#avicenna/magnus
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aurorawest · 2 years ago
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Title: Daydreams and Pretty Lies Author:@aurorawest​​ Fandom: Some Desperate Glory Rating: T Relationships: Avicenna/Magnus Major Archive Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Word Count: 2.9k Summary: Avi wants to keep making gardens for Magnus even though Magnus doesn't need him for that anymore.
Read it here!
Magnus came closer. Avi looked up at him. He was so fucking tall. Huge. To say Avi had wanted to climb him like a tree for months now was the obvious joke. Realizing you were queer and that you had a thing for men who could crush your head between their thighs was rough on Gaia. So many massive warbreed guys, so few people who didn’t want to beat him up for his sexuality. “I was looking for you, so I guess, yeah.” There was a little smile on Magnus’s face, not shy, not uncertain, exactly, but like he was holding the full force of it in reserve just in case Avi was in a mood. Which. Fuck. Avi didn’t want to be in a mood with Magnus.
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Characters, book, and author names under the cut
Magnus Marston/Avicenna - Some Desperate Glory by Emily Tesh
Will Kempen/James St Clair - Dark Rise series by C.S. Pacat
Norma/Badyah - Deadendia by Hamish Steele
Lula Talisola/Zeen Mrala - Midnight Horizon by Daniel José Older
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paintedbirds-worldbuilding · 4 months ago
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(Human) Spaceship Captain Naming Scheme
I only have one captain so far, but my naming scheme here is more thought out and restrictive. A Spaceship Captain's name should pull from two Greek/Roman/European/Islamic individuals who wrote on Alchemy. My setting is based on the works of Psuedo-Geber, Avicenna, and Albertus Magnus, and inherent in the European and Islamic alchemy I am pulling from, is the works of the Greeks, such as Plato and Aristotle, both of whom's ideas show up extensively in European Alchemy in individuals like Albertus Magnus, Paulus of Taranto, ect..
Currently, the only named captain is also specifically a mentor and mentee (Giles of Rome, Thomas Aquinas)
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jamesgraybooksellerworld · 6 months ago
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3 books on women's health
Today I offer 3 books which deal with female topics, procreation, psychology, child bearing and raising Claude Quillet‘s poem is exceedingly stylish and yet quite informative, very, rarely found with all five of the engravings. pseudo Albertus Magnus who was strongly influenced by Avicenna’s [Ibn-Sina (980-1037)] connects all stages of female sexual generation with the early medieval concept of…
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tomirida · 7 months ago
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Abu Nasr Muhammad al-Farabi (c. 870 – 14 December 950–12 January 951), known in the Latin West as Alpharabius, was an early Islamic philosopher and music theorist. He has been designated as "Father of Islamic Neoplatonism", and the "Founder of Islamic Political Philosophy".
Al-Farabi is credited as the first Muslim who presented philosophy as a coherent system in the Islamic world, and created a philosophical system of his own, which developed a philosophical system that went far beyond the scholastic interests of his Greco-Roman Neoplatonism and Syriac Aristotelian precursors. That he was more than a pioneer in Islamic philosophy, can be deduced from the habit of later writers calling him the "Second Master", with Aristotle as the first.
Al-Farabi's impact on philosophy is undeniable, to name a few, Yahya ibn Adi, Abu Sulayman Sijistani, Abu al-Hassan al-Amiri, and Abu Hayyan al-Tawhidi; Avicenna, Suhrawardi, and Mulla Sadra; Avempace, Ibn Tufail, and Averroes; Maimonides, Albertus Magnus, and Leo Strauss. He was known in the Latin West, as well as the Islamic world.
Wikipedia: al-Farabi
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KAZAKHSTAN - rare commemorative 5000 Tenge note.
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noosphe-re · 6 years ago
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It is only rather recently that science has begun to make peace with its magical roots. Until a few decades ago, it was common for histories of science either to commence decorously with Copernicus's heliocentric theory or to laud the rationalism of Aristotelian antiquity and then to leap across the Middle Ages as an age of ignorance and superstition. One could, with care and diligence, find occasional things to praise in the works of Avicenna, William of Ockham, Albertus Magnus, and Roger Bacon, but these sparse gems had to be thoroughly dusted down and scraped clean of unsightly accretions before being inserted into the corners of a frame fashioned in a much later period.
Philip Ball
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anastpaul · 8 years ago
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Saint of the Day – 15 November – St ALBERTUS MAGNUS/Albert the Great O.P. (1200-1280) Doctor of the Church – Doctor universalis (Universal Doctor)- Dominican Friar, Priest, Bishop, Theologian, Scientist, Philospher, Teacher, Writer.   Born in c 1200 at Lauingen an der Donau, Swabia (part of modern Germany) – 15 November 1280 at Cologne, Prussia (part of modern Germany) of natural causes.   Patronages – • medical technicians• natural sciences• philosophers• schoolchildren• scientists (proclaimed on 13 August 1948 by Pope Pius XII)• students• theology students.    St Albert was Beatified in 1622 by Pope Gregory XV and Canonised and created a Doctor of the Church in 1931 by Pope Pius XI.   St Albert was known during his lifetime as Doctor universalis and Doctor expertus and, late in his life, the sobriquet Magnus was appended to his name. Scholars have referred to him as the greatest German philosopher and theologian of the Middle Ages.
Born around 1206 in Launingen, Germany, Albert was educated as a young man at the University of Padua, and joined the Dominican Order in 1223.   He spent the following years engaged in various studies and teaching assignments in several German cities, most prominently Cologne.   He left Cologne for the University of Paris in 1245.
It was there that one of his students, a brilliant if quiet and heavy-set young man was so impressed by him that he later accompanied him back to Cologne and later became his most famous pupil!   Albert said of his student, St Thomas Aquinas, after St. Thomas’ remarkable explanation of a difficult treatise, “We call this young man a dumb ox but one day his bellowing in his teaching will be heard throughout the world.”
