A finely illuminated Ethiopic Psalter dating to the fifteenth-sixteenth century, sold on auction in 1983 and still in the possession of an unknown private collector, was made the object of two distinct publications in 1986. Ewa Balicka-Witakowska focused on the art-historical importance of the manuscript, while Richard Pankhurst dealt with its guard-leaves containing additional notes in Portuguese and Latin and their significance. Almost unnoticed or largely isunderstood remained a small Ethiopic text belonging to the primitive layer of the fly-leaves, that probably held the last place in a larger multiple-text manuscript, of which one loose leaf might have survived. So far unpublished, the text is the Ethiopic version of the Lex lata Constantini Augusti de Arii damnatione (CPG nos 2041 = 8519). Along with the Ethiopic version of the Epistula Constantini imperatoris ad ecclesiam Alexandrinam (CPG no. 8517), unpublished as well, the former is also attested by the earliest Ethiopic canonico-liturgical collection known as the Aksumite collection. An editio princeps of the two epistles in Ethiopic version along with a concisely annotated translation is provided.

‘The accidents of transmission: On a surprising multilingual manuscript leaf. With the edition of the Ethiopic version of two Constantinian epistles (CPG no. 8517, Epistula Constantini imperatoris ad ecclesiam Alexandrinam, and CPG nos 2041 = 8519, Lex lata Constantini Augusti de Arii damnatione) / Bausi, Alessandro. - In: ADAMANTIUS. - ISSN 1126-6244. - 22 (pub. 2017):(2016), pp. 303-322.

‘The accidents of transmission: On a surprising multilingual manuscript leaf. With the edition of the Ethiopic version of two Constantinian epistles (CPG no. 8517, Epistula Constantini imperatoris ad ecclesiam Alexandrinam, and CPG nos 2041 = 8519, Lex lata Constantini Augusti de Arii damnatione)

Bausi, Alessandro
2016

Abstract

A finely illuminated Ethiopic Psalter dating to the fifteenth-sixteenth century, sold on auction in 1983 and still in the possession of an unknown private collector, was made the object of two distinct publications in 1986. Ewa Balicka-Witakowska focused on the art-historical importance of the manuscript, while Richard Pankhurst dealt with its guard-leaves containing additional notes in Portuguese and Latin and their significance. Almost unnoticed or largely isunderstood remained a small Ethiopic text belonging to the primitive layer of the fly-leaves, that probably held the last place in a larger multiple-text manuscript, of which one loose leaf might have survived. So far unpublished, the text is the Ethiopic version of the Lex lata Constantini Augusti de Arii damnatione (CPG nos 2041 = 8519). Along with the Ethiopic version of the Epistula Constantini imperatoris ad ecclesiam Alexandrinam (CPG no. 8517), unpublished as well, the former is also attested by the earliest Ethiopic canonico-liturgical collection known as the Aksumite collection. An editio princeps of the two epistles in Ethiopic version along with a concisely annotated translation is provided.
2016
manuscripts; ethiopic; philology; transmission
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
‘The accidents of transmission: On a surprising multilingual manuscript leaf. With the edition of the Ethiopic version of two Constantinian epistles (CPG no. 8517, Epistula Constantini imperatoris ad ecclesiam Alexandrinam, and CPG nos 2041 = 8519, Lex lata Constantini Augusti de Arii damnatione) / Bausi, Alessandro. - In: ADAMANTIUS. - ISSN 1126-6244. - 22 (pub. 2017):(2016), pp. 303-322.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1695895
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