Manuscripts
Manuscript:
Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 7491
No catalogue entry available
Conduché, Cécile, Liber de verbo: e codice Parisiensi 7491, Corpus Christianorum, Continuatio Mediaevalis, 40E, Turnhout: Brepols, 2018.  
Editio princeps of the grammatical treatise De verbo in BNF MS 7491, f. 89r ff.
abstract:

Il s'agit de la premiere edition imprimee d'un traite sur le verbe latin compose probablement au cours du 8e siecle. Ce texte, d'auteur anonyme, nous est connu par un unique manuscrit originaire de la France du nord, Paris, BnF latin 7491. Ce traite complete notre connaissance d'un groupe de grammaires latines (Ars ambrosiana, Anonymus ad Cuimnanum, Malsachanus) liees aux milieux lettres irlandais a l'oree de la renaissance carolingienne. L'edition de ce traite est essentielle pour comprendre l'organisation et le fonctionnement de la constellation d'opuscules scolaires qui a constitue la base linguistique le support concret de la renovatio studiorum carolingienne.

Löfstedt, Bengt, “Zur Grammatik in Paris, Bibl. nat. MS lat. 7491”, Peritia 12 (1998): 95–97.  
abstract:
Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, MS. lat. 7491, contains a Latin grammatical tract with close affinities to the texts discussed in Der hibernolateinische Grammatiker, Malsachanus and in the well-known Expossitio Latinitatis of the Anonymus ad Cuimnanum (ed. by Bischoff and Löfstedt in 1992). Many of the unusual linguistic forms of the previously discussed texts are here confirmed, and the Paris tract identified as another source for the study of Hiberno-Latin grammatical doctrine in the early middle ages.

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