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Magister Stephanus super quattuor libros Regum. Magister Nicholaus de Tornaco super Iudith et super Parabolas Salomonis et textus earum. Honorius super Cantica Canticorum [titel fenestra]
Manuscript 29 is closely related to manuscript 28. Firstly they share the same major texts: three commentaries on books of the Bible, written by Stephen Langton (d. 1228), archbishop of Canterbury and one of the driving forces behind the Magna Carta: Super quattuor libros Regum (ff. 1v-52v); Super librum Iudith (ff. 52v-65v and ff. 67r-68v); and Super librum Salomonis (ff. 69r-124v). The last two …
Creator
Subject
- Reading culture (medieval)
- Medieval (European)
- reading culture
- Religion
- Reading culture
- Middle Ages
Type of item
- manuscripts (documents)
- Manuscript
Date
- 1199-1301
- 1199/1301
Medium
- unknown
Creator
Subject
- Reading culture (medieval)
- Medieval (European)
- reading culture
- Religion
- Reading culture
- Middle Ages
Type of item
- manuscripts (documents)
- Manuscript
Date
- 1199-1301
- 1199/1301
Medium
- unknown
Providing institution
Aggregator
Rights statement for the media in this item (unless otherwise specified)
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
Creation date
- 1199-1301
- 1199/1301
Places
- Flanders
- Flemish Region
- Belgium
Current location
- Brugge
Provenance
- Cisterciënzerabdij Ter Doest (S.O.Cist.)
Identifier
- Ms. 029
- http://www.manuscriptorium.com/object/OBBB__MS_029______1CIA6DC
Extent
- 35 x 25 cm
Language
- lat
- lat
Is part of
- Art of Reading in the Middle Ages: previously digitised item
Is referenced by
- 29ste Internationale kunst- en antiekbeurs Brugge Brugge. 2002.
- Mmmonk: Middeleeuwse Monastieke Manuscripten - Open - Netwerk - Kennis.
Providing country
- Czech Republic
Collection name
First time published on Europeana
- 2022-06-01T10:48:37.209Z
Last time updated from providing institution
- 2022-06-10T11:28:07.931Z