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Not that St Albert wasn’t an intellectual heavyweight in his own right.   He was known as Albertus Magnus (Albert the Great).   St Albert can truly be called a Renaissance man, a century before the Renaissance actually began!   This Dominican friar and bishop was also known for his scholarly contributions to the sciences and philosophy as well as theology.   The publication of his complete writings in Paris in 1899 came to 38 volumes and covered his extensive knowledge of such diverse subjects as theology, botany, astronomy, mineralogy, alchemy (the forerunner of chemistry), justice and law among others!   He was the first to comment on virtually all of the writings of Aristotle, thus making them accessible to wider academic debate.   The study of Aristotle brought him to study and comment on the teachings of Muslim academics, notably Avicenna and Averroes and this would bring him into the heart of academic debate.
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In 1254 Albert was made provincial of the Dominican Order and fulfilled the duties of the office with great care and efficiency.   During his tenure he publicly defended the Dominicans against attacks by the secular and regular faculty of the University of Paris, commented on John the Evangelist and answered what he perceived as errors of the Islamic philosopher Averroes.
In 1259 he took part in the General Chapter of the Dominicans at Valenciennes together with Thomas Aquinas, masters Bonushomo Britto, Florentius, and Peter (later Pope Innocent V) establishing a ratio studiorum or program of studies for the Dominicans that featured the study of philosophy as an innovation for those not sufficiently trained to study theology.   This innovation initiated the tradition of Dominican scholastic philosophy put into practice, for example, in 1265 at the Order’s studium provinciale at the convent of Santa Sabina in Rome, out of which would develop the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, the “Angelicum”
In 1260 Pope Alexander IV made him bishop of Regensburg, an office from which he resigned after three years.   During the exercise of his duties he enhanced his reputation for humility by refusing to ride a horse, in accord with the dictates of the Order, instead traversing his huge diocese on foot.   This earned him the affectionate sobriquet “boots the Bishop” from his parishioners.   In 1263 Pope Urban IV relieved him of the duties of bishop and asked him to preach the eighth Crusade in German-speaking countries.  After this, he was especially known for acting as a mediator between conflicting parties.   In Cologne he is not only known for being the founder of Germany’s oldest university there but also for “the big verdict” (der Große Schied) of 1258, which brought an end to the conflict between the citizens of Cologne and the archbishop.   Among the last of his labours was the defense of the orthodoxy of his former pupil, Thomas Aquinas, whose death in 1274 grieved Albert (the story that he travelled to Paris in person to defend the teachings of Aquinas can not be confirmed).
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After suffering a collapse of health in 1278, he died on 15 November 1280, in the Dominican convent in Cologne, Germany.   Since then 15 November 1954, his relics are in a Roman sarcophagus in the crypt of the Dominican St Andreas Church in Cologne. Although his body was discovered to be incorrupt at the first exhumation three years after his death, at the exhumation in 1483 only a skeleton remained.
Pope Pius XI, when he canonised him in 1931, said he had “that rare and divine gift, scientific instinct, in the highest degree.”   Like St Thomas, he was very much influenced by Aristotle in seeing the compatibility of natural sciences and philosophy with theology. Also like his star pupil, he rightly saw God’s hand behind all creation!
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(via AnaStpaul – Breathing Catholic)
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jbpiggin · 6 years ago
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Fortuna
The fortunes of  some manuscripts take them to the very brink of destruction, as we see with a Neapolitan part-bible, Vat.lat.8183, digitized in the past week by the Vatican Library. The miniaturist is believed to have been Matteo Planisio. This codex containing Prophets and Psalms once contained gorgeous colourful 14th-century miniatures, but many were snipped out by a "collector". Check it out, because the vandal did not get them all.
This week 26 manuscripts were scanned and put online for all the world to enjoy. My list:
Ross.118 (Upgraded to HQ), an exquisite book of hours in mint condition 
Ross.301,
Vat.gr.2650, from Byzantine southern Italy, a copy of a seventh-century legal deed
Vat.lat.2399,
Vat.lat.2400,
Vat.lat.2482 (Upgraded to HQ), Avicenna, Eugubinus de Montecatino, Albertus Magnus and Petrus de Abano in a 300-folio, mainly medical anthology from the 15th century: see eTK. There's a librarian's handy table of contents at the front.
Vat.lat.2503,
Vat.lat.2505,
Vat.lat.2513,
Vat.lat.3500 (Upgraded to HQ),
Vat.lat.4710,
Vat.lat.4711 (Upgraded to HQ), with an Aristotle commentary
Vat.lat.4760.pt.1,
Vat.lat.4764,
Vat.lat.4791 (Upgraded to HQ),
Vat.lat.4792,
Vat.lat.4813,
Vat.lat.4816,
Vat.lat.4837,
Vat.lat.4841,
Vat.lat.4842,
Vat.lat.4846 (Upgraded to HQ),
Vat.lat.4848,
Vat.lat.4860,
Vat.lat.4871 (Upgraded to HQ), philosophical, with a text by Franciscus de Marchia on univocal concepts
Vat.lat.8183, Italian part bible which begins with Isaiah (above)
This is Piggin's Unofficial List number 207. Thanks to @gundormr for harvesting. If you have corrections or additions, please use the comments box below. Follow me on Twitter (@JBPiggin) for news of more additions to DigiVatLib.
