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List of manuscripts in the Cotton library

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List of manuscripts from the Cotton library

This is an incomplete list of some of the manuscripts from theCotton library that today form the Cotton collection[1] of theBritish Library. Some manuscripts were destroyed or damaged in a fire atAshburnham House in 1731, and a few are kept in other libraries and collections.

Robert Bruce Cotton organized his library in a room 26 feet (7.9 m) long by six feet wide filled withbookpresses, each with the bust of a figure fromclassical antiquity on top. Counterclockwise, these wereJulius Caesar,Augustus,Cleopatra,Faustina,Tiberius,Caligula,Claudius,Nero,Galba,Otho,Vitellius,Vespasian,Titus, andDomitian. (Domitian had only one shelf, perhaps because it was over the door). In each press, each shelf was assigned a letter; manuscripts were identified by the bust over the press, the shelf letter, and the position of the manuscript (in Roman numerals) counting from the left side of the shelf. Thus, the Lindisfarne Gospels, Nero B.iv, was the fourth manuscript from the left on the second shelf (shelf B) of the press under the bust of Nero. For Domitian and Augustus, which had only one shelf each, the shelf letter was left out of the press-mark. TheBritish Museum retained Cotton's press-marks when the Cotton collection became one of the foundational collections of its library, so manuscripts are still designated by library, bookpress, shelf, and number (even though they are no longer stored in that fashion). For example, the manuscript ofBeowulf is designatedCotton MS Vitellius A.xv, and the manuscript ofPearl isCotton MS Nero A.x.

This list isincomplete; you can help byadding missing items.(March 2023)

Augustus

[edit]
iTwo large portfolios containing a 138 16th century maps, charts and plans of towns, buildings, fortifications and related items. Some of the items are plans for projects that were never completed.[2]
iiA portfolio containing a collection of 136 mostlyAnglo-Saxon charters, also contains a few later medieval charters, Papal Bulls, and some other items. Includes: Item 3 TheIsmere Diploma; Item 106Magna Carta: Exemplification of 1215[2]
iiiA collection of drawings, maps and diagrams from the reign of Henry VIII; prints belonging to or associated with the Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae[2]
ivTroy Book byJohn Lydgate,[2] edition of 1555 with some variations. According to heraldic evidence the manuscript was created between 1411 and 1458, probably during Lydgate's lifetime.
vLe Trésor des Histoires. Universal history, from theCreation toPope Clement VI (died 1352). 15th century copy, lavishly illuminated.
viLe livre des propriétés des choses, translated from Latin to French byJehan Corbechon under the patronage ofCharles V of France. 14th century, illuminated.
viiCartulary of Lewes Priory, now catalogued as Cotton MS Vespasian F XV.

Caligula

[edit]
A.iReligious miscellany
A.iiFos. 3–5,A Pistil of Susan (fragment), probably byHuchoun; fos. 5–13,Sir Eglamour of Artois; fos. 22–35,Octavian; fos. 35–42,Sir Launfal; fos. 42–57,Lybeaus Desconus; fos. 71–6,Emaré; fos. 130–4,Sir Isumbras.[3]
A.iiiTexts on theCarthusians[2]
A.ivAnnals of Eutychius, Patriarch of Alexandria. Text in Arabic.[2]
A.vDisputacion de la Felicite Humaine (1st quarter of the 16th century)[2]
A.viHumphrey Llwyd,Chronicle of Welsh history,Cadwaladr ap Cadwallon (d. 664 × 682) to AD 1293; notes on the descent of Welsh nobles (1559)[2]
A.viiHeliand
A.viiiMiscellany
A.ixThe Owl and the Nightingale;Layamon,Brut
A.xPeter of Ickham,De gestis Britonum et Anglorum, to AD 1289 (4th quarter of the 13th century); Chronicle ofWorcester Cathedral Priory to 1377, religious miscellany[2]
A.xiRobert of Gloucester, Chronicle;Short Metrical Chronicle of England (imperfect) (2nd half of the 13th century); William Langland,The Vision ofPiers Plowman (B version) (1st half of the 15th century),De uita monachorum(Mid 13th century)[2]
A.xiiAnnalistic chronicle, AM 1–AD 1246 (Mid 13th century); Cartulary ofPipewell Abbey (3rd quarter of the 13th century – 4th quarter of the 15th century)[2]
A.xiiiList of the kings of England from Stephen (1135–1154) to Henry VII (1485–1509) (15th century); Chronicle of English history, AM 1–AD 1347 (4th quarter of the 14th century-1534); Cartulary of Pipewell Abbey (3rd quarter of the 13th century – 4th quarter of the 15th century)[2]
A.xivCaligula Troper
A.xvJerome,De viris illustribus andVita Sancti Pauli; extracts fromIsidore of Seville,Etymologiae; extract fromCyprian,Ad Quirinum Testimonia, book iii; computistical texts; and Easter tables.[2]

(1) fos. 3-117, 8th and 9th-century material from France, which had arrived in England by the 9th or 10th century (2) fos. 120–53, once part of BL Egerton 3314, belonging to the 11th century. It consists of two parts:
fos. 120–41, part A, computistical texts; annals ofChrist Church, Canterbury; Old English and Latin prognostications andcharms
fos. 142–53, excerpts fromBede,De temporibus anni, with additional notes.[4] At f. 123v is found apagan Norse charm, invoking the godThor.[5]

A.xviMartinus Polonus,Chronicle (1st half of the 14th century-2nd half of the 15th century);Coluccio Salutati,Epistole (1st half of the 15th century)[2]
A.xviiSermon on the murder of Elizabeth Dorrocott committed by William Dillon; report of the murder of Elizabeth Dorrocott, 24 May 1589, and the suicide of William Dillon[2]
A.xviiiTheGreat Roll (Parliamentary Roll or Bannerets' Roll); hymn for the Blessed Virgin Mary;Ingratitude of the great; En un verger m’en entray;Une dame de mult grant pris (imperfect);The treason of Sir Thomas de Turberville;The Song of Caerlaverock (1st quarter of the 14th century)[2]
B-ECorrespondence, records, and papers, including both originals and copies, concerning England, Scotland, and France. Largely 16th century. Includes letters from Mary, queen of Scots (B.iv, C.iii, C.vii), the correspondence of James VI, King of Scots (C.ix)

