Qusta Ibn-Luqa (820-912)
This volume contains the so-called Wörterbuch des alten Schulmeisters (old schoolmaster's dictionary). This is an independent adaptation of the more widely used Vocabularius ex quo. In contrast to the more original version, in the old schoolmaster's edition the German explanations take a back seat to the purely Latin ones. The original pastedowns, which were detached from the cover during a restoration in 1974, also contain excerpts from a Latin translation of Aristotle's De anima and other pieces of related content. The fact that the text on the rear pastedown directly continues the text from the front pastedown shows that, in their original context, the pastedowns must have been two successive pages of one manuscript.
Online Since: 06/18/2020
- Qusta Ibn-Luqa: Johanne Hispano interprete, De differentia animae et spiritus (Exzerpte) (bvb-bra)
Incipit: Spiritus est quoddam corpus subtile, quod quidem in humano corpore oritur a corde
Explicit: hac de causa fiunt virtutes anime imprimis imperfecte perfectione [Dittographie?] et mulieribus et similiter fit in gentibus, in quarum complexione vincit calor vel frigus propter propinquitatem eorum ad solem vel longitudinem ab eo ut Aethiopes et similes.
Found in:
Standard description
- Alfredus, Sereshalensis (Author) | Alter Schulmeister (Author) | Aristoteles (Author) | Heinrich Arnoldi (Librarian) | Hermes, Trismegistus (Author) | Iohannes, Hispanus (Translator) | Louber, Jakob (Librarian) | Moser, Urban (Librarian) | Qusta Ibn-Luqa (Author) Found in: Standard description
Manuscript CB 10 was probably intended for educational use, it contains works of Aristotle, Avicenna, Nicolaus Damascenus, Qusta Ibn-Luca and Alexander Aphrodisiensis. This manuscript, written on parchment during the 13th century, presumably belonged to a student of the Faculty of Arts in Leipzig, as may be concluded from a list of lectures attended during the year 1439 which is included in the codex. The list contains the names of the professors, titles of the texts covered, lecturers' fees, and starting and ending dates for the lecture periods.
Online Since: 12/20/2007
- Qusta Ibn-Luqa: Costa-Ben-Luca, De differentia spiritus et animae (f. 2) Found in: Standard description
- Qusta Ibn-Luqa: De differentia spiritus et animae (f. 242v-245)
Incipit: Spiritus igitus est corpus subtile quod in humano corpore oritur ex corde et fertur in uenis pulsus
Explicit: et ipse priore spiritu multo est subtilior et purior propter sue operationis acumen prior etenim circa sensibilia iste circa sensum latentia. Hec de differentia spiritus et anime dicta sufficiant.
Found in:
Standard description
- Alexander, Aphrodisiensis (Author) | Alfredus, Sereshalensis (Translator) | Aristoteles (Author) | Avicenna (Author) | Bodmer, Martin (Former possessor) | Farabi, Abu-Nasr Muhammad Ibn-Muhammad al- (Author) | Gerardus, Cremonensis (Translator) | Henricus, Aristippus (Translator) | Jacobus, de Venetiis (Translator) | Nicolaus, Damascenus (Author) | Qusta Ibn-Luqa (Author) Found in: Standard description
This manuscript was produced in a Parisian workshop around the end of the 13th century. It contains the Latin version of thirteen critiques written by, or generally thought to have been written by, Aristotle. The book ends with a fragment of De uno deo benedicto by Moses Maimonides. Forty decorated initials adorn the text, and a large drawing of Christ on the cross with Mary and John has been added on the last folio.
Online Since: 04/15/2010
- Qusta Ibn-Luqa (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Alfredus, Sereshalensis (Translator) | Aristoteles (Author) | Gerardus, Cremonensis (Translator) | Ḥunain, Ibn-Isḥāq (Translator) | Johannes, Hispalensis (Translator) | Maimonides, Moses (Author) | Nicolaus, Damascenus (Author) | Proclus, Diadochus (Author) | Qusta Ibn-Luqa (Author) Found in: Standard description
A 13th/14th century philosophical manuscript containing Latin versions of the Liber de definitionibus by Isaac ben Salomon Israeli († ca. 932), a Jew who lived in Egypt and Tunisia, together with the work De quinque essentiis by the Arab philosopher and mathematician Al-Kindi (Latinized as Alkindus; † 873), the Liber de causis, erroneously attributed to Aristotle, as well as the beginning of the work De differentia spiritus et animae by the Arab philosopher Qusta ibn Luqa (Latinized as Costa ben Luca; 820-912). The codex is bound in an extremely damaged Kopert (limp vellum) binding.
Online Since: 04/15/2010
- Qusta Ibn-Luqa: De differentia spiritus et animae. (4 (p. 44))
Incipit: Interrogasti me, honoret te Deus, de differentia inter spiritum et animam
Explicit: et sic per eam
Found in:
Standard description
- Aristoteles (Author) | Isrāʼīlī, Isḥāq Ibn-Sulaimān /al (Author) | Kindī, Ja'kûb Ibn-Ishâk al (Author) | Qusta Ibn-Luqa (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Aristoteles (Author) | Isrāʼīlī, Isḥāq Ibn-Sulaimān /al (Author) | Kindī, Ja'kûb Ibn-Ishâk al (Author) | Qusta Ibn-Luqa (Author) Found in: Additional description