Manuscripts
Manuscript:
Paris, Bibliothèque Mazarine, MS 1711
No catalogue entry available
Poulin, Joseph-Claude, “Liber iste vocatur Vita Sansonis: un légendier factice du XII e siècle constitué de livrets hagiographiques”, Analecta Bollandiana 117 (1999): 133–150.  
abstract:
A 12th-century index (Paris, Bibl. Mazarine 1708, fol. 27) reveals the existence and arrangement of a factitious collection of Vitae containing a number of hagiographic quires copied separately in the 10th-11th centuries; in the 14th century or earlier this collection was dismembered and six of its parts were redistributed between two manuscripts (Mazarine 1708 and 1711). The criteria for recognizing such quires are discussed as well as the consequences of this editorial practice for the circulation of hagiographic works

Results for Paris (274)

Carolingian manuscript containing materials relating to Latin grammar.

  • s. viii/ix
Not yet published.

Transcript of John Lynch’s De praesulibus Hiberniae from Paris, Bibliothèque Mazarine, MS 1869.

  • s. xvi4/4/xvii1/4
  • Paris, Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal, MS 153
  • Paris, Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal, MS 943/ff. 1-78
  • Paris, Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal, MS 3516
Not yet published.
  • s. xviiiex
Not yet published.
  • s. xviii2
  • Paris, Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal, MS FR 6565

Manuscript (middle of the 14th century) commissioned by Jean Trisse for the Carmelite convent of Nîmes, of which he was a friar, and copied in Paris by Henri Dahelou, a Breton clerk of the diocese of Quimper. It contains a number of works of Carmelite interest, including some composed by Jean Trisse. The first explicit in the manuscript is followed by a Middle Breton proverb.

  • 1360-c.1362
  • Henri Dahelou