via Blogger http://bit.ly/2LjpEAB
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Aristotelianism
Aristotelianism (/ˌærᵻstəˈtiːliənᵻzəm/ ARR-i-stə-TEE-li-ə-niz-əm) is a tradition of philosophy that takes its defining inspiration from the work of Aristotle. The works of Aristotle were initially defended by the members of the Peripatetic school, and, later on, by the Neoplatonists, who produced many commentaries on Aristotle's writings. In the Islamic world, the works of Aristotle were translated into Arabic, and under philosophers such as Al-Kindi, Al-Farabi, Avicenna, and Averroes, Aristotelianism became a major part of early Islamic philosophy. Moses Maimonides adopted Aristotelianism from the Islamic scholars and based his famous Guide for the Perplexed on it; and that became the basis of Jewish Scholastic Philosophy. Although some knowledge of Aristotle's logical works was known to western Europe, it wasn't until the Latin translations of the 12th century that the works of Aristotle and his Arabic commentators became widely available. Scholars such as Albertus Magnus and Thomas Aquinas interpreted and systematized Aristotle's works in accordance with Christian theology. After retreating under criticism from modern natural philosophers, the distinctively Aristotelian idea of teleology was transmitted through Wolff and Kant to Hegel, who applied it to history as a totality. Although this project was criticized by Trendelenburg and Brentano as non-Aristotelian, Hegel's influence is now often said to be responsible for an important Aristotelian influence upon Marx. Postmodernists, in contrast, reject Aristotelianism's claim to reveal important theoretical truths. In this, they follow Heidegger's critique of Aristotle as the greatest source of the entire tradition of Western philosophy. Recent Aristotelian ethical and 'practical' philosophy, such as that of Gadamer and McDowell, is often premissed upon a rejection of Aristotelianism's traditional metaphysical or theoretical philosophy. From this viewpoint, the early modern tradition of political republicanism, which views the res publica, public sphere or state as constituted by its citizens' virtuous activity, can appear thoroughly Aristotelian. The most famous contemporary Aristotelian philosopher is Alasdair MacIntyre. Especially famous for helping to revive virtue ethics in his book After Virtue, MacIntyre revises Aristotelianism with the argument that the highest temporal goods, which are internal to human beings, are actualized through participation in social practices. He juxtaposes Aristotelianism with the managerial institutions of capitalism and its state, and with rival traditions — including the philosophies of Hume and Nietzsche — that reject Aristotle's idea of essentially human goods and virtues and instead legitimate capitalism. Therefore, on MacIntyre's account, Aristotelianism is not identical with Western philosophy as a whole; rather, it is "the best theory so far, [including] the best theory so far about what makes a particular theory the best one." Politically and socially, it has been characterized as a newly 'revolutionary Aristotelianism'. This may be contrasted with the more conventional, apolitical and effectively conservative uses of Aristotle by, for example, Gadamer and McDowell. Other important contemporary Aristotelian theorists include Fred D. Miller, Jr. in politics and Rosalind Hursthouse in ethics. More details Android, Windows
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Book names + authors under the cut
Cassandra Igarashi/Laura Wilson- The Wicked + The Divine by Kieron Gillen & Jamie McKelvie
Avicenna "Avi"/Magnus Marston- Some Desperate Glory by Emily Tesh
Salim/The Jinn- American Gods by Neil Gaiman
Zhao Yunlan/Shen Wei- Guardian/Zhen Hun by Priest
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jbpiggin · 8 years ago
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Science Manuscripts at Vatican
Medieval (and earlier) science dominates the recent releases by the Bibliotheca Palatina project in Heidelberg, Germany. The old ducal and university library at Heidelberg was confiscated and given to the pope. The whole stock of books is now being reconstituted both for the DigiVatiLib project and as a standalone online digital resource in Heidelberg that is especially interesting for those studying the history of medicine and alchemy. What caught my eye in this lot was an elaborate book-length horoscope prepared by astrologers and geomancers for one Erasmus von Minckwitz, chancellor of the kingdom of Saxony in the mid 16th century.
Although he had obtained a doctorate in law at Padua, Erasmus was clearly more susceptible to his stars than to science. Below is the full list, compiled from the library's RSS feed. Most of these manuscripts are late medieval, but note the 11th century Epistulae of Symmachus, Pal.lat.1576. Where codices are mentioned in the catalog of incipits by Lynn Thorndike and Pearl Kibre, I have added the incipit and a link to the electronic Thorndike-Kibre (eTK).
Pal. lat. 56 Questo e il santo vangelio (14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1124 Arcolani, Giovanni; Johannes Michael : Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Ferrara, 1460/61) :
Pal. lat. 1194 Bartholomaeus/ Galeatus de Sancta Sophia; Antonius Guainerius; Guilhelmus de Brescia; Bartholomaeus de Montagnana: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Italien (Padua?), Mitte 15. Jh.) : eTK, Tibi amoris gratia mi Antoni Maglane.
Pal. lat. 1224 Hermannus; Johannes de Toleto; Constantinus ; Andromachus: Medizinischer Sammelband (Ostmitteldeutschland, 15. Jh. ; Ende 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1225 Knab, Erhardus; Walter Agilon; Concellarius Montespessulani; Johannes ; Petrus ; Johannes de Burgundia; Mundinus; Gentilis ; Petrus Bononiensis: Medizinischer Sammelband (Heidelberg (I) , Italien (II), 1456-1462 ; um 1408) : eTK, Actus curativus pestis est in tribus (15c), by Petrus de Tussignano
Pal. lat. 1228 Bartholomaeus de Montagnana; Bernardus : Ambrosius Prechtl Collectanea (Regensburg, ca. 1560) : eTK, Cautele medicorum in iudicando urinas, by Bartholomaeus de Montagnana ?
