« Previous
Next »
Provenance
- Included in a nineteenth century collection of Papal Signatures (call number: qBX850 C36) gifted to Saint Mary's College in March or April of 1944 by a group of anonymous donors. Once part of a two-volume set. The second volume is held by the University of Notre Dame.25
- Item donated to Knox College by Harriet Robbins Moses (1888-1973) of Salina, KS as part of a bequest through her estate in 1973. Moses graduated from Knox College in 1912.24
- Item from the donation of Edward (1861-1949) and Lucy Smith Morse Caldwell (1864-1941), acquired in 1953. The Caldwells graduated from Knox in 1886.7
- One of the ten items in the St. Olaf Paleography Teaching Collection, acquired in 2019.7
- One unidentified SMC MS, purchased through the Rosenbach company, is recorded as having been produced at Choristers of the Cathedral of Jaen in Southern Spain. This leaf is one of five held by Saint Mary's College possessing a Spanish origin.5
- Part of the Seymour Document Collection, donated to Knox College by George Seymour (1878-1945) and Flora Seymour (1888-1948).4
- A leaf from Otto Ege's portfolio "Original Leaves from Famous Bibles Nine Centuries 1121-1935 AD, Series B". This portfolio belongs to Bethany Theological Seminary whose collections are on deposit at Earlham College. The provenance of this portfolio is otherwise unknown.3
- Item donated to Berea College by Ross Waters Sloniker of Cincinnati, OH in 1971.3
- One of the items in the St. Olaf Ege portfolio, "Original Leaves from Famous Books: Nine Centuries, 1122 AAD - 1923 AD" Set #31.3
- Part of the John H. Haldeman Memorial Bible Collection. These items came to SBTS as part of the donation of the private collection of John H. Haldeman (1915-1990) and wife Virginia Bailey Haldeman made in December 1981.3
- Gift of Mrs. J. A. Chapperon to Loyola's Classical Studies Department November 26, 1980. Transferred to Loyola Special Collections December 13, 2013.2
- One of three manuscript leaves gifted to Earlham College in the 1920s or 1930s by Ruby Davis, a longtime English professor who specialized in medieval literature. No information known regarding where she obtained these leaves.2
- Part of the NIU Collection of Leaves from Medieval European Christian Texts. Purchased by Northern Illinois University in 2003.2
- Purchased by the Art Department of DePauw University in the 1960s from the Ferdinand Roten Gallery.2
- Purchased in Lyon, France by Foliophiles (New York). The Muskegon Museum of Art then purchased the leaf from Foliophiles in 1932. Accessioned 9/20/1932.2
- These leaves are found in a two-volume edition of Petrarch's works (Basel: Henricus Petri, 1554). Gift of Edward A. Cudahy.2
- This fragment is found in a copy of Maximilien de Eynatten, Manuale exorcismus (Anterwerp: Plantin Moretus, 1619). It is one of two in situ fragments in the same host volume.2
- This leaf was purchased by the Muskegon Museum of Art from Otto F. Ege, Cleveland, OH. Accessioned May 1937.2
- A Cincinnati Post article published on January 26, 1933 suggests that this codex was donated to Xavier University by an alumnus. De Ricci's Census indicates that this codex was obtained in Paris by an alumnus of Xavier (unnamed) from an unknown source. This alumnus donated it to Xavier University around 1926.1
- A gift of Carl W. Moebius, Jr., and his wife, Janet Moebius, to the Marquette University in September of 1970. Two names written on the final folio (fol. 108v) provide the date of 1518 as the terminus ad quem for the production of this codex. Historical metadata has suggested that these might have been signatures of the scribes of this volume, but this link cannot be firmly established. Another inscription (fol. 77v), dated 1723, states that this book belonged to the Iglesia de Santiago el Mayor (Church of St. James) in the city of Ecija, Spain. The inscription reads: "Este libro es de la insigne Parrochia del St. Santiago de la ciudad de Ecija. Tusole esta nota aqui el ano ae 1723 siendo Pontafice N.M.S.P. Inocentio XIII. y Arcobispo de Sevilla Don Luis Salcedo. y Rey de Espana Don Phelipe V. Fenia ya este libro 200. anos" [This book belongs to the renowned parochial church of St. James of the city of Ecija. This notation was placed here in the year 1723, being Pontiff (at the time) N.M.S.P. Innocent XIII, and archbishop of Seville, Luis Salcedo, and King of Spain, Philip V. This book was already 200 years old.]1