Manuscripts
Manuscript:
Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 4126 = Poppleton manuscript
  • s. xiiiex + s. xiv3/4
Broun, Dauvit, “The church of St Andrews and its foundation legend in the early twelfth century: recovering the full text of version A of the foundation legend”, in: Simon Taylor (ed.), Kings, clerics and chronicles in Scotland, 500–1297: essays in honour of Marjorie Ogilvie Anderson on the occasion of her ninetieth birthday, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2000. 108–114.
Friedman, John Block, Northern English books, owners, and makers in the late Middle Ages, Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1995.  
Contents: 1. Northern book-owning men and women: evidence from wills and extant manuscripts -- 2. Northern professional scribes and scribe families -- 3. Color and the archaizing style -- 4. The interlace and mask medallion style -- 5. ‘Hermits painted at the front’: images of popular piety in the north -- 6. Three northern magnates as book patrons: John Newton, Thomas Langley, Thomas Rotherham, and their manuscripts -- App. A. The Pigment folium --App. B. A handlist of extant northern manuscripts -- App. C. Book ownership in the north: a census from wills.
Hudson, Benjamin T., “Elech and the Scots in Strathclyde”, Scottish Gaelic Studies 15 (1988): 145–149.
Anderson, Marjorie Ogilvie, “The Scottish materials in the Paris manuscript, Bib. nat., latin 4126”, The Scottish Historical Review 28:1 (April, 1949): 31–42.
Hammer, Jacob, “A commentary on the Prophetia Merlini (Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia regum Britanniae, Book VII) [part 1]”, Speculum 10:1 (January, 1935): 3–30.

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