Manuscripts
Manuscript:
Klagenfurt, Kärntner Landesarchiv, Geschichtsverein, MS 12/31
No catalogue entry available
Dorfbauer, Lukas J., and Roger Gryson, “Ein Fragment eines unbekannten Apokalypse-Kommentars aus hiberno-lateinischer Tradition / Un nouveau fragment hiberno-latin sur l'Apocalypse”, Revue Bénédictine 129:1 (2019): 109–142.  
abstract:
A Carolingian manuscript fragment, preserved in the Kärntner Landesarchiv in Klagenfurt, contains remnants of an unknown commentary on Revelation. The present article offers a paleographical description of the fragment, a full discussion and an edition of the text. It is demonstrated that the fragme[n]tary work depends on a lost Hiberno-Latin commentary from the first half of the 8th century which was also used in the Pauca problesmata de enigmatibus ex tomis canonicis, in the exegetical compilation on the bible by Theodulf of Orléans, and in a gloss preserved in a Breton manuscript, and which itself made use of the commentary on Revelation by Tyconius. Thus, the fragment from Klagenfurt is of importance for our knowledge of the exegesis of Revelation in the early middle ages.

Results for G (312)
  • Amsterdam, University Library, MS xv G 1
  • Bangor, University Library, MS Gwyneddon 3
  • Belfast, Central Library, MS Gaelic 15
  • Belfast, Central Library, MS Gaelic 25

Paper manuscript compiled for Robert Shipboy MacAdam in the middle of the 19th century, containing a substantial, alphabetically arranged collection of materials made in preparation for an English–(Ulster) Irish dictionary. The project was undertaken by MacAdam, who worked together with Aodh Mac Domhnaill, a native speaker from County Meath. The manuscript consists of 23 (port)folios, lacking letter F and the beginning of G, and numbers around 1145 pages. The dictionary remained unpublished.

  • 1842 x 1856
  • Belfast, Queen's University Library, MS Gaelic 18
  • Belfast, St. Malachy's College, O'Laverty Library, MS Gaelic 11
  • Broken book of Giolla na Naomh Mac Áedhagáin (lost)
  • Cambridge, Gonville and Caius College, MS 249