Pal. lat. 1230 Gentilis ; Galenus: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Italien, 2. Hälfte 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1249 Bd. 1 Leopoldus de Austria; Johannes ; Alexander ; Hermannus Stilus de Norchem; Johannes ; Almansor astrologus; Thetel; Lullus, Raimundus; u.a.: Sammelhandschrift zum Quadrivium (Paris, 14. Jh. (um 1368)) :
Pal. lat. 1249 Bd. 2 Leopoldus de Austria; Johannes ; Alexander ; Hermannus Stilus de Norchem; Johannes ; Almansor astrologus; Thetel; Lullus, Raimundus; u.a.: Sammelhandschrift zum Quadrivium (Paris, 14. Jh. (um 1368)) :
Pal. lat. 1252 Galenus; Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-; Avicenna; Conradus : Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Deutschland, 1. Hälfte 15. Jh.) : eTK, Si dormitatis inter medios cleros penne columbe; De commendatione cler.
Pal. lat. 1254 Hippocrates; Benevenutus : Collectanea practicae medicinalis, Vol. III (Süddeutschland, um 1400) :
Pal. lat. 1255 Godefridus; Gerardus de Monte Pessulano; Johannes de Sancto Amando; Petrus Musandinus: Collectanea practicae medicinalis, Vol. I (Süddeutschland, um 1400) :
Pal. lat. 1256 Matthaeus ; Bartholomaeus Pictaviensis; Richardus ; Johannes de Sancto Amando; Gualterus Agilon; Gerardus de Monte Pessulano; Petrus Hispanus: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Ostmitteldeutschland, 1. Hälfte 15. Jh.) : eTK, Abesa (Abela?) id est agrimonia latinus arabicus acacia
Pal. lat. 1260 Gentilis ; Thomas de Garbo; Marsilius de Sancta Sophia; Petrus ; Mesue Minor; Aegidius Corbolensis; Isrāʾīlī, Isḥāq Ibn-Sulaimān /al-; Lanfrancus ; u.a.: Zusammengesetzte Handschrift (Italien (I) , Süddeutschland (II) , Montpellier (III), Anfang 15. Jh. ; 1363 (III)) : eTK, Alphita farina ordei idem (15c); .sp Presentis negotii propositum est tractare
Pal. lat. 1261 Ferrarius de Gradibus, Johannes Matthaeus; Isrāʾīlī, Isḥāq Ibn-Sulaimān /al-; Avicenna; Gerardus de Solo; u.a.: Zusammengesetzte Handschrift (Hedelberg (I) , Montpellier (II), 15. Jh. (1476) ; 2. Hälfte 14. Jh. (II)) : eTK, Ad capitulum octavum huius libri primo veniamus (15c), by Petrus Blancus
Pal. lat. 1264 Knab, Erhardus; Gerhard Brant; Nicolaus Salernitanus; Ps.-Albertus Magnus; Gentilis ; u.a.: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Heidelberg, 1450-1455) : eTK,
Pal. lat. 1265 Bernardus Alberti; Antonius de Scarpariis; Maimonides, Moses; Bernardus ; Arnoldus ; Guido de Chauliaco; Petrus ; u.a.: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Padua und Süddeutschland, 1. Viertel 15. Jh.) : eTK , Anno domini 1345 ? magna erat pestilentia et duravit (15c)
Pal. lat. 1266 Marsilius de Sancta Sophia; Bernardus : Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Norditalien, Anfang 15. Jh. (1402)) :
Pal. lat. 1267 Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-; Elias de Assissi: Alchemistische Sammelhandschrift (Frankreich, 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1269 Magenbuch, Johannes: Ärztliche Verordnungen (Nürnberg, 1525-1528) :
Pal. lat. 1270 Receptarium (Heidelberg, 2. Hälfte 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1277 Thessalus ; Ps.-Alexander Magnus: Herbarium pictum (Süddeutschland, 2. Hälfte 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1278 Algafiqui; Algizar; Kiranides; Alexius Africanus; Johannes Paulinus: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (2. Drittel 15. Jh.) : eTK; Non inveni aliquem de antiquis aut modernis (15c); .ix1 In dei nomine verba Abicrasar
Pal. lat. 1279 Galeatius de Sancta Sophia; Kiranides; u.a.: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Speyer, 3. Viertel 15. Jh. (1462,1468)) : eTK, Abrotanum est planta plures habens ramusculos (1468), by Sancta Sophia, Galeatius de
Pal. lat. 1280 Isrāʾīlī, Isḥāq Ibn-Sulaimān /al-; Ibn Gazla; Bartholomaeus : Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1281 Aegidius Corbolensis; Gualterus Agilon; Bartholomaeus ; u.a.: Zusammengesetzte Handschrift (Deutschland (II) , Frankreich (III), 14. Jh. ; 13./14. Jh. ; 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1282 Baverius de Baveriis: Practica medicinae (Bologna, 1469) : eTK, Antequam accedamus ad curam doloris capitis (1469), by Baverius de Baveriis
Pal. lat. 1283 Ambrosius Prechtl: Sammlung lateinischer und deutscher Rezepte, Experimente und Kuren (Amberg, letztes Drittel 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1284 Guilhelmus Placentinus; Arnoldus ; Jacobus de Sanatis; Nicolaus de Sancta Sophia; Innocentius ; Thaddaeus; Bernardus : Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Mitte 15. Jh.) : eTK, Medicina est scientia cognoscendi dispositiones (14c-15c); .sp Introductiones appellantur indebite que prima
Pal. lat. 1285 Guilhelmus de Varignana: Practica Sybona (Vol. I) (Augsburg, 1471) : eTK, Exsurge domine deus meus in dextra tua forti et infinita (15c)
Pal. lat. 1286 Guilhelmus de Varignana: Practica Sybona (Vol. II) (Augsburg, nach 1471) : eTK, Exsurge domine deus meus in dextra tua forti et infinita
Pal. lat. 1287 Guilhelmus de Saliceto Placentinus: Practica (15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1288 Johannes Stocker: Liber medicinalis (Süddeutschland, 1. Hälfte 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1289 Johannes des Gaddesden: Rosa anglica medicinae (Süddeutschland, 1368) : eTK In viridario voluptatis et iocunditatis in mense (1368), by John of Gaddesden
Pal. lat. 1290 Johannes des Gaddesden: Rosa anglica medicinae (Wien (?), 1. Hälfte 15. Jh.) : eTK, In viridario voluptatis et iocunditatis in mense (1365), by John of Gaddesden
Pal. lat. 1291 Mesue Minor; Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-; Avicenna: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (15. Jh. (1425)) :
