TEXT-inc
a corpus of texts printed in the 15th century

TEXT-inc

tid00374000

Text-inc Id:
tid00374000
Bod-inc Id:
D-171
Headings:
Duns Scotus, Johannes Quaestiones in primum librum Sententiarum. Opus Oxoniense (ed. Frater Rufinus).
Subjects:
theology-speculative
Analysis of content:
  1. [a1r] [Table of contents].
  2. [b1r] Duns Scotus, Johannes: Quaestiones in primum librum Sententiarum. Opus Oxoniense. Edited by Frater Rufinus. Incipit: ‘[C]upientes aliquid de penuria etcetera. Circa prohemium vel prologum huius primi libri Sentantiarum ...’ B5r Explicit: ‘... Propter quod notum est quod omnis nostra volitio et potissime Dei ordinata est ad finem ultimum qui est alpha et principium et finis cui sit honor et gloria in secula seculorum. Amen. Laus deo. Finis.’ See D‑166.
  3. [C1r] Additiones. [Preface]. Incipit: ‘[E]t si pene innumeras a quampluribus acutissimis ...’ Explicit: ‘... illius loci atque additionis meditando sententias sue menti adheserit.’
  4. [C1r] ‘Prologi additiones’ Incipit: ‘Prime questionis. Secundum aliam viam de perfecto et imperfecto ...’ [D7v] Explicit: ‘... dicendum ex tempore non sunt proprie relationes sed nomigenes eternarum relationum.’
  5. [D7v] Colophon: ‘Joannis Scoti theologi subtilissimi super primum sententiarum finit die v.a Novembris, per nobilem virum Vindelinum Spirensem, qui ingenium dedaleum in impressionibus suis edocet. M.cccc.lxx2° Nicholao Throno Venetiarum duce.’
  6. [D7v] [Editorial close] ‘Frater Rufinus ordinis cordiferorum in sacra Theologia bachelarius dignissimus magna cum diligentia peroptime emendavit.’
Imprint:
[Venice] Vindelinus de Spira Folio 5 Nov. 1472.
Collation:
[a2 b10 c-d8 e10 f-g8 h10 i-k8 l10 m-n8 o10 p-q8 r10 s8 t-v10 x-y8 z10 A8 B-C6 D8]. Spaces left blank for initials, without printed guide letters.
References:
Source: Bodleian; Subiaco Ben (III B 19) ISTC: id00374000 H *6422; Goff D‑374; BMC V 159; GW 9079; BSB‑Ink D‑300; not in Sheppard. LCN: 14341577
Copies:
  1. D-171(1) Copy Wanting the blank leaf [D8]. Binding: Late fifteenth or first quarter of the sixteenth century, North Italian (Padua) blind-tooled brown goatskin over wooden boards bevelled inwards. Four clasps, secured by two star nails placed vertically and hinged on the upper cover, now lost; catches of a pointed trefoil form secured by those nails; rebacked by R. Riley, Feb. 1920. Formerly chained: staple-marks of a hasp at the foot of the upper cover. On both covers triple fillets form four concentric frames. A circular rayed sun stamp and a small flower-petal stamp alternate within the first and third frames; a tool of two flower-petals is repeated within the second. The inner rectangle is decorated with the rayed sun and small flower-petal between pyramidal and cruciform constructions of knotwork. Edges dark green. Double dark green headbands. Sewn on three split thongs. New endleaves. See also De Marinis, Legatura, II no. 1525. ‘The sun and vineleaf shop'; for this and other bindings from the same shop see A. Hobson, ‘Bookbinding in Padua in the Fifteenth Century', in Incunabula, ed. Davies, 389-420, at 408. Size: 352 × 243 × 67 mm. Size of leaf: 338 × 232 mm. Marginal notes in a small fifteenth-century hand, mainly commenting on the text; manuscript signatures of the gatherings. On [b1r] an eight-line Venetian initial ‘C' is supplied in pink, edged on the outside in red and on the inside in yellow, on a gold and blue ground, with foliate extensions into the margins in blue and pink, and with gold dots; also a four-line initial ‘P' is supplied in blue edged in gold. Other initials, some with red pen-work infill and extensions into the margins, and paragraph marks are supplied in red or blue. Capital strokes in red. Provenance: Würzburg, Bavaria, Conventual Franciscans, Inventio crucis/Sancta crux; an inscription on [a2r] in a seventeenth-century hand: ‘De bibliotheca Fratrum Minorum Conuentualium S. Francisci Herbipoli'. Albert Ehrman (1890-1969); armorial book-plate; purchased, as his first incunable, from E. S. Fowler, Mar. 1920, for £5. 5. 0; accession no. ‘129'. Presented in 1978 by John Ehrman. SHELFMARK: Broxb. 18.7.