Bio-Bibliographical Guide to Medieval and Early Modern Jurists |
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Report No. a594 |
Abbreviatio Decreti ‘Quoniam egestas’ |
c. 1150 |
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Alternative Names |
‘Omne ius aut diuinum’ |
Biography/Description |
Written around 1150 in Southern France. In several manuscripts the work is accompanied by glosses which utilize the civilian Exceptiones Petri, likewise of Provençal origin. See also Appendix abbreviationis ‘Quoniam egestas’.metal |
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Entry by: KP rev CD 11.i.2017 |
Text(s) |
No. 1 | Abbreviatio Decreti ‘Quoniam egestas’, c. 1150. |
Text(s) – Manuscripts |
No. 1 |
Abbreviatio Decreti ‘Quoniam egestas’, c. 1150. |
Manuscript | Leipzig, Universitätsbibl. 1012 (without prologue; part I only) |
Oxford, New Coll. 220 (without prologue) |
Paris, BN lat. 15001, fol. 127-238v (without prologue) |
Praha, Metropolitní Kapitula I.LXXIV, fol. 10-107v |
Sankt Gallen, Stiftsbibl. 711 |
Vorau, Stiftsbibl. 184 |
Worcester, Cath. Libr. Q.43 (ends at C.26 q.6 c.12) |
Literature |
U.–R. Blumenthal, ‘Dating the Exceptiones Petri’, ZRG Kan. Abt., 101 (2015) 54–85. |
R. Weigand, ‘Die Dekretalabbreuiatio “Quoniam egestas” und ihre Glossen’, in Fides et ius . . . Georg May (Regensburg 1991) 249–265. |
S. Kuttner, ‘The “Extravagantes” of the Decretum in Biberbach’, BMCL, 3 (1973) 263–264. |
S. Kuttner, Repertorium 263–264. |