In this issue: 1. Cooperative Manuscript Descriptions / 2. Alchemy in St. Gall / 3. Regional History and e-codices / 4. Between Print and Manuscript The e-codices newsletter provides information about the latest updates, highlights, and activities of our project. We are delighted to count you among our readers!
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e-codices Newsletter

Issue no 49 - 13 October 2020

In this issue:

  1. Cooperative Manuscript Descriptions
  2. Alchemy in St. Gall
  3. Regional History and e-codices
  4. Between Print and Manuscript

The e-codices newsletter provides information about the latest updates, highlights, and activities of our project. We are delighted to count you among our readers!

The e-codices team

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1. Cooperative Manuscript Descriptions

Collaboration between researchers and manuscript conservators has produced many new manuscript descriptions on e-codices. The Bern Burgerbibliothek attests to this scientific collaboration, having already published 16 new detailed descriptions. Often the specialist has deeper knowledge of the contents of the manuscripts and literature pertaining to it, while the manuscript conservator is better prepared to treat the manuscript’s codicology and history. Thus Dr. Florian Mittenhuber of the Burgerbibliothek Bern has already collaborated with Richard Trachsler (Zürich, new this update: Cod. 388), Henry Hope (University of Bern), Gerhard Schwedler (Zürich), Charlotte Denoël (Paris), Pierre Chambert-Protat (Paris, now at the Vatican Library), Norbert Kössinger (Constance), Christoph Eggenberger (Zürich), Sabine Utz (Lausanne) and Michael I. Allen (Chicago). Thus, two descriptions prepared with Prof. Allen have been published in the last update: Cod. 433 (Ps-Cicero, Rhetorica ad Herennium, ninth century) and Cod. 451, which was probably copied on the initiative of Lupus of Ferrières.

Bern, Burgerbibliothek, Cod. 451, f. 147r

The manuscript with one of the oldest and most important copies of the Historia Alexandri of Curtius Rufus also contains numerous Tironian notes (Bern, Burgerbibliothek, Cod. 451, f. 147r).

St. Gallen, Kantonsbibliothek, Vadianische Sammlung, VadSlg Ms. 391, f. 5r (detail) – Ps.-Raimundus Lullus

2. Alchemy in St. Gall

The Vadianische Sammlung of the Kantonsbibliothek St. Gallen possesses an extensive collection of alchemical texts that belonged to Bartlome Schobinger (1500-1585), the wealthy merchant and alderman (Ratsherr) of the city of St. Gall. As can be seen from the notes that he left in these manuscripts, Schobinger was intensively engaged in alchemy. The manuscripts contain tables and diagrams of alchemical processes of the sort that are often found in writings ascribed to Raimundus Lullus.

Browse the collection
Delémont, Musée Jurassien d'Art et d'Histoire, MJ. 1950.20, f. 1_0133v (detail) – Genealogical Register of the Canons of the Diocese of Basel, 1502-1794

3. Regional History and e-codices

In the Libraries and Archives of Switzerland there are many sources of foundational importance for regional history. Even when the sources are stored in libraries and archives, access is difficult because of the lack of a printed edition. Local chronicles, rent-rolls, registers, land account books, almanacs, cartularies, statutes, etc., contain far more significant texts than could possibly be edited by traditional means. For this reason, digital editions, even when they just publish images and descriptions, provide an extremely valuable complement to traditional research tools. Recently, e-codices has published digital editions of important documents for the local history of the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries from the Landesarchiv Appenzell Innerrhoden, the Bibliothèque cantonale jurassienne in Porrentruy and the Musée Jurassien d’Art et d’Histoire in Delémont.

Genève, Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. fr. 172, f. 78v (detail) – Philippe Prevost, Le Mars, c'est-a-dire de la militie, discipline et art de la guerre

4. Between Print and Manuscript

The Geneva manuscript Ms. fr. 172 contains primarily the Autograph “Le Mars” on the art of war by Philippe Prevost, advisor and Grand Master of King Henry IV. Although the text was prepared for print and illustrated with drawings probably taken from copper engravings, it was never printed. Dr. Brigitte Roux, project collaborator for e-codices, prepared the description of the manuscript.

Learn more about the manuscript

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