Pal. lat. 1292 Matthaeus Silvaticus: Opus pandectarum medicinae II (15. Jh. (1472)) : eTK, A autem est mentastrum autem est species camphore (1472); Practica medicinalis
Pal. lat. 1293 Collectanea practicae medicinalis, Vol. II (Süddeutschland, um 1400) :
Pal. lat. 1294 Bernardus ; u.a.: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Süddeutschland, 15. Jh. (1452)) :
Pal. lat. 1295 Antonius de Gradi; Saladinus de Esculo; Petrus ; Thomas de Garbo; Bartholomaeus de Montagnana; Thaddaeus Alderotti; Mathaeus de Verona; Antonius Cermisonus; u.a.: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Padua, ca. 1464) :
Pal. lat. 1296 Bartholomaeus de Sancta Sophia: Commentum in nonum Almansoris Rasis (Heidelberg, 1483) :
Pal. lat. 1297 Johannes Stocker: Liber medicinalis (Süddeutschland, 16. Jh. (1535)) :
Pal. lat. 1298 Mundinus ; Avicenna; Maimonides, Moses; Mesue Senior; Arnoldus ; Galenus: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Padua, 15. Jh. (1464)) : eTK, Congregavi in divisionibus egritudinum et ostendi curas (15c); .st Inquit Rasis cum in civitate
Pal. lat. 1299 Mundinus ; Dinus de Florentia; Guilhelmus de Saliceto; Guido de Chauliaco: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Wien, Anfang 15. Jh. (1413-1414)) :
Pal. lat. 1300 Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-: Libri XIII-XVII (Deutschland, 1. Hälfte 15. Jh.) : eTK, De libro signorum dixit squivros ? est apostema inflatum et durum (15c); .ix1 Dixit apostema appellatum squivros
Pal. lat. 1301 Nicolaus Falcutius: Sermones medicinales (Deutschland, 2. Hälfte 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1302 Avicenna; Knab, Erhardus; u.a.: Canon III, fen 10. 11. 13: Excerpta de morbis pectoris, cordis stomachique cum receptis et curis quorundam auctorum collecta ab Erhardo Knab (Heidelberg, 2. Drittel 15. Jh.) : eTK, Collum est membrum intraiacens inter faciem; Anatomia stomachi
Pal. lat. 1303 Antonius de Gradi; Zacharias de Feltris; Platina, Bartholomaeus: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Heidelberg, 15. Jh. (1476)) :
Pal. lat. 1305 Lanfrancus ; Rolandus de Parma; Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-; Mundinus ; Johannitius; u.a.: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Süddeutschland, 15. Jh. (1422)) :
Pal. lat. 1306 Guilhelmus de Saliceto; Theodericus de Cervia: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Heidelberg, Mitte 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1307 Guilhelmus de Saliceto; Gentilis ; Johannes : Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Padua, 15. Jh. (1403)) :
Pal. lat. 1308 Guilhelmus de Saliceto; Dinus del Garbo: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Italien, 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1309 Guilhelmus de Saliceto: Chirurgia I-V (15. Jh. (1407)) :
Pal. lat. 1311 Lanfrancus ; Ps.-Galenus: Sammelhandschrift (Padua, 1. Hälfte 15. Jh. (1431)) :
Pal. lat. 1312 Theodericus de Cervia: Practica chirurgiae I-III (Deutschland, Mitte 15. Jh. (1453)) :
Pal. lat. 1313 Theodericus de Cervia; Richard : Medizinisch-alchemistische Sammelhandschrift (Heidelberg, 1480-1490) :
Pal. lat. 1314 Bruno : Chirurgia magna I-II (Italien, 1. Hälfte 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1315 Bruno ; Galenus; Nicolaus Salernitanus; Odo : Zusammengesetzte Handschrift (Italien (I) , Frankreich (II) , Deutschland (III), 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1316 Guido de Chauliaco; Albertus ; Bartholomaeus de Montagnana; Hippokrates; Johannes ; Petrus Hispanus; Jacoby, Johann; Marsilius de Sancta Sophia: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Heidelberg, 15. Jh. (1451)) : eTK Ad faciendum ardens vinum in vase et ad faciendum flammam magnam (15c); Experimenta Alberti
Pal. lat. 1317 Guido de Chauliaco; Gualterus Agilon: Medizinischer Sammelband (Montpellier, 14. Jh. (1373)) :
Pal. lat. 1318 Rolandus de Parma; Nicolaus Salernitanus; Bartholomaeus; Matthaeus : Zusammengesetzte Handschrift (Italien (I) , Deutschland (III), 13./14. Jh. (I) ; 12./13. Jh. (II) ; 2. Hälfte 13. Jh. (III)) :
Pal. lat. 1319 Leonardus de Bertipaglia; Johannes de Tracia; Johannitius; Arnoldus ; Aegidius Corbolensis; Ibn-Māsawaih, Abū-Zakarīyā Yūḥannā; Widmann, Johannes; Johannes May: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Heidelberg, 1473-1498) : eTK, Causa egritudinis huius ut placuit Avicenne; De catarro
Pal. lat. 1320 Arnoldus ; Petrus de Nadilis; Bernardus Alberti; Gerardus de Solo; Jacoby, Johann; Raymundus de Moleriis; Benevenutus ; Galenus; u.a.: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Montpellier (?), Ende 14. Jh. (1384)) :
Pal. lat. 1321 Bruno ; Ortolf ; Bartholomaeus; Arnoldus ; Petrus Hispanus; u.a.: Zusammengesetzte Handschrift (Italien (I) , Südwestdeutschland (II) , Süddeutschland (III), 15. Jh. (I) ; 1425 (II) ; 14. Jh. (III)) : eTK Ad inveniendum signum nativitatis tue et quorumlibet hominum
Pal. lat. 1322 Guilhelmus de Saliceto; Nicolaus Salernitanus; Arnoldus ; Valascus de Taranta; Petrus : Medizinischer Sammelband, Handschrift und Inkunabel (Heidelberg, Ende 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1323 Galenus; Bruno ; Theodericus de Cervia; Avicenna; u.a.: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Süddeutschland, 15. Jh. (1407)) :
Pal. lat. 1325 Medizinischer Sammelband: Collectanea Ambrosii Prechtl (Regensburg (I), 1556-1560 (I) um 1500 (II)) :
Pal. lat. 1326 Albertus : De animalibus, libri IX-XXVI (Vol. II) (Paris (?), Mitte 14. Jh. (1346)) : eTK, Canis animal notum est de cuius diversitate multum (1346); Capituluum de cane et de equo multum et de aquila et falconibus...