Claudius

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A.iReligious miscellany[2]
A.iiReligious materials, much by John Mirk[2]
A.iiiVolume of liturgical fragments[2]
A.ivReligious miscellany[2]
A.vChronicon Angliae Petriburgense – The Spalding Annals
A.viComposite manuscript in two parts: the Latin cartulary of the Benedictine priory of St Mary and St Blaise at Boxgrove in the diocese of Chichester (13th and 14th centuries). The second part (first half of the 12th century) is sermons and letters byIvo of Chartres,Marbodius, andHildebert of Lavardin (13th century-14th century)[2]
A.viiiMiscellany[2]
A.xTwo works byJohn of Garland.[2]
A.xiAnselm of Canterbury,Epistole (2nd half of the 13th century-2nd half of the 14th century).[2]
A.xiiDudo of Saint-Quentin,Historia Normannorum;Marbod of Rennes,De Lapidibus; Bury St Edmunds hosteller's register;William de Montibus,Poeniteas Cito (3rd quarter of the 12th century-1450)[2]
A.xiiiCartulary of the Woodford family of Brentingby (Leicestershire), including a list of the kings of England to Henry VI (1449)[2]
A.xivJakob Nielsen (James Nicholas of Dacia),Liber de distinctione metrorum, written in commemoration of Aymer de Valence, 11th earl of Pembroke (d. 1324)[2]
B.iOne of the two extant full-text translations of the Revelations of the mystic and saintBirgitta of Sweden, known as theLiber celestis revelationum (Heavenly Book of Revelations). The other is Cotton MS Julius F.ii[2]
B.iiAlan of Tewkesbury,Collectio Epistolarum Sancti Thome Cantuariensis;John of Salisbury,Life of St Thomas Becket with Alan of Tewkesbury's prologue. Alan of Tewkesbury (d. 1202) compiled a collection of StThomas Becket's letters from earlier collections than John of Salisbury's collection. The earliest extant version of Alan of Tewkesbury's collection. It contains a number of emendations, additions and corrections indicating that it may have been a work in progress. Comprises 598 letters arranged in chronological order.[2]
B.iiiCartulary of York Minster, including terriers and rentals of the prebends (4th quarter of the 13th century-4th quarter of the 14th century)[2]
B.ivIllustrated Old English Hexateuch[2]
B.vActs of the Council of Constantinople[2]
B.viCartulary ofAbingdon Abbey (imperfect), including a treatise on the abbey'sobedientiaries (1st half of the 13th century); Miniature of a battle-scene by the Boethius Master;Jean Froissart,Chronique (imperfect; 1st quarter of the 15th century)[2]
B.viiManuscript assembled (from earlier materials) for ArchbishopMatthew Parker (d. 1575). Includes legal proceedings;Roger of Howden,Chronicle,Pseudo-Turpin,De gestis Karoli magni; 'Prester John',Epistola ad Manuelem imperatorem, etc; extracts made in the time of Matthew Parker; Pseudo-Dares Phrygius,De excidio Troie historia;Geoffrey of Monmouth,Prophetiae Merlini; legal proceedings.[6]
B.viiiSamaritan Pentateuch
B.ixHélinand of Froidmont,Chronicon, books i–xvi (only surviving volume of 3; mid 15th century); List of the martyrs, confessors and virgins buried atChrist Church Cathedral Priory, Canterbury; list of the confessors buried at St Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury; Family-tree of the Cistercian abbeys in England (Mid 13th century-2nd half of the 13th century);Historia uite et regni Ricardi secundi, AD 1377–1402 (1st quarter of the 15th century)[2]
B.xCarta de executoria de hidalguia made for Juan de la Torre de Valle of Gran Puerto de Santa Maria (1584)[2]
C.iMichael Heneage (d. 1600), Collections relating to English noble families, and names of the barons summoned by King Edward I of England to fight in Scotland, 1296[2]
C.iiMiscellany regarding English nobility, 16th-17th centuries[2]
C.iiiThe names and Armes of suche as haue ben aduaunced to the honorable Ordre of knighthoode, Henry IV–James I, mostly in the hand ofRobert Glover (d. 1588), with an index (2nd half of the 16th century-1624)[2]
C.ivExtracts from theRed Book of the Exchequer and other records, including excerpts from theStrata Florida Chronicle and theNeath Chronicle (4th quarter of the 16th century)[2]
C.vSurvey of Lindsey (1st quarter of the 12th century); Rental ofOwston Abbey (4th quarter of the 14th century);Iohannes de Lignano,De uirtutibus generatione (imperfect) (Mid 15th century)[2]
C.viPart 1 (2nd half of the 11th century, French), contains a collection of historical and legal works, predominantly theDecretum (Decretals) byBurchard, bishop of Worms. The second part (12th century) is from the Cathedral Priory of the Holy Trinity orChrist Church, Canterbury. It contains various documents related to Christ Church, and theConsuetudines (Constitutions) ofLanfranc, archbishop of Canterbury.[2]
C.viiUtrecht Psalter[7]
C.viiiIndex of the heirs of English families, Edward I–Elizabeth, extracted from various records, in the hand of Robert Glover (d. 1588).[2]
C.ixThe first (2nd half of the 12th century) is theChronicle ofHugh of Saint-Victor. The second (1st half of the 13th century), is theGesta Regum Anglorum (Deeds of the Kings of England) by William of Malmesbury. The third part, (2nd half of the 12th century and late 13th century) is theLiber Terrarum (Book of the Lands) of the Benedictine abbey of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Abingdon, also known as theHistoria Ecclesie Abbendonensis.[2]
C.xNames of those owing service to the kings of England, Henry III–Edward IV[2]
C.xiRegisters of the bishopric ofEly.[2]
C.xiiInquisitions and escheats relating to Yorkshire, Henry III-Richard III, with genealogies of the descendants of SirRobert Thwing of Danby (4th quarter of the 16th century-1st quarter of the 17th century).[2]
D.iLetters and documents related to theAbbey of St. Albans.[2]
D.iiComposition of Yards and Perches
D.iiiBede,Martyrology; bilingualRule of St Benedict; obituary calendar ofWintney Priory (c.1220 – 1st half of the 15th century).[2]
D.ivfolios 48-54 ofDe Iniusta Vexacione Willelmi Episcopi Primi (missing introduction and parts of the conclusion)
D.viAbbreviatio compendiosa chronicorum Anglie (Brief Abridgement of the Chronicles of England),Matthew Paris's summary of hisHistoria Anglorum. The rest of the manuscript is mostly fragmented historical treatises composed byWilliam Rishanger.[2]
D.vi/1In 1929, folio 12 of Claudius D.vi (including a map of Britain drawn by Matthew Paris) was removed and is now kept separately.[2]
D.viiChronicle ofLanercost Priory[1]
D.viiiProctor's book of theUniversity of Oxford (1st quarter of the 15th century); Commentary on the Gospels (imperfect) (Mid 15th century)[2]
D.ixThe first part (2nd half of the 13th century) contains parts of papal and conciliar decretals. The second (1st quarter of the 12th century) contains the so-calledCollectio Lanfranci (Lanfranc's Collection), a collection of decretals made in the 11th century and attributed toLanfranc of Bec (b. 1005, d. 1089).[2]
D.xCronica de regibus Anglie, Noah–AD 1377 (4th quarter of the 14th century); 'The Red Book' of St Augustine's (4th quarter of the 13th century-1st half of the 16th century)[2]
D.xiCartulary ofMalton Priory, including a pastedchirograph of Prior William of Ancaster (4th quarter of the 13th century-1534).[2]
D.xiiCartulary ofDaventry Priory (4th quarter of the 13th century – 17th century).[2]
D.xiiiRegister ofBinham Priory (3rd quarter of the 14th century – 17th century).[2]
E.iTheological tracts, includingAnselm of Canterbury'streatises, Arnold of Bonneval'sDe Operibus Sex Dierum andDe Sex Verbis Domini in Cruce;Peter the Chanter,Verbum Abbreviatum;Liber Esdrae[2]
E.iiBible, in a version ascribed toJohn Wyclif (1st half of the 15th century)[2]
E.iiiRalph of Diceto,Abbreviationes Chronicorum,Ymagines Historiarum;Winchester Chronicle;Henry Knighton,Chronicon;William Rishanger,Opus Chronicorum;Tito Livio Frulovisi,Vita Henrici Quinti;Robert Grosseteste,Epistola[2]
E.ivThomas Elmham,Chronica regum nobilium Anglie, to AD 1389 (imperfect);De inuentione et miraculorum sancti Amphibali sociorumque eius (incomplete, possibly added after Cotton's death) (1st half of the 17th century); materials related to the Abbey of St. Albans.[2]
E.vNotitia Provinciarum;Pseudo-Isidore,Decretales; excerpts fromBede,Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum; Pseudo-Gregory the Great,Decreta; Cartulary ofChrist Church, Canterbury;Ralph d'Escures,Letter (1st quarter of the 12th century)[2]
E.viLeasebook of theOrder of St John of Jerusalem (Knights Hospitallers), 1481, 1503–1526[2]
E.viiA Collection of all priuiledges, liberties & immunities whatsoeuer graunted to or claymed by the Merchants of the Hanze Citties with all differences & complaintes betweene the English & them concerning the same, Henry III–James I[2]
E.viiiAdamus Murimuthensis,Chronicon Sui Temporis

