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Bibliography

Bishop, T. A. M., “Autographa of John the Scot”, in: René Roques (ed.), Jean Scot Érigène et l’histoire de la philosophie: Laon 7–12 Juillet 1975, 561, Paris: CNRS Éditions, 1977. 89–94.

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Citation details
Contributors
Article
“Autographa of John the Scot”
Pages
89–94
Year
1977
Subjects and topics
Headings
Irish abroad
Sources
Texts
History, society and culture
Agents
Anonymous [i¹]Anonymous ... i¹
(s. ix)
Anonymous scribe/annotator whose Irish hand is detected in a number of continental manuscripts of Eriugena’s works. Since a study by E. K. Rand, the hand is usually designatedl i¹, distinguishing it from that of a fellow scribe, which is designated i². T. A. M. Bishop, Edouard Jeauneau and Bernhard Bischoff identified it as the hand of Eriugena himself, but others have argued that he was probably one of his assistants.
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Anonymous [i²]Anonymous ... i²
(s. ix)
Nisifortinus;i²
Anonymous scribe/annotator whose Irish hand is detected in a number of continental manuscripts of Eriugena’s works and who was probably an assistant of Eriugena. Since a study by E. K. Rand, the hand is usually designatedl i², distinguishing it from that of a fellow scribe, which is designated i¹. Because he is known to have written annotations beg. Nisi forte quis dixerit to some of Eriugena’s bolder statements, modern scholars have nicknamed him Nisifortinus.
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John Scottus EriugenaJohn Scottus Eriugena
(fl 9th century)
Irish scholar and theologian who had been active as a teacher at the palace school of Charles the Bald.
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Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
November 2018, last updated: October 2021