Bagno da Bisticci, Vite di uomini illustri del eta XV, Florence, 1938, p

Bagno da Bisticci, Vite di uomini illustri del eta XV, Florence, 1938, p

Handsome copies of this text were much loved by Anglophone collectors

523. Palmieri’s working copy is Florence, Scansia Azzurri, MS Convv. Soppr. 133. See A. Modigliani, ‘A la momento del De re aedificatoria: Il codice ancora gli archetipi del Alberti’, Albertiana 16 (2013), pp. 91–110 (91–100). Examples include British Library Add MS 62994, Wellcome Library MS 591, Fitzwilliam Museum MS 178, Glasgow University Library MS Hunter 198 (U.1.2) and Beinecke Library Marston MS 217. Early sopra the sixteenth century, verso new supplement esatto the Chronicle was produced mediante a Paris printer’s shop; see P. Way, ‘Jehan de Mouveaux’s “Primum exemplar”: Verso Model Copy Made for Henri Estienne’s 1512 Edition of Eusebius’s Chronicle’, Quaerendo, 32, 2002, pp. 60–98. A still later continuation appears mediante Johannes Sichardus’s edition, Habes opt. lector chronicon opus felicissime renatum, Basel, 1536, fols 211 r –221 v : ‘.’.

Palmieri’s account of Lucius’s conversion appears ed.g. at MS Vatican City, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, Pal. Lat. 817, fol. 94 r : ‘Lucius britanniae rex eleuterium pontificem baptisma postulavit: quod cum accepisset: brittani quoque fidem christi una susceperunt: & usque ad dioclitiani tempora inviolatam servaverunt.’ On the story of Lucius and Eleutherius, see F. Heal, ‘What can King Lucius do for you? The Reformation and the Early British Church’, English Historical Review, 120, 2005, pp. 593–619.

MS note ibid., flyleaf, anche.g., this quotation from Jerome-Eusebius, Onomasticon, di nuovo. Ed. Klostermann, GCSL, Leipzig, 1904, 5: ‘Eusebius, ora a fausto Pamphilo martyre cognomentum sortitus est, post incognita ecclesiasticae historiae libros, post temporum canones, quos nos Latina lingua edidimus, post diversarum vocabula nationum, quae quo che olim apud Hebraeos dicta sint et nunc dicantur exposuit: post cosmographiam [lectio facilior for chorografiam] terrae Iudeae et distinctas tribuum sortes, ipsius quoque Hierusalem templique mediante ea cum brevissima expositione picturam, ad extremum con hoc opusculum laboravit, ut congregaret [om. nobis] de sancta scriptura omnium asta urbium, montium, fluvium, viculorum et diversorum locorum vocabula, quae vel eadem manent vel immutata sunt postea, vel aliqua una volta dose corrupta, unde [om. et] nos admirabilis viri sequentes studium, secundum ordinem litterarum ut sunt sopra Graeco posita transtulimus etc.’.

Heinrich Pantaleon, Chronographia Christianae ecclesiae, Basel, 1561, New York Society Library Sharp P197 C5577, 13. The text reads: ‘Polycarpus, Iustinus, Papilus in Asia, Photinus, Sanctus, Maturus, Atalus, Blandina & multi alij sopra Gallia reportant. Euseb. 4. cap. 15. & 5. capite 1. quaeso vide.’ The unidentified annotator comments: ‘Dignissima sunt lectu f[ragmenta] epistolarum Eccles. Smyrene[nsis de Poly]carpo, et Lugdunensis de Atato, Blandina et…’.

Joseph Justus Scaliger, Thesaurus temporum, https://datingranking.net/it/adam4adam-review/ Leiden, 1606, p. 202: ‘Quorum usque in praesentem diem condita libris certamina perseverant.] Ea et Polycarpi martyrium hodie extant apud Eusebium in Historia Eccles. quae sunt vetustissima Ecclesiae martyria, quorum lectione piorum animus ita afficitur, ut nunquam satur inde recedat: quod quidem ita esse unus quisque pro captu suo et conscientiae modo sentire potest. Certe ego nihil unquam in historia Ecclesiastica vidi, a cuius lectione commotior recedam, ut non amplius meus esse videar. Idem sentimus de Actis Martyrum Lugdunensium et Viennensium apud eundem Eusebium, quibus quid augustius, quid venerabilius in antiquitatis Christianae monimentis legi potest?’ Isaac Casaubon underlined ‘vetustissima Ecclesiae mediante historia Ecclesiastica vidi, verso cuius lectione commotior recedam, ut non amplius meus esse videar‘ in his copy of the book, Cambridge University Library Adv.a.3.4., and commented on the blank before the title-page: ‘202. vide.’.

Scaligeri pietas, et affectus durante legendis Actis martyrum

T. Freeman, ‘Sex, Lies and Microfilm: Reading and Misreading Foxe’s “Book of Martyrs”’, Sixteenth Century Journal, 30, 1999, pp. 23–46.

See Tau. Freeman, ‘“Great Searching Out of Bookes and Autors”: John Foxe as an Ecclesiastical Historian, PhD Diss., Rutgers University, 1995; G. Minton, ‘”The Same Cause and like Quarell”: Eusebius, John Foxe and the Evolution of Ecclesiastical History’, Church History, 71, 2002, pp. 715–42.

Click to rate this post!
[Total: 0 Average: 0]

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *