Humbertus, de Romanis († 1277)
Four bifolia (= 1 quire) of a manuscript that contained the treatise De eruditione religiosorum by (Pseudo-)Humbert of Romans, which recently was ascribed to Guilelmus Peraldus. In 1632, the fragment came to Bern as part of the property of Jacques Bongars.
Online Since: 07/12/2021
- Humbertus, de Romanis (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Bongars, Jacques (Former possessor) | Gravisset, Jakob von (Former possessor) | Guilelmus, Peraldus (Author) | Humbertus, de Romanis (Author) Found in: Standard description
This extensive volume was copied at the turn of the thirteenth to fourteenth century by a single hand with a somewhat varying ductus. It contains a thematically ordered compilation of short examples and observations on virtues and vices (pp. 3–658) that may have been taken from Etienne de Bourbon or Humbertus de Romanis. This summa is made accessible by an index (pp. 659–661), written in a later hand, which hand also completed the foliation. The manuscript is rubricated throughout and contains two-line red and blue lombards. On the front flyleaf can be found a fragment of a charter from 1295. The red-leather binding has the remains of a medieval clasp.
Online Since: 09/22/2022
- Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Buchegger, Franz Eduard (Librarian) | Humbertus, de Romanis (Author) | Jakob, von Vitry (Author) | Petrus Alfonsi (Author) | Stephanus, de Borbone (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Buchegger, Franz Eduard (Librarian) | Humbertus, de Romanis (Author) | Jakob, von Vitry (Author) | Petrus Alfonsi (Author) | Stephanus, de Borbone (Author) Found in: Additional description
Parts I, II and IV of a four-part manuscript in German of collected materials containing cloister rules (including the Benedictine Rule), prayers, and short spiritual texts. A comparative study of the script indicates that the volume was written by Benedictine monk Friedrich Kölner (Köllner, Cölner, Colner), who lived at the Abbey of St. Gall between 1429/30 and 1439. Part III, or the model on which it was based, was dedicated to Anna Vogelweider, a sister in the Cistercian women's cloister of Magdenau in Lower Toggenburg, according to an annotation which was later stricken through. This Anna was likely the aunt of a certain Sister Els (Elsbeth?), named in the record of a donation, from the women's community of St. George.
Online Since: 03/31/2011
- Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Bernardus, Claraevallensis (Author) | Friedrich, Kölner (Scribe) | Humbertus, de Romanis (Author) | Isidorus, Hispalensis (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Bernardus, Claraevallensis (Author) | Friedrich, Kölner (Scribe) | Humbertus, de Romanis (Author) | Isidorus, Hispalensis (Author) Found in: Additional description
- Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Bernardus, Claraevallensis (Author) | Friedrich, Kölner (Scribe) | Humbertus, de Romanis (Author) | Isidorus, Hispalensis (Author) Found in: Additional description
This manuscript, which features two ownership notes from the community of sisters of St. Georgen above St. Gall (probably from the period around 1500) on p. 3, contains two spiritual texts from the 13th and 14th century, respectively. They are a translation into German of instructions regarding the Rule of his Order by Humbert of Romans, Master General of the Dominican Order († 1277) (pp. 5–295), and an Upper German version of the work Die geistliche Hochzeit (Brulocht) by the Flemish theologian Jan von Ruusbroec († 1381) (pp. 296–482).
Online Since: 06/22/2017
- Humbertus, de Romanis (Author) | Ruusbroec, Jan van (Author) Found in: Standard description