Ars moriendi.

Author
Gerson, Jean, 1363-1429 [Browse]
Format
Manuscript, Book
Language
Latin
Published/​Created
[Germany or low counties] : [producer not identified], [between 1475 and 1500]
Description
1 volume (vi, 16, vi leaves) ; 13 cm

Details

Subject(s)
Notes
  • The text contains a prologue and contents list (fol. 1r); 6 chapters, the last one comprised of 7 prayers (fols. 1r-16v); and an Admonitio (fol. 16v). The devotional text known as the Ars moriendi, as well as variant titles, is attributed in the present manuscript to Jean Gerson (1363-1429).
  • Script: Hybrida libraria by a scribe from Germany or the Low Countries, who was also responsible for corrections made on the line and in the margins.
  • Decoration: The incipit, rubrics, 3- and 2-line initials, paraph marks, crosses, and asterisks are in red ink. Some initial letters are stroked in red as well.
Binding note
Germany (?), late 19th century. Brown half-calf and paper (with printed woodgrain pattern) over pasteboard.
Contents
1.1r-16v: “Incipit tractatus de arte moriendi magistri Johannis gerson cancellarii Parisiensis. Cum de presentis exilii miseria mortis transitus propter moriendi inperitiam ... Capitulum primum. Cum omnium terribilium mors corporis sit terribilissima, ut ait philosophus ...” Explicit: “... mediante gratia omnipotentis dei Qui regnat in celis et benedictus est in secula. Amen. Explicit tractatus moriendi magistri Johannis gerson Parisiensis.”
Provenance
Princeton Ms. 199 is of unknown early and intermediate provenance. Gift of Bruce C. Willsie, Class of 1986, to the Princeton University Library in 2007 (Acc. no. 2008-41).
Source acquisition
Gift; Bruce C. Willsie, 2007.
References
Medieval & Renaissance manuscripts in the Princeton University Library, volume 2, pages 481-482.
Cite as
Princeton MS. 199, Manuscripts Division, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library.
OCLC
1116317415
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