3LS
MISCELLANEOUS. sCologne; 1474.
€ractatu£ copogititg g ^eucrcnbu magi^tru
no.ijtru $j)agi£tru y oljamie tre fafirica ortiini.a fratru
minorst gacre pagine pfcso'ore famo£is£tmu pari£iu£
in pfati ortiiniO gcosa rcgente £up tieciaracone ^ntml-
gentiaru cocesoaru p animafj$ in purgatorio .
Tliere are 38 lines below; but a full page contains 43 lines. On
the reverse of the second leaf, commences a treatise of Nicolaus
Richardus upon tlie same subject. On tlie recto of the 6'th leaf we
read
d&CQuitur re^oiutio ^umme ^sntfjonini arcjju
ejpijsscopi ssorentini.
which concludes on the reverse of the same leaf, at the 27th line.
Then follow three small tracts, which have not been before described.
The first lias this prefix :
dSequutur au&ameta cofcsso2s
The second tract is thus entitled :
^etjuitur mofcu£ fcigtrifmetii afcso'ionalia pttt t brfie
To tlie thii d and last tract is the ensuing prefix :
s orrna afi^osutioni^
whicli latter is the same, in substance, as the usual forms of the like
nature. In the whole, 8 leaves: without signatures, numerals, or
catchwords. This curious volume was purehased at the sale of a por-
tion of the late Bisliop of Ely’s Library; and during the life-time os
its former owner, I remember to have heard from him frequent
attestations of its singular curiosity. It is bound in russia.
692. Fasciculus Temporum. Printed hy Ther
Huernen. Cologne. 1474. Folio.
Although Panzer places this edition, in his list of impressions of this
work, as the second in chronological order — that of Goetz de Sletzst,
of 1474, being the first—yet, at vol. i. p. 277, n°. 19, he calls it
Editio Originalis : and so it seems to be considered by SeemiLler.
MISCELLANEOUS. sCologne; 1474.
€ractatu£ copogititg g ^eucrcnbu magi^tru
no.ijtru $j)agi£tru y oljamie tre fafirica ortiini.a fratru
minorst gacre pagine pfcso'ore famo£is£tmu pari£iu£
in pfati ortiiniO gcosa rcgente £up tieciaracone ^ntml-
gentiaru cocesoaru p animafj$ in purgatorio .
Tliere are 38 lines below; but a full page contains 43 lines. On
the reverse of the second leaf, commences a treatise of Nicolaus
Richardus upon tlie same subject. On tlie recto of the 6'th leaf we
read
d&CQuitur re^oiutio ^umme ^sntfjonini arcjju
ejpijsscopi ssorentini.
which concludes on the reverse of the same leaf, at the 27th line.
Then follow three small tracts, which have not been before described.
The first lias this prefix :
dSequutur au&ameta cofcsso2s
The second tract is thus entitled :
^etjuitur mofcu£ fcigtrifmetii afcso'ionalia pttt t brfie
To tlie thii d and last tract is the ensuing prefix :
s orrna afi^osutioni^
whicli latter is the same, in substance, as the usual forms of the like
nature. In the whole, 8 leaves: without signatures, numerals, or
catchwords. This curious volume was purehased at the sale of a por-
tion of the late Bisliop of Ely’s Library; and during the life-time os
its former owner, I remember to have heard from him frequent
attestations of its singular curiosity. It is bound in russia.
692. Fasciculus Temporum. Printed hy Ther
Huernen. Cologne. 1474. Folio.
Although Panzer places this edition, in his list of impressions of this
work, as the second in chronological order — that of Goetz de Sletzst,
of 1474, being the first—yet, at vol. i. p. 277, n°. 19, he calls it
Editio Originalis : and so it seems to be considered by SeemiLler.