Pal. lat. 1328 Hermes; Johannes ; Avicenna; Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-; Gaelnus; Kindī, ʿAbd-al-Masīḥ Ibn-Isḥāq /al-; u.a.: Alchemistische Sammelhandschrift (2. Hälfte 14. Jh.) : eTK, Accipe aceti acerrimi de vino distillato; Perfectum magisterium
Pal. lat. 1329 Khālid ibn Yazīd al-Umawī; Winandus ; Arisleus; Arnoldus ; Thomas Capellanus; Johannes Tetzenensis; u.a.: Alchemistische Sammelhandschrift (Schlesien, 1. Drittel 15. Jh. (1430)) : eTK Accipe in nomine domini de lapide minerali lb. i. et tere (15c)
Pal. lat. 1330 Archilaus; Albertus ; Hermes; Arnoldus ; Johannes ; u.a.: Alchemistische Sammelhandschrift (Italien, 15. Jh. (1463/64)) : eTK Accipe aluminis iameni et zucarini et lactis pecorini ana lib. iii (15c)
Pal. lat. 1331 Johannes de Tornamira; Arnoldus ; Bernardus Alberti; Gerardus de Solo; Stephanus Arlandi; Bernardus ; Magninus ; Zahrāwī, Ḫalaf Ibn-Abbās /az-; u.a.: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Südwestdeutschland, Anfang 15. Jh.) : eTK Cognoscuntur leprosi a quinque signis (15c); .ix1 Cognoscuntur leprosi a quinque modis
Pal. lat. 1332 Ps.-Thomas de Aquino; Arnoldus ; Hortulanus; Johannes Tetzenensis; Philo ; u.a.: Alchemistische Sammelhandschrift (Südwestdeutschland, 1. Hälfte 15. Jh.) : eTK A divina magnificentia emanavit donum (15c); .ix1 Non legitur a divina munificentia
Pal. lat. 1333 Johannes : De consideratione quintae essentiae seu de famulatu philosophiae (15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1335 Albertus ; Arnoldus ; Thaddaeus ; Magister Jacobus; Johannes ; u.a.: Alchemistische Sammelhandschrift (um 1400) : eTK, Aqua permanens coagulat argentum vivum (15c); .sp Distinctio secretorum sapientum in
Pal. lat. 1336 A. Candidus: De alchymia epistolae (Neuhausen bei Worms, 1570-1571) :
Pal. lat. 1338 Hieronymus Carazolus; Poll, Nicolaus: Medizinische Sammelhandschrift (Süddeutschland, 1. Drittel 16. Jh.) : eTK Dixit Morienus id translator legimus in historiis (14c); .ix1 Legimus in historiis veterum
Pal. lat. 1339 Geber; Hermes; Morienus; Rāzī, Muḥammad Ibn-Zakarīyā /ar-; Archelaus; Ps.-Avicenna; u.a.: Alchemistische Sammelhandschrift (Anfang 14. Jh.) : eTK, Accipe argenti vivi libras decem (15c); Liber congelationis argenti vivi
Pal. lat. 1374 Johannes de Lineriis; Nicolaus Mülhus: Tabulae astronomicae (Prag, 1407) :
Pal. lat. 1377 Petrus ; Philo ; Tideus; Alhazen; Jordanus ; Ibn ʿEzra, Avraham ben Mei̇r; Johannes ; Johannes ; Philippus de Caserta: Sammelband, Miscellanea (Italien , Niederlande , Frankreich , Deutschland, 15. ; 11./12. ; 14. Jh.) : eTK De tempestatum presagiis tractaturi a sole; .ix1 Purus oriens atque non fervens
Pal. lat. 1421 Nativität des Markgrafen Georg Friedrich von Brandenburg-Ansbach (Franken, Mitte 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1422 Nativität des kurfürstlichen Kanzlers Erasmus von Minckwitz (Süddeutschland, Mitte 16. Jh. (um 1547)) :
Pal. lat. 1426 Leowitz, Cyprian: Tabulae ad figuras caeli erigendas (Augsburg, Mitte 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1427 Leowitz, Cyprian: Tabulae motus lunae (Lauingen a.d. Donau, vor 1560) :
Pal. lat. 1428 Leowitz, Cyprian: Introductio tabularum novarum (Lauingen a.d. Donau, 1560) :
Pal. lat. 1429 Leowitz, Cyprian: Tabulae ascensionum Vol. III (Lauingen a.d. Donau, 1560) :
Pal. lat. 1431 Leowitz, Cyprian: Tabulae ascensionum Vol. I (Lauingen a.d. Donau, 1560) :
Pal. lat. 1432A Leowitz, Cyprian: Tabulae ascensionum Vol. II (Lauingen a.d. Donau, 1560) :
Pal. lat. 1432B Astrologische Kalender 1559 und 1560 (Augsburg/ Lauingen a.d. Donau, 1558/59) :
Pal. lat. 1433 Planetentafeln 1482-1606 (Augsburg, Mitte 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1434 Leowitz, Cyprian: Canon extrahendi arcum ecliptice verum ; Ratio partis proportionalis colligendae (Augsburg, Mitte 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1435 Omar; Albumasar; Hali Abenragel; Messahalla; Abraham Judaeus; Johannes Dank de Saxonia: Sammelhandschrift mit Inkunabeldruck (Süddeutschland, 15. Jh. (1473-1478)) : eTK Astrolabium ita construitur accipe rotulas; .ix1 Astrolabium sic construitur accipe rotulas
Pal. lat. 1437 Johannes de Erfordia; Alexander de Villae Dei; Johannes de Sacrobosco; Johannes de Polonia: Sammelband zum Komputus (Süddeutschland (I) , Ungarn (II), Drittes Drittel 15. Jh. (I) ; Ende 14. Jh. (II)) :
Pal. lat. 1440 Practica geomantiae (Deutschland, 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1441 Leovitius, Cyprianus: Horoskope (Franken, Mitte 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1442 Leovitius, Cyprianus: Horoscopus cum prognosticis (Böhmen, Mitte 16. Jh. (nach 1547)) :
Pal. lat. 1443 Johannes ; Ibn-Abī-'r-Riǧāl, Abu-'l-Ḥasan ʿAlī: Astrologisch-geomantische Sammelhandschrift (Deutschland, 2. Hälfte 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1444 Ibn-Abī-'r-Riǧāl, Abu-'l-Ḥasan ʿAlī; Leopoldus ; Hermes; Battānī, Muḥammad Ibn-Ǧābir /al-: Astrologische Sammelhandschrift: Miscellanea (Süddeutschland, Ende 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1450 Sammelband: Komputus ; Medizinisches Handbuch (Heidelberg, Ende 15. Jh. (I) ; um 1540 (II)) :
