Canon in Ebreica
prose
Exegetical text datable to the 8th century and thought to be of Hiberno-Latin provenance.
Commentarius in Evangelium secundum Marcum (Pseudo-Jerome)
prose
Pseudo-Jerome [commentator on Mark]Pseudo-Jerome ... commentator on Mark
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Jerome
Jerome
(c.340s–420 (Prosper))
Church father, born in Dalmatia, and biblical scholar who translated the greater part of the Bible into Latin and whose labours led to the Vulgate version.

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(ascr.)
Latin commentary on the Gospel of Mark, sometimes attributed to Jerome but written by an unidentified scholar in the early medieval period. It has been dated to the seventh century, which would make it the earliest such commentary to survive, preceding that by Bede in the following century. The text is found in a number of manuscripts with Irish associations. Bischoff even suggested that the author may have been Irish, but this view has been contested or treated as unproven.
Commentarius in Matheum (Frigulus)
prose
FrigulusFrigulus
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(ascr.)

An early medieval, perhaps 8th-century Latin commentary on the Gospel of Matthew, attributed to an exegete who in modern scholarship is usually identified by the name Frigulus. 

De vindictis magnis magnorum peccatorum
prose

A collection of excerpts from the Bible, focusing on a number of well-known sinners and their punishments. Some features, such as its use of the term vindicta crucis, might betray a Hiberno-Latin origin for the compilation.

Hymnum dicat turba fratrum
verse
beg. Hymnum dicat turba fratrum
Hilary of Poitiers
Hilary of Poitiers
(fl. c.315/6–c.367/8)
theologian and bishop of Poitiers (el. 353), who campaigned against Arianism and has the reputation of being the first writer of Latin hymns, who composed a Liber hymnorum, although few texts are extant. He appears to have been held in high esteem in medieval Ireland.

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(ascr.)

An early metrical Latin hymn (35 qq) on the life of Christ, written in trochaic tetrameter and attributed to St Hilary (fl. 4th century). The text is attested in a 7th-century Irish manuscript, the Bangor antiphoner, and became one of the most popular hymns in medieval Ireland.

Interpretationes nominum hebraicorum in Insular gospel prefaces
prose
list
Lists of Hebrew names, which ultimately derive from Jerome, appear in the prefatory texts of a number of Insular gospel books produced between the 7th and 9th centuries. An Insular, particularly Irish origin has been suggested for the transmission of this material.
Irish Liber de numeris (Pseudo-Isidore)
prose
Pseudo-IsidorePseudo-Isidore
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A Latin, likely Hiberno-Latin, collection of miscellaneous material organised according to their relevance to certain numerical subjects (e.g. the five senses, ten windows of the soul, etc.)