain the Life of Aesop and his Fables, translated into Latin by Rinuccio di Arezzo. The manuscript was owned by François Bonivard († 1570), who was prior of the Cluniac Priory of St. Victor in Geneva. (jeg)

Online Since: 04/15/2010

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 97
Parchment · I + 33 + I ff. · 25.5 x 17.5 cm · beginning of the 16th century
Raoul Bollart: On the Victory of King Louis XII of France against the Venetians; Moral Poem

This manuscript dates from the beginning of the 16th century and contains two poems by Raoul Bollart, the first of which celebrates the siege of King Ludwig XII of France against the Venetians in 1509. The second poem treats the subject of moral values and relates the supplications made to a rich person by the poor. All miniatures found in this manuscript, illustrating various scenes in the poems, were made in Rouen. The way in which they follow the morality text is similar to the style of modern comics. During the 17th century this manuscript was owned by the Petau family. In 1720 Ami Lullin of Geneva purchased the codex and donated it to the Bibliothèque de Genève. (jeg)

Online Since: 12/09/2008

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 98
Parchment · I-III + 54 + IV-VI ff. · 21 x 12.5 cm · France: Champagne, Burgundy or Centre · 1170-1180
Alexandreis (epic poem relating the story of Alexander the Great), by Walter of Châtillon

This manuscript, dated to the years 1170-1180, contains the text of the Alexandreis, a Latin epic poem written by Walter of Châtillon to tell the story of Alexander the Great. Dedicated to the Archbishop of Reims, the work quickly became a great success and remains known today as “the greatest epic poem of medieval literature”. In addition, the version preserved in this manuscript should be one of the oldest. (jeg)

Online Since: 04/09/2014

Preview Page
Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 99
Parchment · 314 pp. · 20.7 x 14.1 cm · Florence · end of the 15th century (cf. H. Aubert and A. Dufour) or around 1478-1480 (cf. B. Gagnebin)
Amyris. Poem in honor of Sultan Sultans Mehmed II, by Gian Mario Filelfo

At the request of his friend Othman Lillo Ferducci of Ancona, Gian Mario Filelfo composed the Amyris in the years 1471-1476. This long Latin poem was intended to thank Sultan Mehmet II for having freed Ferducci’s brother-in-law, who had been taken prisoner by the Turcs during the capture of Constantinople in 1453. Gian Mario Filelfo had the manuscript decorated in Florence with "bianchi girari” ornamentation, had it bound in Urbino with a very beautiful Italian Renaissance binding, and then gave it to the Duke of Urbino, Federico da Montefeltro, at whose court he was staying in 1477 and 1478. (jeg)

Online Since: 12/18/2014

Documents: 110, displayed: 81 - 100