Liturgical calendar, psalter, and canticles and prayers in Dutch.
Support: parchment; Extent: 143 leaves : 163 x 120 (106 x 72) mm. bound to 173 x 127 mm; Foliation: Parchment, 143; i-ci, [i], cii-cxlii, contemporary foliation in Roman numerals, upper right recto [folio between f. 101-102 is unnumbered, last 3 f. blank].
Written in one column of 27 lines, frame-ruled in ink.
Written in a gothic script, in two different hands.
Ms. codex.
Title from spine.
Incipit (verse, January): Snijt vleys voer onsen coninck ian, f. 3r; explicit (verse, December): Leest wel wildy ewich vrolick wesen, f. 14v.
Incipit (table of psalms): Om te vinden die XV psalmen die men leset voer alle gheloinghe sielen, f. 15r.
Incipit (canticles): Dat Canticum van Ezechias den conine van iuda doen hy sieck lach vander pestilentien, f. 127v; explicit: god ewelick sonder eynde. Amen, f. 139r.
Translation from the Latin Vulgate, with notes in the margin, headed by Intheb, Theb, etc., which offer translations of the Hebrew version , along with occasional Scriptural cross-references (Webber).
Netherlands
Written in the southern Netherlands (in the regional dialect), 15th century (Webber).
Vellum.
Dutch
Sold by Laurence Witten, 1961.
Netherlands
Written in the southern Netherlands (in the regional dialect), 15th century (Webber).
Dutch
Sold by Laurence Witten, 1961.
Liturgical calendar, psalter, and canticles and prayers in Dutch.
Ms. codex.
Title from spine.
Incipit (verse, January): Snijt vleys voer onsen coninck ian, f. 3r; explicit (verse, December): Leest wel wildy ewich vrolick wesen, f. 14v.
Incipit (table of psalms): Om te vinden die XV psalmen die men leset voer alle gheloinghe sielen, f. 15r.
Incipit (canticles): Dat Canticum van Ezechias den conine van iuda doen hy sieck lach vander pestilentien, f. 127v; explicit: god ewelick sonder eynde. Amen, f. 139r.
Translation from the Latin Vulgate, with notes in the margin, headed by Intheb, Theb, etc., which offer translations of the Hebrew version , along with occasional Scriptural cross-references (Webber).
Written in a gothic script, in two different hands.
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