Cleopatra

[edit]
A.iiLife of StModwenna
A.iiiThe Old English 'Cleopatra Glossaries'
A.xivBernard Silvestris,Cosmographia;Cyfraith Hywel, Cyfnerth Redaction
A.xviAdamus Murimuthensis,Chronicon Sui Temporis
B.iiiAilred of Rievaulx,Historia Angliae
B.ixMiscellany
B.xiiiMiscellany (Homilies etc.)
C.viiiPrudentius,Conflict Of The Soul
D.iMiscellany, including (1)Vitruvius,De architectura; (2)Vegetius,De Re Militari
E.viMiscellany, including Sir Thomas More's letter to Henry VIII before execution (ff. 176v–177)

Domitian

[edit]
iMiscellany, includesAnnales Cambriae C, works byIsidore of Seville,Bede, andGerald of Wales
iiMiscellany: John Somer,Chronicle; computistical tables; Battle Chronicle;Liber de Situ Ecclesie Belli; an untitled Chronicle to AD 1292;Chronicles of the Brut; a summary of Anglo-Scottish affairs (4th quarter of the 12th century-2nd quarter of the 15th century)[2]
iiiChronicle from Brutus to AD 1299 (sometimes attributed toPeter of Ickham) (4th quarter of the 13th century-1st quarter of the 14th century); Cartulary ofLeominster Priory (2nd quarter of the 13th century-1st half of the 16th century)[2]
ivChronicles; Welsh verse; thePurgatory of St Patrick (13th to 15th century)[2]
vRalph d’Escures,Epistola de iniuria sibi et ecclesie Cantuariensi illata andDe primatu Cantuariensis ecclesie (3rd quarter of the 12th century);Gerald of Wales,De iure et statu Meneuensis ecclesie (imperfect) (1st half of 13th century); notes by Richard James (d. 1638) (1st half of the 17th century)[2]
viJohn of Bologna,Summa notarie (incomplete); Aegidius de Fuscarariis,Ordo iudiciarius;Thomas of Capua,Summa de arte dictandi.[2]
viiDurhamLiber Vitae
viiiCollection of chronicles. Includes:
Item III (ff. 30–70) Bilingual Canterbury Epitome (Anglo-Saxon Chronicle F)
ixfragment of the Bilingual Canterbury Epitome (Anglo-Saxon Chronicle H),futhorc row
xMiscellany, including cartularies of Rochester Cathedral, chronicle summaries, and documents relating to English-Scottish relations.
xiMiscellany of French documents, including much byNicholas Bozon. Also a formulary relating to the abbey of Bec and its affairs in England (4th quarter of the 13th century-1st half of the 14th century)[2]
xiiThis manuscript is in three parts. The first is a chronicle from Brutus to AD 1335/6. The second part is another chronicle from Brutus to 1430, titledCronica de Kirkstall (Chronicle of Kirkstall)--possibly written at the CistercianAbbey of Kirkstall in Leeds. The third part contains sermons byIvo of Chartres.[2]
xiiiMiscellany[2]
xivChronicle of English and Norman affairs, AD 1035–1120 (imperfect) (4th quarter of the 13th century-1st quarter of the 14th century); Cartulary ofHyde Abbey (2nd half of the 13th century-15th century).
xvInquisition of the rights of the borough of Torksey; materials related to Ely.[2]
xviThe Psalter of Henry VI (c.1405-1430).[2]
xviiTreatises on English royal coronation and funeral rites; transcriptions of chronicles and other historical material, including maps byLaurence Nowell;Bernard André'sLife of King Henry VII; treatises on heraldry (2nd half 15th century-1st quarter 17th century)[2]

Faustina

[edit]
A.iiiCartulary of the Abbey of St Peter, Westminster
A.vMiscellany, separated byHenry Savile the Elder from Dublin, Trinity College 114. It includes the following items:

fos. 25r–97r.Symeon of Durham,Liber de exordio atque procursu Dunelmensis ecclesiae, includingBede's Death Song
fos. 99r–99v, Pseudo-Bede,De Quindecim Signis
fos. 99v–102r, Pseudo-Augustine,De Antichristo quomodo et ubi nasci debeat[8]

A.viiiAbbreviatio de Gestis Normannorum ad Gulielmum I Regem Angliae
A.xAdditional Glosses to the Glossary inÆlfric's Grammar
B.iiiLife of Saint Edith in Middle English Verse
B.viiiRegister of Chapel of St Stephen, Westminster
B.ixChronicle of Melrose
D.iStatutes of the Order of the Garter, revised under Edward VI

