- 1604 x 1607
- Thomas Wiliems, John Wynn [1553-1627]
- s. viiiin
German manuscript containing copies of works by Boethius, Severinus, Isidore of Seville and Eusebius. An item of Irish and Welsh interest is the letter known as the Bamberg cryptogram.
- s. x/xiin
9th-century manuscript of a Greek psalter, with interlinear Latin text, and additional devotional material. It was written by multiple Irish hands, possibly in northern Italy.
- s. ix2/3/3/3
- s. xi
- s. x/xi
9th-century manuscript containing Augustine’s Enchiridion ad Laurentiam (ff. 65r–116r), with some interlinear Latin and Old Irish glosses, and other texts of theological interest. It forms the third part (ff. 65–188) of a composite manuscript probably compiled at St. Maximin's, Trier, and may itself have been written at Mainz.
- s. ix
A part of the ‘Cotton-Corpus legendary’ which covers feast-days for the months of October, November and December. The other parts of the legendary are to be found in London, British Library, MS Cotton Nero E i.
- s. xi2
Manuscript containing a transcript of Leabhar Branach from an early 17th-century exemplar.
- c. 1726-1728
- Mícheál Ó Broin
- c. 1800
- Mícheál Ó hArragáin
Northern English manuscript compilation of historical prose and verse, in French and to a lesser extent in Latin, notably a copy of Pierre Langtoft’s Chronicle. It includes material relating to the Trojan foundation legend, to Edward I, II and III, Merlinic prophecies and the bishops of England and Wales. M. R. James suggests that the “author may be connected with Durham”.
- s. xiv
A large English manuscript volume in three separately foliated segments.
- s. xiv–xv
Irish paper manuscript continuing the Irish translation of the Old Testament from Dublin, Marsh's Library, MS Z 4.2.3a-b. This volume includes the prophetical and apocryphal/non-canonical books.
- s. xviiex
English composite manuscript which seems to consist of parts of two originally independent compilations: I. a 12th-century MS of Sawley provenance (pp. 1-40, 73-252), and II. a 14th-century MS of Bury St Edmunds (pp. 253-642, 41-72). Neither is complete since part I belongs together with CCCC MS 66, and part II with CCCC MS 66A. This arrangement was made in the 16th century, when Matthew Parker took the Sawley and Bury St Edmunds manuscripts, split each of them, rebound the material and donated the combined second halves to Corpus Christi College.
- s. xii–xiv