Esteemed @ParvaVox points out in response on Twitter that it's a "quite extraordinary #Carolingian witness of a late antique doctrinal controversy ... containing glosses dating back to the fight against Pelagianism and Julian of Eclanum".
For those interested in Carolingian science, the eTK lists a tract in the codex beginning De mundi principio quomodo factus est ... At the back are paschal tables from 804 to 873 (a note marks Ruothild's death), as well as fine diagrams including this one of the phases of the moon:
Also new in color is Reg.lat.1140, a packed tome of 557 folios containing Fons memorabilium universi of Domenico Bandini of Arezzo, but what caught my eye was this amazing diagrammatic table of contents:
The last new color item of note is Vat.lat.2190, a 14th-century text by the Spanish Franciscan philosophy teacher and early Scotist, Peter Thomae (c.1280-c.1350), Ista convertuntur proprie videlicet esse et reytas, ens et res, entale et reale, entalitas et realitas, also listed in eTK.
There are of course completely new items online, of which I have spotted 26:
- Pal.gr.205
- Reg.lat.196
- Reg.lat.1206
- Reg.lat.1227
- Reg.lat.1239
- Reg.lat.1247
- Reg.lat.1293
- Reg.lat.1330, eTK: Astrologia est beneficio deorum nobis revelata
- Reg.lat.1548
- Reg.lat.1576
- Reg.lat.1614
- Reg.lat.1628
- Reg.lat.1629
- Reg.lat.1634, HT to @LatinAristotle, who points out this is Lucan's Civil War with a diagram laying out the topographical situation
- Reg.lat.1639
- Reg.lat.1651
- Reg.lat.1862 Fenix on its nest, in a digitized Bestiary from @DigitaVaticana as seen on the list by @JBPiggin.https://t.co/4Yg4NzHOHz pic.twitter.com/QjUUh56ZI7— Pieter Beullens (@LatinAristotle) November 26, 2017
- Vat.lat.1417
- Vat.lat.2022
- Vat.lat.2049
- Vat.lat.2099
- Vat.lat.2172
- Vat.lat.2181
- Vat.lat.2184, a 14th-century collection on Aristotlean philosophy: the catalog lists commentators Averroes, Michael Scot and Étienne de Provins. eTK says contents include De Intensione et Remissione Formarum, an essay on the philosophy of Aristotle by Walter Burley: Incipit: In hoc tractatu intendo perscrutari de causa intrinseca.
- Vat.lat.2199
- Vat.lat.15372 seems to be a Renaissance book of hours, which according to notes on the endpapers was an heirloom and repeated family gift by legacy until it entered the Vatican collection in 2008. Browse it for the delicate images:
https://t.co/nvxFdwgGFC.15372 might be from Arras, or passed through there. The same Thomas de Parent(i/y) owned a Pontifical that is still there BM Arras MS 702 - https://t.co/SLBnqezU97— AaronM (@gundormr) November 26, 2017
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