Galba

[edit]
A.iiAnglo-Saxon futhorc, destroyed by fire
A.vIrish Psalter
A.xviiiAthelstan Psalter, 10th century

Julius

[edit]
A.i9 items damaged by fire in 1731.[2] Consists of a drawing representing the origin of the Stywarde family arms (16th century);Chronicle of Bury St Edmunds, AM 1–AD 1265 (3rd quarter of the 13th century); Chronicle from the Creation to AD 1317 (1st half of the 14th century); Chronicle of the reigns of KingsEdward II (1307–27) andEdward III (1327–77) of England (imperfect; 1st half of the 14th century); Collection of English royal documents (1st half of the 14th century); Medieval memorandum (15th century); Cartulary ofPipewell Abbey (1st half of the 15th century-1st quarter of the 16th century); Genealogical tree of the kings of England (3rd quarter of the 13th century); Cartulary ofChatteris Abbey (second quarter of the 15th century, with additions to the 1st quarter of the 16th century; 17th century (186r))
A.iiThis manuscript contains 3 separate items, bound together for Cotton:Bede, De temporum ratione, books lxvi–lxx (imperfect), 1st quarter of the 12th century; Ælfric, Grammar (imperfect), Ælfric, Glossary; a grammatical treatise, beginning 'Sum verbum substantium', mid-11th century; A metrical prayer); Adrian and Ritheus; Disticha Catonis (excerpts), 2nd half of the 12th century.[2] Damaged by fire in 1731.
A.iiiBernard André, A la bonne grace du roy; Bernard André, Chancon faicte en l’honneur de madame Marie; Bernard André, Ad Henricum VII in vicesimum tercium felicissimi regni sui annalem (1507–08)[2]
A.ivBernard André, Rerum memorandarum ad Henricum VII narratio (1504–05)[2]
A.v7 items, damaged by fire in 1731. Consists of Psalter leaves (c.1350–1360); Unidentified leaf (miniature of a king and his companions in a ship; 2nd half of the 13th century); Prophecy concerning Scotland (4th quarter of the 13th century – 1st quarter of the 14th century);Pierre de Langtoft, Chronicle of England, Brutus to AD 1306 (imperfect) and The Testament of the Buck (1st quarter of the 14th century – 3rd quarter of the 16th century); Unidentified leaf (miniature ofMerlin taking leave of his mother; miniature of Merlin standing before Vortigern; 2nd half of the 13th century);Prophetie Merlini (Geoffrey of Monmouth, Historia regum Britannie, books 112–115) (imperfect; 4th quarter of the 13th century-1st quarter of the 14th century); and Pierre de Langtoft, Chronicle of England, AD 1307,Nicholas Bozon, Tretys de la Passion; Nicholas Bozon (attributed), Lament of the Virgin, The Prophecies of Merlin, Award of Norham, ballad on the Scottish wars, verse account of theBattle of Mansourah, 1250, Prose Lancelot (imperfect) (14th century).[2]
A.viA calendar, computistical texts and tables, Expositio Hymnorum, canticles and poems (1st half of the 11th century – 2nd half of the 12th century)[2]
A.viiChronicles of the Kings of Mann and the Isles, c. 1262;John of Salisbury, Entheticus in Policraticum; verse miscellanies; Revelatio sancti Michaelis in Monte Tumba, etc. This manuscript contains 9 items, bound for Cotton.[2]
A.viii3 items, damaged by fire in 1731: Leaf of a Psalter (2nd quarter of the 12th century);Thomas Otterburn, Chronica regum Anglie, Brutus to AD 1359 (mid 15th century – 1st quarter of the 17th century); Leaf of a Psalter (2nd quarter of the 12th century).[2]
A.ix5 items, damaged by fire in 1731: Leaf of a Bible (2nd half of the 13th century); De uita reclusorum, De reclusis, Guigo Carthusiensis (Ps.-Bernard of Clairvaux), Scala claustralium (imperfect); Commentary on the Carthusian statutes (1st half of the 16th century); Letter-book ofAbingdon Abbey (2nd half of the 13th century); Leaf of a Bible (2nd half of the 13th century)[2]
A.xOld English Martyrology, (4th quarter of the 10th century-1st quarter of the 11th century); Life and Miracles of St Oswine (4th quarter of the 12th century-1st quarter of the 13th century)[2]
A.xiWilliam Fitz Stephen'sLife of StThomas Becket (last quarter of the 12th century or 1st quarter of the 13th century; last quarter of the 13th century or 1st quarter of the 14th century); Aelred of Rievaulx, Gesta regum Anglorum, list of the kings of Britain and England (4th quarter of the 12th century-1st half of the 13th century); Serlo of Savigny, Uersus de contemptu mundi (4th quarter of the 12th century; imperfect); Leaf of a Book of Hours (c.1415–1420); Notes on William FitzStephen and Uita sancti Thome archiepiscopi et martyris (2nd half of the 17th century)[2]
A.xviAilred of Rievaulx,De Gestis Davidis Regis Scottorum[citation needed]
B.iLeaf from a noted liturgical book (2nd half of the 15th century); Chronicle of the city of London, AD 1189–1483 (imperfect), includingJohn Lydgate, 'Sotelties' at the Coronation Banquet of Henry VI, list of the lord mayors of London, 1509–31, battle-ordinances for the invasion of Scotland, 1386[2]
B.ii3 items: Chronicle of the city of London, AD 1189–1434/5,John Lydgate, On the entry ofKing Henry VI of England in London, 1432 (2nd quarter of the 15th century); Medieval endleaves, chronicle of the Popes toGregory XI, chronicle of the Holy Roman emperors toCharles IV, chronicle of thearchbishops of Canterbury toWilliam Whittlesey, lists of bishoprics, chronicle of English history, Brutus–1367, medieval endleaf (2nd half of the 14th century-1st quarter of the 15th century).[2]
B.iiiLeaf from a noted liturgical book (2nd half of the 15th century)[2]
B.ivCustoms and liberties concerning theCinque Ports, including original documents; Modus tenendi Parliamentum (1st quarter of the 17th century; middle of the 15th century; 2nd half of the 16th century)[2]
B.vLeaves from two noted liturgical books; Laws and customs of the port ofSandwich (2nd half of the 16th century)[2]
B.viPapers (mostly originals) relating toBrittany,Edward III (1327–77)–Henry VII (1485–1509) (2nd half of the 14th century – 1st half of the 17th century). Leaves damaged by fire, 1731.[2]
B.vii3 items, endleaves damaged by fire in 1731: 2 imperfect penetentials from the 2nd half of the 13th century; Calendar. Ps.-Ambrose of Milan, De gradibus uirtutum (incomplete), Bede (attributed), Martyrologium, verses for calculating thedate of Easter, 1349–1522, lections for feast-days in the diocese ofNorwich (2nd half of the 15th century)[2]
B.viiiFleta (1st half of the 14th century)[2]
B.ixRegister of Thomas Goodrich, chancellor of England (1551–53)[2]
B.xiRepertory of family pedigrees in the Office of Arms, compiled byWilliam Camden (d. 1623) (1st quarter of the 17th century)[2]