Pal. lat. 1451 Johannes ; Qabīṣī, Abu-'ṣ-Ṣaqr ʿAbd-al-ʿAzīz Ibn-ʿUṯmān /al-; Johannes ; Ps.-Aristoteles: Miscellaneenband: Komputus ; Arithmetik ; Medizin (Bayern (I , II) , Heidelberg (III , IV), Letztes Viertel 14. Jh. (I) ; Ende 15. Jh. (II) ; Anfang 16. Jh. (III) ; Mitte 15. Jh. (IV)):
Pal. lat. 1452 Johannes ; Johannes ; Gerardus ; Raimundus Lulus; Omar: Sammelhandschrift mit Quadriviumstexten (Bayern, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1453 Geomantischer Sammelband (Schwaben (I) , Italien (II), 2. Hälfte 15. Jh. (I) ; 15. Jh. (II)) :
Pal. lat. 1454 Geomantischer Sammelband (Bayern, 2. Hälfte 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1455 Gerardus : Geomantia (Italien, Mitte 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1456 Gerardus : Sammelhandschrift: Mantische Texte (Südwestdeutschland, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1457 Hugo : Geomantia (Deutschland, Mitte 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1458 Johannes : Kalendarium (Würzburg, Mitte 15. Jh. (1446)) :
Pal. lat. 1543 Seneca, Lucius Annaeus : Epistulae (Frankreich, 12. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1563 Vitruvius; Frontinus, Sextus Iulius: De architectura ; Strategemata (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1567 Mela, Pomponius: Sammelhandschrift (Italien, 15. Jh. ; 16. Jh. ; 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1569 Solinus, Gaius Iulius; Einhard: Sammelhandschrift (Italien (Venedig), 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1570 Solinus, Gaius Iulius: Sammelhandschrift (Deutschland, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1576 Symmachus, Quintus Aurelius: Epistulae (Deutschland, 11. Jh.) : a notably old item from this collection:
Pal. lat. 1612 Plautus, Titus Maccius: Comoediae (Italien?, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1614 Plautus, Titus Maccius: Comoediae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1616 Plautus, Titus Maccius: Comoediae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1617 Plautus, Titus Maccius: Comoediae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1618 Plautus, Titus Maccius: Comoediae (Deutschland, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1619 Plautus, Titus Maccius: Comoediae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1621 Terentius Afer, Publius: Comoediae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1622 Terentius Afer, Publius: Comoediae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1623 Terentius Afer, Publius: Comoediae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1624 Terentius Afer, Publius: Comoediae (Italien, 14.-15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1625 Terentius Afer, Publius; Adolphus Vindobonensis; Alanus ; Sallustius Crispus, Gaius; Pius / Enea Silvio Piccolomini ; Augustinus ; Petrarca, Francesco; Antonius Haneron: Sammelhandschrift (Deutschland, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1626 Terentius Afer, Publius: Comoediae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1627 Terentius Afer, Publius: Comoediae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1629 Donatus, Aelius: Commentum in Terentii (Italien, Deutschland, 15. Jh. (1474?)) :
Pal. lat. 1630 Donatus, Aelius: Commentum in Terentii (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1633 Vergilius Maro, Publius: Opera (Deutschland, Ende 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1634 Vergilius Maro, Publius: Aeneis (Italien, 14.-15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1636 Vergilius Maro, Publius: Aeneis (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1637 Vergilius Maro, Publius: Opera (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1638 Vergilius Maro, Publius: Opera (Pays-Bas (?), 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1639 Vergilius Maro, Publius: Opera (Italien, 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1640 Vergilius Maro, Publius: Opera (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1641 Vergilius Maro, Publius: Aeneis (Italien (Padua), Ende 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1642 Vergilius Maro, Publius: Opera (Italien, 14.-15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1644 Vergilius Maro, Publius; Ovidius Naso, Publius: Sammelhandschrift (Deutschland , Italien, 15. Jh. ; 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1650 Tibullus, Albius: Elegiae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1651 Tibullus, Albius: Elegiae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1653 Horatius Flaccus, Quintus: Carmina seu Odae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1654 Horatius Flaccus, Quintus: Opera (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1656 Horatius Flaccus, Quintus: Opera (Italien, Ende 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1658 Horatius Flaccus, Quintus: Epistulae (Frankreich, 13.