If you are looking at a codex page and need to quote it, click on the "i" in a white circle in the left navigation pane:
Scroll down to and down to "Page URL":
From here you only need to click the "COPY" button to get a usable link in your clipboard.
And now, the list of 26 new additions:
- Borg.copt.109.cass.XXV.fasc.123, page of a gospel?
- Borg.copt.109.cass.XXV.fasc.124,
- Borg.copt.109.cass.XXV.fasc.125,
- Borg.copt.109.cass.XXVI.fasc.126,
- Borg.copt.109.cass.XXVI.fasc.127,
- Borg.copt.109.cass.XXVI.fasc.128,
- Borg.copt.109.cass.XXVI.fasc.129,
- Reg.lat.203,
https://t.co/mSJy2B0TQo.203 is a Brevarium (Cistercian?), starting with the service for dedication of a churchhttps://t.co/mSJy2B0TQo.1647 seems to be Macrobius’ Saturnalia
— AaronM (@gundormr) December 28, 2017 - Reg.lat.1120, Justinian Code, glossed, 13th century
- Reg.lat.1271, commentary on Avicenna's canon (HT to @monicaMedHist)
- Reg.lat.1291, Renaissance commentary on Aristotelean mechanics
- Reg.lat.1410, 10th-century classics manuscript with Virgil, Horace, Juvenal
new manuscripts uploaded @DigitaVaticana among which this fascinating 10thC copy of classical poetry (Horace, Virgil, Persius & Juvenal) conceived and designed to accommodate a substantial corpus of interlinear and marginal annotations. HT @JBPiggin https://t.co/DE0if6bWV5 pic.twitter.com/JnYipjozDV
— GiorgiaV (@ParvaVox) December 28, 2017 - Reg.lat.1454, Seneca, Letters to Lucillium
- Reg.lat.1489, Lancelot du Lac, French
- Reg.lat.1559, early Renaissance compilation of Latin classics
- Reg.lat.1608,
- Reg.lat.1645.pt.1,
- Reg.lat.1645.pt.2,
- Reg.lat.1647,
- Reg.lat.1655, early Priscian, Institutiones grammaticae
- Reg.lat.1656,
- Reg.lat.1661,
- Reg.lat.1663,
- Reg.lat.1668,
- Reg.lat.1675, Horace, 11th-century?
- Urb.lat.1402, Fiore delle medicine, 15th-century Italian medical treatise (HT to @monicaMedHist)
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