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Liber Quodlibetarius (MS B.200)

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Liber Quodlibetarius
MS B.200, Universitätsbibliothek Erlangen
Erlangen, Germany

MS B.200 117v.png
MS B.200 118r.png
Folia 117v-118r
HagedornLeng
WierschinHils
Type Commonplace book
Date 1524
Place of origin Nuremberg
Language(s) Early New High German
Author(s) Unknown
Scribe(s) Benedictus Rughalm
Illustrator(s) Unknown
Material Paper, in a half-leather cover
Size 204 folia
Format Double-sided; one illustrations
per side, with captions
Script Bastarda
External data Library catalog entry
Treatise scans Digital scans (1500x2000)

The MS B.200 is a German commonplace book created in or around 1524; it seems to have been scribed by one Benedictus Rughalm, though he was probably not the author of any of it.[1] The original currently rests in the holdings of the Universitätsbibliothek Erlangen-Nürnberg in Erlangen, Germany. The manuscript is a compilation of a variety of disparate texts, including a series of fencing and wrestling devices based on the treatise of Andre Paurñfeyndt and the Landshuter Ringerbuch.

Provenance

Contents

118r - 119r
119v - 121r
121v - 125r

Gallery

Images hosted by the Universitätsbibliothek Erlangen-Nürnberg.

[Digital images available for import.]

Additional Resources

References

  1. Internally dated on 86v, and both dated and signed on 164r.

Copyright and License Summary

For further information, including transcription and translation notes, see the discussion page.

Work Author(s) Source License
Images Universitätsbibliothek Erlangen-Nürnberg
Public Domain-permission.png
Translation
CCBYSA30.png
Transcription Dierk Hagedorn Index:Liber Quodlibetarius (MS B.200)
Copyrighted.png