[Collection of contemporary Latin manuscripts] ca. 1418?-ca. 1513.

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[Collection of contemporary Latin manuscripts] ca. 1418?-ca. 1513.

Beginning on the verso of leaf i8 of the preceding printed work (LCCN 2007567144) are a series of mss. in various hands and differing inks. The hands are primarily cursive; the inks are black, (faded to?) brown, and red. The texts include an alphabetical listing of materials in the the Carmelites's Constitutions, 1499, with definitions and textual citations; adaptations of various statutes; ordinances following the Brussels statutes of 1418; provincial statutes of Rottenburg (Germany) of 1484; a list of popes and their bulls; and a copy of a papal bull. Some pages are blank; there are also several slips with additional mss. annotation bound in.

ca. 700 p. ; 17 cm.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7179533

Library of Congress

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

Otto Vollbehr Collection (Library of Congress)

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Catholic Church

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During much of Doctor JoseĢ Gaspar de Francia's dictatorship (1814-1840), Paraguay was without a bishop and the church was harrassed. From the description of Libro de providencias, ordenes, y autos : por Dn. Juan Antonio Riveras, cura rector de la parrequial de la Villeta : manuscript, 1804-1857. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 612746619 An antiphonary is a book containing sacred vocal music, both the antiphons of the breviary, and the musical notes. An antiphon it...

Carmelites

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The Order of Our Lady of Mount Carmel was founded in Palestine around 1154 by St. Berthold (d. about 1195) but it has claimed (without authentic documentation) continuity with hermits settled on Mount Carmel in earlier times, and even to be a direct descendant of Elijah and the "sons of the prophets" (cf. 2 Kgs. 2). The primitive rule as laid down in 1209 by Albert of Vercelli, Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, was one of extreme asceticism and solitude. Honorius III approved the definitive rule in ...