B.xii4 items, damaged by fire in 1731: Names of the families who came to England withWilliam the Conqueror, incorporating verses onKing Harold II, ordinances for the funeral of a nobleman, account of the reign ofKing Henry VII of England; Record of thetrial of the Knights Templar in England (1st quarter of the 13th century); Account of the creation of Prince Henry of England (the futureKing Henry VIII) as duke of York, 1494; Register of Richard, Duke of Gloucester (2nd half of the 15th century-2nd half of the 16th century).[2]
B.xiii2 codices:Hugh of Saint-Victor, Chronicle; Chronicle ofMelrose Abbey, AD 1-249;Gerald of Wales, De principis instructione[2]
C.iMiscellaneous documents in the hand ofWilliam Camden (d. 1623);Epitome ofDomesday Book; inquisition temp.King Edward I of England[2]
C.ii16 items, outer edges of leaves damaged by fire in 1731. Names of those holding feudal service inKent (2nd half of the 15th century); Pleas for the county of Kent,Edward II, historical excerpts from the works ofGildas,Aelred of Rievaulx,William of Malmesbury and other authors; Transcript of the laws of the kings of Kent (4th quarter of the 16th century – 1st quarter of the 17th century); Excerpts fromTextus Roffensis, transcribed byFrancis Tate; Excerpts fromJohn of Worcester, Chronicle (1st quarter of the 17th century); Account of the foundation ofFountains Abbey (2nd half of the 16th century); List of the archbishops of Canterbury from Augustine (597–604) toReginald Pole (1556–58) (3rd quarter of the 16th century); John Herd, Historia Anglicana (3rd quarter of the 16th century); Confession ofEdmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent, concerning the planned restoration of Edward II, king of England, letters of John Stratford, archbishop of Canterbury, and Edward III (mid 16th century); Excerpts from the Curia Regis Rolls, (2nd half of the 16th century); Notes concerning the bishops ofDurham (2nd half of the 16th century); Rental of Sheen Charterhouse (1532); Note of the royal grants made to the prior of Huntingdon (eid 16th century); Poem beginning 'Ordinibus distincta suis atque ebria dulci', dedicated toRudolph II, Holy Roman Emperor (1576–1612), by the college of the Society of Jesus at Prague; Joannes Casparus Gevartius, In statuam equestrem Henrici magni, dedicated toHenri IV, king of France (1589–1610); Register ofAbingdon Abbey (imperfect) (4th quarter of the 15th century)[2]
C.iiiCorrespondence of Robert Cotton.[2]
C.ivAn Abstracte or Memoriall of such courses as haue beene used in militarye affayres bothe at lande and sea for defence and offence (14th century – 1st half of the 17th century)[2]
C.vCorrespondence of William Camden (d. 1623) and index[2]
C.viMaterials by John Leland[2]
C.viiCollections of Nicholas Charles, Lancaster Herald (d. 1613)[2]
C.viiiA treatise concerninge the Nobilitie accordinge to the Lawe of Englande; The orders of the king's house in the time of King Edward the 4th; Collections of English matters of England's Marshalls (1st quarter of the 17th century; 1601)[2]
C.ixDe dignitate, (2nd half of the 15th century),La fundacion de la companie de Gartier dans le chastell de Wyndesor, verses on the twelve virtues of a nobleman, statutes of the Order of the Garter,The particular styles of the king's majestie, of the prynce and of the residence of the compaignions of the most noble Order of the Garter, assembled at the ffeaste of St. George holden at White Halle, Anno Domini 1604, treatise on the Order of the Garter (imperfect), excerpts on the Order of the Garter (imperfect);The voiage of my lorde marques of Northampton into France, 1551; miscellaneous papers[2]
C.xiiAilred of Rievaulx,De Regibus Saxorum[citation needed]
D.ixSouth English Legendary (1st half of the 15th century)[2]
E.iv"Beauchamp Pageants",c. 1484–90
E.iiiExtracts from the close, patent, foreign, fine and liberate rolls (2nd half of the 16th century)[2]
E.ivMiscellany, including John Lydgate's Verses on the kings of England to Henry VI.[2]
E.vMaterials byAlain Chartier[2]
E.viCronicques extraictes et abreges de France, Angleterre et Flandres (1st half of the 16th century)[2]
E.viiÆlfric'sLives of Saints; Ælfric, Interrogationes Sigewulfi in Genesin; De falsis diis (1st third of the 11th century)[2]
E.viiiRanulf Higden, Polychronicon, to AD 1339 (imperfect), incorporating Geoffrey of Monmouth, Uita Merlini[2]
F.iLetter from a man to his sister, written in confinement (2nd half of the 16th century); Book of receipts and deliveries of the Office of Ordnance, January 1580/1–December 1581[2]
F.iiThis manuscript contains one of the two extant full-text translations of the Revelations of the mystic and saint,Birgitta of Sweden (b. 1303, d. 1373), known as the Liber celestis revelationum (Heavenly Book of Revelations), and the only extant Middle English translation of the Epistola solitarii ad reges (The Solitary's Letter to Kings) of Alfonso of Pecha (b. 1330, d. 1389), Bishop of Jaén. Alfonso wrote the Epistola as a preface to the final (eighth) book of the Liber, in which he defends Birgitta's status as a visionary and the veracity of her visions.[2]
F.iiiProceedings of the Navy Commission and list of witnesses (1608–1609)[2]
F.ivThomas Smith,The Arte of Gunnerye (1608)[2]
F.vRobert Hare,Treatise on military discipline (1556-7)[2]
F.viHistorical and topographical papers of William Camden (d. 1623), incorporating items concerningMary, queen of Scots,Elizabeth I, andRobert Devereux, 2nd earl of Essex, and including the charges brought against Thomas,Cardinal Wolsey; the indictment of SirWalter Raleigh;The Deuise for alteratione of religione; a table of the weights of English and Scottish coins; the proclamation ofLady Jane Grey on assuming the crown of England, 1553; and an account of theRuthwell Cross.[2]
F.viiCommonplace-book of William Worcester, including a contents-table of Chrétien le Gowayz de Saint-Maure (attributed), Methamorphoseos; Sedulius, Paschale carmen; Ralph Marham, Manipulus chronicorum ab mundi initio usque ad sua tempora; John Argentine, Actus publice habitus in academia Cantabrigiensi; John Gower, Verses in praise of King Henry IV of England; and John Somerset, Querimonia de ingratitudine universitatis Cantebrigie[2]
F.viiiNicholas Charles, Visitation of Huntingdonshire, 1613[2]
F.ixGenealogical and historical collections, including the arms of the abbeys of Thorney and Crowland; a list of the abbots of Peterborough Abbey; and a charter of Abbot Reginald of Ramsey.[2]
F.xTwo documents in Welsh and English.[2]
F.xiGenealogical and historical collections, much of it published in William Camden,Remaines of a Greater Worke, concerning Britaine (London, 1605).