-14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1660 Horatius Flaccus, Quintus: Opera (Italien, 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1662 Ovidius Naso, Publius; Cicero, Marcus Tullius; Donatus, Aelius: Sammelhandschrift (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1665 Ovidius Naso, Publius: Heroides (Italien, 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1670 Ovidius Naso, Publius: Metamorphoses (Italien, 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1673 Seneca, Lucius Annaeus : Tragoediae (Italien, 14.-15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1674 Seneca, Lucius Annaeus : Tragoediae (Italien, 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1676 Seneca, Lucius Annaeus : Tragoediae (Italien, Ende 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1678 Lucanus, Marcus Annaeus: De bello ciuili (Italien, 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1679 Lucanus, Marcus Annaeus: De bello ciuili (Italien, Ende 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1680 Lucanus, Marcus Annaeus: De bello ciuili (Deutschland, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1681 Lucanus, Marcus Annaeus: De bello ciuili (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1688 Statius, Publius Papinius: Thebais (Italien, 14.-15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1690 Statius, Publius Papinius: Thebais (Italien, 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1692 Statius, Publius Papinius: Thebais ; Achilleis (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1693 Statius, Publius Papinius: Thebais ; Achilleis (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1696 Martialis, Marcus Valerius: Epigrammata I-XIV (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1697 Martialis, Marcus Valerius: Epigrammata I-XII (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1698 Martialis, Marcus Valerius: Epigrammata I-XIV (Deutschland, Ende 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1699 Iuvenalis, Decimus Iunius; Persius Flaccus, Aulus: Saturae (Italien (Verona?), 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1700 Iuvenalis, Decimus Iunius: Saturae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1702 Iuvenalis, Decimus Iunius: Saturae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1704 Iuvenalis, Decimus Iunius: Saturae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1705 Iuvenalis, Decimus Iunius: Saturae (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1707 Iuvenalis, Decimus Iunius; Horatius Flaccus, Quintus; Persius Flaccus, Aulus; Ovidius Naso, Publius; Tibullus, Albius; Sallustius Crispus, Gaius; Vergilius Maro, Publius; Cicero, Marcus Tullius: Sammelhandschrift (Deutschland, Ende 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1708 Iuvenalis, Decimus Iunius; Persius Flaccus, Aulus: Saturae (Italien, 14.-15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1709 Persius Flaccus, Aulus; Soloneus; Boethius, Anicius Manlius Severinus; Celtis, Konrad; Sallustius Crispus, Gaius; Ovidius Naso, Publius; Fridancius; Vergilius Maro, Publius: Sammelhandschrift (Deutschland, 15.-16. Jh.) : eTK An de impressionibus metheorologicis habeatur scientia (15c); .ix1 Circa initium quatuor metheororum
Pal. lat. 1711 Manilius, Marcus: Astronomica (Italien, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1727 Alanus ; Cicero, Marcus Tullius: Sammelhandschrift (Deutschland, 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1776 Johannes : Catholicon (Erfurt, um 1450-1460) :
Pal. lat. 1815 Frontinus, Sextus Iulius: Strategemata ; De uiris illustribus Urbis Romae (Italien, Ende 15. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1820 Cicero, Marcus Tullius: Opera ; Orationes (Italien, 14. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1850 Erhard Bacher: Loci communes (Wittenberg, 1562-1568) :
Pal. lat. 1851 Hartmann, David: Oratiuncula de nomine Jesu (Heidelberg, 1585) :
Pal. lat. 1852 Notae historicae (Heidelberg, 1560-1592) :
Pal. lat. 1857 Sammelhandschrift (Deutschland, Mitte 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1861 Notae in evangelia (Deutschland, Mitte 16. Jh.) :
Pal. lat. 1862 Orationes scholasticae (Heidelberg, 1580-1582) :
Pal. lat. 1883 Sententiae latinae (Heidelberg (?), Anfang 17. Jh.) :
This is Piggin's Unofficial List number 130. If you have corrections or additions, please use the comments box below. Follow me on Twitter (@JBPiggin) for news of more additions to DigiVatLib. via Blogger http://ift.tt/2ylX4XK
0 notes
melanielocke · 2 years ago
Text
Some propaganda for Avi&Magnus
This is a very unhealthy couple that should probably not be encouraged and yet it remains very intriguing. Avi is just the worst. You'll be rooting for him and then you hate him and then you'll be rooting for him again.
Meanwhile Magnus, while looking like a Norse god reborn, is quite nice? He never wanted to be a soldier, he just wants to live in peace.
Being raised in a cult just severely fucked up both of them and I hope with lots of therapy they can make it work.
Book names + authors under the cut
Cassandra Igarashi/Laura Wilson- The Wicked + The Divine by Kieron Gillen & Jamie McKelvie
Avicenna "Avi"/Magnus Marston- Some Desperate Glory by Emily Tesh
Salim/The Jinn- American Gods by Neil Gaiman
Zhao Yunlan/Shen Wei- Guardian/Zhen Hun by Priest
47 notes · View notes