General category: Continental manuscripts
- c.838
Manuscript of De nuptiis (9 books), with glossing from two main traditions.
- s. ix2
Quires 22 (ff. 168-175) and 23 (ff. 176-181) representing an originally separate manuscript and containing Book IX of Martianus Capella's De nuptiis with glosses from the Eriugenian tradition.
- s. ix?
- Anonymous [i²]
Composite manuscript whose constituent parts have all been dated to the 9th century and assigned an origin in northeastern France (see Bischoff).
- s. ix
- s. ix2/4
- s. xiii1/3
- s. xiii1/3
- s. xiii1/3
- s. ix4/4–xi1/4
- s. xex/xiin
- Stephanus [scribe in BL MS Add. 21917]
One of the earliest copies of the Navigatio sancti Brendani, albeit one that is marred by many scribal errors. In the explicit, the text is called a Vita.
- s. x2
Compilation esp. of canon law and penitentials.
- s. ix4/4/x1/4
Merovingian manuscript containing a copy of Vita sancti Fursei, with extracts from prayers or chants in a slightly later hand.
- s. viii2/4/3/4
Carolingian manuscript containing a commentary on Martianus Capella’s De nuptiis.
- s. xin
- Gifardus of Reims, Gerbert of Aurillac
Stray leaf inserted into the manuscript and numbered f. 3.
- s. x
- Gerbert of Aurillac
A manuscript whose core is a psalter of the mid-9th century, together with preliminary matter, canticles and prayers as well as a calendar, in addition to material which it accrued in the ensuing centuries. Provenance: St. Maximin, Trier. Some features of Celtic Latin interest include the 12th-century insertion of a calendrical obit for Israel the grammarian (obiit Israhel episcopus), who became a monk at St. Maximin's at the end of his life, and the names of Patrick and Brigit that appear in the litany of the saints on f. 112.
- s. ixmed
A mutilated double leaf written in Anglo-Saxon script, possibly from Fulda. It preserves fragments of a Latin commentary on the Song of Songs, whose text has been identified as being essentially the Veri amoris, an abridged text of Apponius’s commentary. Bischoff suggested that the exemplar was Irish.
- s. ix