Manuscripts Catalogue
<<<

ID: 138846
General information
Shelfmark Barb.gr.152
Date sec. XV med vel ex, sec. XVI
Beginning date 1426
Ending date 1600
Support chart.
Height 242 (libellus I), 243 (libb. II et III)
Width 173 (libellus I), 172 (lib. II), 174 (lib. III)
Extent ff. 42

Description
Other name Leopardi, Giacomo, conte, 1798-1837, translator
Other name Bonnerue de Saint-Romain, Joannes Josephus, sec. XVII-XVIII (external author)
General note Codex miscellaneus tribus constans libellis in unum conpactis, i. e. (ff. 1-10) libellus I, (ff. 11-34) lib. II, (ff. 35-42) lib. III. Quo tempore codex noster miscellaneus effectus sit, nescio, sed putare malim de prioribus decenniis saec. XIX, quo aevo liber conpactus est, nam codex miscellaneus ipse et libelli tres, qui eum efficiunt, non memorantur in Indd. codd. graec. Bybliothecae Barberinianae a Iohanne Iosepho a S. Romano saec. in. XVIII digestis et in codd. Barb. lat. 3139. 3138 adservatis.
General note In f. 1r marg. sup. manus saec. XVI ex. inscriptionem adposuit "Plutarchj"; ibid. nota "20" et numerus "955", qui, eadem manu exaratus, saec., ni fallimur, XVI medio, obcurrit quoque in superiore ora f. 55r cod. Barb. gr. 133 et f. 75r cod. Barb. gr. 141, II; ibid. ad angulum sup. externum et manu, si me audias, <Iacobi Leopardi>, v. cl. (cfr. cod. Vat. "Ferraioli, lettere" vol. XIV, n. 199; Barb. gr. 98 f. 1r), "Plutarchi | de dignoscendo | amico ab adulatore".
General note Summa in ora f. 11r manus, ni fallimur, saec. XVIII titulum adposuit "Michaelis Ephesii Fragmentum Commentarii ad Aristo(tel)em de Partibus | Animalium".
General note In f. 35r inscriptio saec., nisi egregie fallor, XVIII ut in f. 11r "Galenus de septimestri partu"; f. 42v pars inferior exhibet conscribillationes varias librarii et alias conscribillationes, ut videtur, seriore manu adpositas; quae omnia nullius sane momenti sunt.

Hypertextual links
Shelfmark Barb.gr.152
Other author/nameLeopardi, Giacomo, conte, 1798-1837
Other author/nameBonnerue de Saint-Romain, Joannes Josephus, sec. XVII-XVIII