The Verona Palimpsest (or Fragmentum Veronese) is a manuscript, dated about the 494 AD, which contains a Christian collection of Church Orders in Latin.[1] The manuscript, which contains many lacunae, is the only source of the Latin version of the Apostolic Tradition.
Description
editThis manuscript is preserved in the Chapter House Library (Biblioteca Capitolare) in Verona and is numbered LV (olim 53). It is a palimpsest in which the Sententiae of Isidore of Seville in the 8th century has been written over the previous content, which includes:
- Didascalia Apostolorum (of which 32 leaves of 86 total were preserved)[2]
- Apostolic Church-Ordinance (of which 1.5 leaves of 4.5 total were preserved)[2]
- the Egyptian Church Order, better known as Apostolic Tradition, (of which 6.5 leaves of 11.5 total were preserved).[2] Chapters 9 through 20, 22 through 25, and 39 and 40 are missing completely.
- a leaf containing Fasti consulares running to 494, which allows for dating of the manuscript. [3]
Publication
editThis Palimpsest was discovered in 1896 and fully published in 1900 by Edmund Hauler.[4] A further edition was published by Erik Tidner in 1963[5]
Notes
edit- ^ Bradshaw, Paul F. (2002). The Search for the Origins of Christian Worship. Oxford University Press. pp. 75, 88. ISBN 978-0-19-521732-2.
- ^ a b c Steimer, Bruno (1992). Vertex traditionis: die Gattung der altchristlichen Kirchenordnungen. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 106–113. ISBN 978-3-11-013460-5.
- ^ Peretto, Elio (1996). Tradizione Apostolica. pp. 19–21. ISBN 88-311-3133-8.
- ^ Edmund Hauler, Didascaliae apostolorum fragmenta ueronensia Latina. Accedunt canonum qui dicuntur Apostolorum et Aegyptiorum reliquae, Leipzig 1900
- ^ Erik Tidner, Didascaliae apostolorum Canonum ecclesiasticorum Traditionis apostolicae versiones Latinae, TU 75, Berlin 1963
See also
editExternal links
edit- Edmund Hauler, Didascaliae apostolorum fragmenta ueronensia Latina, 1900: full text in Latin