Nero

[edit]
A.iAnglo-Saxon law codes and writings related toWulfstan, bishop of Worcester and archbishop of York.[2]
A.iiFragment of thePsalter of Jerome, leaf from aBook of Hours, an Early English prayer-book, Latin sermons, and an extract fromBede’sHistoria ecclesiastica andVita Sancti Cuthberti.[9]
A.iiiReligious materials, including the Constitutions of the English Benedictine General Chapter, 1444, and the Rules and statutes of the Carthusian Order.[2]
A.vComputus and bestiary (Bestiairius) ofPhilippe de Thaon
A.xPearl,Sir Gawain and the Green Knight,Patience, andCleanness
A.xi(1)Carta caritatis posterior (13th century), (2) Pseudo-Turpin,De gestis Karoli magni; De miraculis apostoli Iacobi, (3)Orderic Vitalis andGesta Normannorum Ducum, (4) excerpts from Pseudo-Jerome,De essentia diuinitatis, (5) Jerome,Aduersus Iouinianum.[10]
B.iRoyal diplomatic correspondence concerning Portugal
B.viiiRoyal diplomatic correspondence concerning Russia
B.xiRoyal diplomatic correspondence concerning Russia
C.ivWinchester Psalter
C.vMarianus Scotus, Chronicle;Bartholomew Cotton, Historia Anglicana
C.viiMiscellany
C.ixMiscellany
C.x• Item 1 Autograph diary of Edward VI
• Item 2 Letters of Edward VI to Henry VIII and Katherine Parr
C.xiRobert Fabyan, Chronicle of England and France
D.iMatthew of Paris,Liber additamentorum
D.iiOrder of Ceremony for the Knights of the Bath
D.ivLindisfarne Gospels
D.xAdamus Murimuthensis,Chronicon Sui Temporis
E.iMiscellany in two parts.

(1) The first and earliest part is theCotton-Corpus Legendary, a Worcester manuscript (1050 x 1075) which includesByrhtferth'sLife of Oswald, hisLife of Ecgwine andLantfred of Winchester'sTranslatio et MiraculaS. Swithuni.
(2) In the second part, various texts with dates ranging between the 10th and 13th century are bound together. These include the Oswald Cartulary andIV Edgar (a law-code belonging to KingEdgar, r. 959–975).[11] Folios 182 and 183 of Cotton Nero E.i, pt.2 (Worcester cartulary), are now bound separately as London, BL, MS. Add. 46204.[12]

Otho

[edit]
A.xÆthelweard,Chronicon de Rebus Anglicis
A.xiiThe Battle of Maldon (destroyed in 1731)
B.viThe Cotton Genesis
B.xMary of Egypt (fragmentary)
B.x.165Old EnglishRune poem (destroyed in 1731)
B.xi.2Anglo-Saxon Chronicles G (mostly destroyed in 1731)
C.iVolume containing fragments of the four Gospels, Dialogues of Gregory the Great,Ælfric'sDe creatore et creatura and other pieces in Old English.
C.iiAdamus Murimuthensis,Chronicon Sui Temporis
C.vOtho-Corpus Gospels (fragmentary)
C.ixLetters of the Grand Masters of Rhodes to Henry VIII
C.xiLayamon,Brut
E.iLatin-Old English Glossary
E.ivLetters of Intelligence from Paris to the Court of Elizabeth I
E.xiiiLegal miscellany, including some of theProverbia Grecorum

Tiberius

[edit]
A.iAn Arabic manuscript on silk.[2]
A.iiOttonian Gospels, donated to KingAthelstan and by Athelstan to Christ Church, Canterbury.
A.iiiMiscellany. Includes:
f. 3-27.Regularis Concordia (Item 1)
Rule of St. Benedict (Item 43)
f. 55–6v, 94v–7.Late Old English Handbook for a Confessor.[13]

Old English Lapidary

A.iv3 works by John Gower.[2]
A.vGlastonbury Chronicle, based on the works of William of Malmesbury and John of Glastonbury.[2]
A.viAbingdon Chronicle I (Anglo-Saxon Chronicle B)
A.vii/1John Lydgate'sThe Pilgrimage of the Life of Man, bound with chronicles and other materials.[2]
A.vii/225 paper folios containing lists of archbishops, bishops and kings, (1st quarter of the 17th century). Originally bound with A.vii/1.[2]
A.viiiJohn Capgrave,De illustribus Henricis (mid 15th century)
A.ixAbbreviatio de Gestis Normannorum ad Gulielmum I Regem Angliae[2]
A.xHistorical miscellany, 8th-15th centuries[2]
A.xiCartulary of St Mary's Abbey, Dublin (1st quarter of the 14th century – 2nd half of the 15th century)[2]
A.xiiCommentaries by Alexander Nequam and William of Malmesbury and other documents[2]
A.xiiiWorcester cartularies, includingHemming's Cartulary byHemming
A.xivBede,Historia Ecclesiastica
A.xvCanterbury Letterbook, collection of letters
B.iAbingdon Chronicle II (Anglo-Saxon Chronicle C). Singed by the 1731 fire. Also includes an Old English Translation of Orosius, Historiae adversus paganos; Menologium; Maxims II.[2]
B.iiMiscellany, including Miracles of St Edmund, in verse
B.iiiCalendar of Saints; computistical tables; lunar calendar with prognostics; solar and lunar tables; instructions for determining the dates of liturgical feasts from the Temporal cycle; Benedictional; sequence of prayers on the Litany; a memoria for St Ursinus of Bourges; Odo of Cluny, Collationes (imperfect)
B.ivCollection of Chronicles, Histories and related material. Includes:


Item 1 – Worcester Chronicle (Anglo-Saxon Chronicle D)

