Einsiedeln, Stiftsbibliothek, Codex 191(277)

Lowe Elias Avery, Codices Latini Antiquiores. A palaeographical guide to latin manuscripts prior to the ninth century. Part VII: Switzerland, Oxford 1956 (Osnabrück 1982), p. 12.
Manuscript title:Collectio Canonum Quesnelliana
Date of origin:Saec. VIII-IX.
Support:Parchment of fair quality; a few leaves have small holes.
Extent: Foll. 237
Format:317 x 225-230 mm
Foliation:Numbered I-VI, 1-165, 165bis-233, with foll. 81, 203, and 240 cut out.
Collation:Gatherings of eight, with hair-side normally outside; no quire-marks survive.
Page layout: (240 x 150-155 mm) in 28 long lines. Ruling before folding, mostly on the hair-side, a quire at a time, with the direct impression on the inner bifolium. Double bounding lines in both margins. Prickings in the outer margin guided the ruling.
Writing and hands:- Punctuation varies: the semicolon or:· or,:· marks the main pause, the point surmounted by an oblique marks lesser pauses.
- Omissions are indicated bysignes de renvoi (fol.34).
- Run-overs carried to the line above are set off by a sinuous line.
- Abbreviations, apart from technical terms, includeb;.,q: = bus, que;ɔ (in a correction) = con;dix̅r̅ = dixerunt;ꜿ = eius;ep̅s, ep̅i, epīsm = episcopus, -i, -um;e̅ = est;f ki = fratres karissimi;n̅ = non;nꞇ̅i, no̅m (fol.91) = nostri, -um;ꝴ = nus;ꝑ (ꝓcorrected toꝑ on fol.101) = per;qꝛ, qd̅ = quia, quod;qn̅m = quoniam;sꞇ̅ = sunt.
- Ink brown. Script is mainly an excellent Caroline minuscule:a is the rule, rare; noteworthy is the form ofz with its stem barred horizontally and descending below the line; theƐ ligature is used for hard and softti.
Additions:An entry and correction by an Irish hand is seen on fol.
8v; another by a seemingly Anglo-Saxon hand occurs on fol.
37v (see plate) with other slight corrections by this same hand on foll.
10v,
33, and
38. Various hands saec. IX are seen on foll.
I-
V and
229v ff. Marginal notes saec. XI-XII passim. The list of popes at the beginning of the manuscript cannot be used for dating.
Origin of the manuscript: Written presumably in Northern France in the centre which produced Arras 644 (C.L.A., VI. 713) containing the same collection of canons: the two manuscripts agree in size, colour of decoration and other palaeographical features including the peculiar form ofz.
Acquisition of the manuscript:The volume belonged to the Cathedral of Constance by the eleventh century, as is proved by the marginal entries of that time, among them being several in the hand of the well-known writerBernold of Constance. Belonged toJacob Johann Mirgel, suffragan bishop of Constance († 1629). Earlier the volume probably belonged toJoannes Fabri, vicar general of Constance and later bishop of Vienna († 1541), many of whose books were acquired byBishop Mirgel.