B.v/1Anglo-Saxon Miscellany (images)


includesAnglian collection of royal genealogies andAnglo-Saxon Cotton world map

B.viDocuments relating to Anglo-French relations, Henry V; Gaspar de Perusio, Gaspar of Bergamo and others, Sermones, orationes et epistole.[2]
B.viii/1Liber Pontificalis (Pontifical of Glasgow) (3rd quarter of the 12th century). Outer edges damaged by water, 1731.[2]
B.viii/2The Coronation Book of Charles V of France[2]
B.ixComputistical tables; register of the abbots of Bury St. Edmunds; treatise attributed to John of Tewkesbury; Mahumet Bag-dadini, Liber divisionum; Roger Bacon, De speculis comburentibus[2]
B.xMuslim religious text; in Arabic[2]
B.xiGregory the Great,Regula pastoralis (4th quarter of the 9th century)[2]
B.xiiThomas Beckington,Opus de iure regis Anglie ad regnum Francie (2nd half of the 15th century).[2]
B.xiiiGerald of Wales,Speculum Ecclesiae andDe Rebus a Se Gestis; Roger of Ford, Speculum Ecclesiae (13th century)[2]
C.iMiscellany.
C.iiBede,Ecclesiastical History
C.iiiHonorius of Autun,Gemma animae sive De divinis officiis (4th quarter of the 12th century)[2]
C.ivJan van Naaldwijk,Croonycke van Hollandt, to AD 1461 (1st quarter of the 16th century);Dit sijn die wonderlijcke oorloghen vanden doorluchteghen hoochgheboren prince, keyser Maximiliaen (1531?)[2]
C.vWorks byRoger Bacon (mid 15th century); Cartulary of the hospital of St Thomas of Acon, London, volume 2 (2nd half of the 14th century-3rd quarter of the 15th century)[2]
C.viTiberius Psalter
C.viiChronicle ofHenry Knighton[2]
C.viiiRegister of the lords ofTattershall (imperfect) (3rd quarter of the 15th century)[2]
C.ixHistoria Vitae et Regni Ricardi Secundi fromEvesham Abbey[2]
C.xTaxatio ecclesiastica Anglie et Wallie, 1291–1292 (4th quarter of the 13th century – 1st quarter of the 14th century)[2]
C.xiEinhard,Uita Caroli magni; genealogy of the kings of the Franks to AD 885;Uisio sancti Barontii monachi Longoretensis cenobii;Commemoratio de rebus sancte Traiectensis ecclesie;Radbod of Utrecht, account of the year AD 900;Regino of Prüm,Chronicon;Dormitio septem fratrum;Uisio Lietberto; Chronicle ofEgmond Abbey, AD 640–1147, 1199–1305;De Berta et Margareta sanctimonialibus;Passio sancti Thome Cantuariensis[2]
C.xiiCartulary ofFountains Abbey, volume 1 (A–C); missal fragments.[2]
C.xiiiChronicle of John Brompton (attributed), AD 588–1199 (mid 15th century); psalter leaves.[2]
D.iTranscript of the journals of the clerk of the parliaments, 1 Henry VIII (1509–1510)–7 Edward VI (1553)[2]
D.iiLivre des monnoies (2nd half of the 16th century); Coats of arms of the monarchs of Europe and the nobility of France (2nd half of the 16th century); index[2]
D.iiiLegendary; includesVita Sancti Niniani[2]
D.ivA collection of hagiographical texts in two parts (975–1200)[2] Formerly part of Winchester, Cathedral Library I; includes Bede,Historia Ecclesiastica;De abbatibus.
D.vJohn Wheathampstead, Granarium, part II (A–Z) (2nd quarter of the 15th century); Imago mundi; Adomnán, De locis sanctis (4th quarter of the 14th century)[2]
D.viCartulary of Christ Church Twinham (Christchurch Priory Cartulary)
D.viiJohn Trevisa, translation ofRanulf Higden'sPolychronicon, prefaced by hisDialogue between a Lord and a Clerk (4th quarter of the 14th century)[2]
D.viiiPrivileges of English merchants, Edward III to Elizabeth I, including a map of the city of Hamburg and the river Elbe (4th quarter of the 15th century-1st half of the 17th century)[2]
E.iJohn Tynemouth, Sanctilogium Angliae, Walliae, Scotiae et Hiberniae (2nd half of the 14th century); in two volumes.[2]
E.iiCroniques de Pise (4th quarter of the 15th century)[2]
E.iiiRentals of chantries and guilds in Lincolnshire (2nd quarter of the 16th century)[2]
E.ivWinchcombe Chronicle; Calendar; Bede,De Temporum Ratione,De Natura Rerum, De Temporibus;Abbo of Fleury,De Differentia Circuli et Sphere, Computus; Helperic of Auxerre,De Computo;Robert the Lotharingian,Excerptio de Chronica Mariani; (1st half of the 12th century-1st quarter of the 14th century)[2]
E.vCartulary ofNorthampton Abbey (1313 – 4th quarter of the 15th century)[2]
E.viHistorical miscellany, Register ofSt Albans Abbey (1st half of the 14th century – 1st half of the 15th century)[2]
E.viiWilliam of Nassington,Speculum uite (imperfect); lamentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary on the Passion;The Form of Living (imperfect);The Gast of Gy;Northern Homily Cycle.[2]
E.viiiMiscellaneous historical and heraldic papers; Account-roll of the expenses of the English army in Scotland, 27 Edward I (1298–1299)[2]
E.ixMiscellaneous historical, genealogical and heraldic papers, (4th quarter of the 16th century-1st half of the 17th century)[2]
E.xSir George Buck,The History of King Richard the Third (1619). Damaged in 1731 fire.[2]
E.xiUnidentified theological tract(s); Charters relating to the hospital of St Julian, St Albans (4th quarter of the 14th century-1st quarter of the 15th century)[2]

Titus

[edit]
A.iLiber Eliensis (G)
A.xixAilred of Rievaulx,De Gestis Davidis Regis Scottorum
A.xv & A.xviJohn Joscelyn, an Old English-Latin dictionary
A.xxvThe Annals of Boyle
B.iOrder for the tournament on theField of the Cloth of Gold, France, 1520
B.iiHoroscope of Elizabeth I
B.viiiDocument I – SirWalter Ralegh's autograph journal of his second voyage to Guiana, 1617–18
Document II – Francis Drake graved and bremd his ship at 48 degrees on the backside of Labrador
C.xviThe Travels ofSir John Mandeville
D.ivLatin Epigrams of Sir Thomas More, on the coronation of Henry VIII and Katherine of Aragon, 1509
D.xviiiSawles Warde,Seinte Katherine andHali Meiðhad (Katherine group)
D.xxvi & D.xxviiÆlfwine's Prayerbook

Vespasian

[edit]
A.iVespasian Psalter
A.viiiNew Minster Reformation Charter
A.xivA composite volume of three 12th-century manuscripts. These include: a collection of Welsh saints' Lives, an excerpt from Bede's "Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum", and some of Alcuin of York's Epistulae.[14]
A.xvVocabularium Cornicum
A.xviiiAilred of Rievaulx,De Gestis Davidis Regis Scottorum
A.xixMiscellany
B.viincludesAnglian Collection V
B.ixHistory of the foundation of the hospital and priory of St Bartholomew, Smithfield
B.xiChronicle of Hagnaby Abbey
B.xxGoscelin of Saint-Bertin,Lives of the Canterbury saints
C.iCorrespondence of the Spanish royal court with the court of Henry VIII
D.viMiscellany, including theOld Kentish Glosses.
D.xiiLatin Hymnal with Old English gloss
D.xivMiscellany of the mid-12th century. It has most ofÆlfric'sCatholic Homilies (first and second series) and cites from Ælfric's letters to Sigeferth and Wulfstan. Other works include aLife ofSaint Neot; homily on the Phoenix; Old EnglishDicts of Cato; prognostications; the Vision ofSt Furseus; translations ofRalph d'Escures' homily onMary; and excerpts from Honorius Augustodunensis,Elucidarium.[15]
D.xix(1)Nigel Witeker,Miracula sancte Dei genitricis uirginis Marie and other poems; (2) Ely Chronicle (12th century); (3) Easter-table chronicle; (4)Hildebert of Le Mans, certain letters and sermons.[16]
E.ivMiscellany

Vitellius

[edit]
A.viiiAnnals of Lacock Abbey
A.xStatutes of Lichfield Cathedral
A.xiiPenitential of Bartholomew, Bishop of Exeter
A.xiiiGenealogy of the Dukes of Normandy
A.xvNowell Codex:
ff 1: Psalter leaf removed by British Library to form Royal MS 13 D I*, f 37.
ff 2: Cotton endleaf
ff 3: Medieval endleaf with memoranda
ff 4-93:Soliloquies of Augustine,Gospel of Nicodemus, Debate of Solomon and Saturn, Homily on St. Quintin
ff 94-209: Homily on St. Christopher, Marvels of the East,Letter of Alexander the Great to Aristotle,Beowulf,Judith
A.xxDescriptio Constantinopolis
B.iiDiplomatic letters to Henry VIII. Singed by fire.
B.ivBull of Pope Leo X, 1521, granting Henry VIII the title "Defender of the Faith". Badly damaged by fire, 1731
B.vLetters of Pope Adrian VI to Henry VIII
B.viiiLetters of Pope Clement VII to Henry VIII
C. iiiAnglo-Saxon Herbal
C.viiiMiscellany, including Epistles of St. Paul from Durham
C.xiTreaty of Marriage between Louis XII of France and Mary Tudor
C.xviiThe Manner of Sir Philip Sidney's Death
E.iiGrandes Chroniques de France[1]
E.viJohannes a Leydis, Chronicle of Holland (autograph of first edition)
E.viiGiraldus Cambrensis,Life and Miracles of St Æthelberht
E.xiiiThe Intermediate Compilation+Crowland Annals,Decretals
E.xviiiPsalter with interlinear Old English Gloss
F.xiVitellius Psalter (Irish)

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Cotton manuscripts". British Library. Archived fromthe original on 12 September 2016. Retrieved29 December 2016.
  2. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamanaoapaqarasatauavawaxayazbabbbcbdbebfbgbhbibjbkblbmbnbobpbqbrbsbtbubvbwbxbybzcacbcccdcecfcgchcicjckclcmcncocpcqcrcsctcucvcwcxcyczdadbdcdddedfdgdhdidjdkdldmdndodpdqdrdsdtdudvdwdxdydzeaebecedeeefegeheiejekelemeneoepeqereseteuevewexeyezfafbfcfdfefffgfhfifjfkflfmfnfo"Browse Archives and Manuscripts".hviewer.bl.uk. Retrieved2023-03-10.
  3. ^Mills, M (Ed). 1969.Lybeaus Desconus. Oxford University Press for the Early English Text Society. 302 pp. Middle English romances in British Library MS Cotton Caligula A.ii, p 1.
  4. ^Takako Kato."London, British Library, Cotton Caligula A. xv".The Production and Use of English Manuscripts 1060 to 1220. University of Leicester.
  5. ^"London, British Library, MSS Cotton Caligula A.XV, fols. 120r–153v + Egerton 3314, fols. 1r–44v".Medieval primary sources. University of Lancaster.
  6. ^"London, British Library, MS. Cotton Claudius B. VII".The British Library Manuscripts Catalogue. British Library. Retrieved20 May 2010.
  7. ^"The Utrecht Psalter". Universiteitsbibliotheek Utrecht. Retrieved20 December 2016.
  8. ^Takako Kato."London, British Library, Cotton Faustina A. v + Dublin Trinity College 114 (A. 5. 2)".The Production and Use of English Manuscripts 1060 to 1220. University of Leicester.
  9. ^https://codecs.vanhamel.nl/London,_British_Library,_MS_Cotton_Nero_A_ii/Sections
  10. ^"London, British Library, MS Cotton Nero A.XI".The British Library Manuscripts Catalogue. British Library. Retrieved20 May 2010.
  11. ^"London, British Library, MS. Cotton Nero E. I".The British Library Manuscripts Catalogue. British Library. Archived fromthe original on 16 October 2012. Retrieved20 May 2010.
  12. ^"Portal to manuscript descriptions: list of manuscripts".The Production and Use of English Manuscripts 1060 to 1220. University of Leicester.
  13. ^Fowler, Roger (ed.). "A Late Old English Handbook for the Use of a Confessor."Anglia 83.1 (1965): 1-34.
  14. ^Wade-Evans, A. W.Vitae Britanniae et Genealogiae. University of Wales Press Board, Cardiff, 1944, pg. viii.
  15. ^Elaine Treharne."London, British Library, Cotton Vespasian D. xiv".The Production and Use of English Manuscripts 1060 to 1220. University of Leicester.
  16. ^"London, British Library, MS. Cotton Vespasian D XIX".The British Library Manuscripts Catalogue. British Library. Retrieved20 May 2010.

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Blockley, M. (1982). "Addenda and Corrigenda to N. R. Ker's "A Supplementary Catalogue of Manuscripts Containing Anglo-Saxon"".Notes and Queries.227:1–3.
  • Ker, N. R. (1957).Catalogue of Manuscripts Containing Anglo-Saxon. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Ker, N. R. (1976). "A Supplementary Catalogue of Manuscripts Containing Anglo-Saxon".Anglo-Saxon England.5:121–31.doi:10.1017/s0263675100000818.
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