Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (1366-1433)
In 1474 Adam Keuten, since 1467 parish priest at the Hofkirche in Lucerne, compiled a large-format volume with the Proprietates rerum naturalium moralisatae, an encyclopedia in seven parts about the most important fields of creation, followed by allegorical interpretations of natural phenomena. The volume also contains a medical treatise, several short works about the Eucharist, and a longer treatise about the Mass.
Online Since: 12/14/2018
- Aegidius, Romanus (Author) | Arnoldus, de Villa Nova (Author) | Bernardus, de Parentis (Author) | Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) | Petrus, Reicher de Pirchenwart (Author) Found in: Standard description
This manuscript was written in 1445 by the prolific scribe and later prior of the Dominican Monastery of Basel, Albert Löffler, shortly before entering the order. Its content illustrates Löffler's academic and religious education: it contains Latin texts of spiritual character, such as the Speculum artis bene moriendi now attributed to Nikolaus von Dinkelsbühl, the Pilgerbuch der Seele zu Gott by Bonaventure, and the Speculum ecclesiae by Hugh of Saint-Cher, as well as the hugely popular Liber de ludo scacchorum by Jacobus de Cessolis, one of the first Latin treatises on chess. The manuscript also contains two German texts: a treatise on perfection and a catalog of questions to examine whether, after death, a sick person's soul may expect eternal life.
Online Since: 12/14/2018
- Aegidius, Romanus (Author) | Albertus, Loeffler, OP (Scribe) | Arnulfus, de Boeriis (Author) | Augustinus, Aurelius (Author) | Bitz, Wilhelm (Restorer) | Bonaventura, Sanctus (Author) | Caesarius, Arelatensis (Author) | Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) | Heinrich, von Bitterfeld (Author) | Hieronymus, Sophronius Eusebius (Author) | Hugo, de Sancto Caro (Author) | Jacobus, de Cessolis (Author) | Johannes, Chrysostomus (Author) | Thomas, de Aquino (Author) Found in: Standard description
A collection of homiletic and pastoral texts dated with the years [14]52, [14]54 and [14]55, which came to Einsiedeln from the Lake Constance area. The main work are those by Nikolaus von Dinkelsbühl: Sermones de sanctis, De tribus partibus poenitentiae, De indulgentiis, De oratione Dominica; a collection of writings in Latin by Marquard von Lindau OFM; and texts by Jordanus von Quedlinburg OESA: Sermones de communi sanctorum, Sermones ad religiosos et religiosas.
Online Since: 12/21/2010
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Augustinus, Aurelius (Author) | Bernardus, Claraevallensis (Author) | Bonaventura, Sanctus (Author) | Conradus, de Brundelsheim (Author) | Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) | Dionysius, Exiguus (Author) | Gregorius I, Papa (Author) | Guigo, Cartusianus (Author) | Iordanus, de Quedlinburgo (Author) | Johannes, Chrysostomus (Author) | Marquard, von Lindau (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Augustinus, Aurelius (Author) | Bernardus, Claraevallensis (Author) | Bonaventura, Sanctus (Author) | Conradus, de Brundelsheim (Author) | Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) | Dionysius, Exiguus (Author) | Gregorius I, Papa (Author) | Guigo, Cartusianus (Author) | Iordanus, de Quedlinburgo (Author) | Johannes, Chrysostomus (Author) | Marquard, von Lindau (Author) Found in: Additional description
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) Found in: Additional description
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) Found in: Additional description
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) Found in: Additional description
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) Found in: Additional description
- Augustinus, Aurelius (Author) | Bernardus, Claraevallensis (Author) | Bonaventura, Sanctus (Author) | Conradus, de Brundelsheim (Author) | Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) | Dionysius, Exiguus (Author) | Gregorius I, Papa (Author) | Guigo, Cartusianus (Author) | Iordanus, de Quedlinburgo (Author) | Johannes, Chrysostomus (Author) | Marquard, von Lindau (Author) Found in: Additional description
This extensive manuscript miscellany was written by the secular priest Matthias Bürer. According to the numerous colophons, he finished the copies of the texts in the period from ca. 1448 to 1463 in Kenzingen (Baden-Württemberg) and in many places in Tyrol. The manuscript transmits among other things several theological treatises, a confessors' manual, two mirrors of confession, an ars moriendi (“the art of dying”), the Acts of the Apostles with the Glossa ordinaria, sermons, as well as Books II–IV of Pope Gregory the Great's Dialogues. After the death of Matthias Bürer in 1485, the manuscript went, along with other books, to the Abbey of St. Gall, in accordance with a 1470 agreement.
Online Since: 09/22/2022
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Anselm von Canterbury (Author) | Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Augustinus, Aurelius (Author) | Beda, Venerabilis (Author) | Bonaventura, Sanctus (Author) | Caesarius, Arelatensis (Author) | Caesarius, Heisterbacensis (Author) | Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) | Gregorius I, Papa (Author) | Guilelmus, Peraldus (Author) | Henricus, de Frimaria (Author) | Jacobus, de Cessolis (Author) | Johannes, Gerson (Author) | Konrad, von Waldhausen (Author) | Marquard, von Lindau (Author) | Metzler, Jodokus (Annotator) | Metzler, Jodokus (Librarian) | Nikolaus, von Jauer (Author) | Thomas, de Aquino (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Anselm von Canterbury (Author) | Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Augustinus, Aurelius (Author) | Beda, Venerabilis (Author) | Bonaventura, Sanctus (Author) | Caesarius, Arelatensis (Author) | Caesarius, Heisterbacensis (Author) | Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) | Gregorius I, Papa (Author) | Guilelmus, Peraldus (Author) | Henricus, de Frimaria (Author) | Jacobus, de Cessolis (Author) | Johannes, Gerson (Author) | Konrad, von Waldhausen (Author) | Marquard, von Lindau (Author) | Metzler, Jodokus (Annotator) | Metzler, Jodokus (Librarian) | Nikolaus, von Jauer (Author) | Thomas, de Aquino (Author) Found in: Additional description
This manuscript from 1467, which first belonged to the convent of the Poor Clares at Freiburg in Breisgau and was transported to the Abbey of St. Gall in 1699, contains, in addition to some Latin texts, many tracts for spiritual instruction in German translation. These include an Ars moriendi, the Cordiale de quattuor novissimis by Gerard van Vliederhoven, the so-called Hieronymus-Briefe(Letters of Jerome) translated by John of Neumark (ca. 1315-1356), the Spiegelbuch, a dialogical text in rhymed verses on living life properly, the trials of worldly life and everyday tribulations, with about twenty colored pen sketches, and a version of the legend of the Three Kings by John of Hildesheim (1310/1320-1375). The manuscript also contains some additional pen sketches: a unicorn (p. 87), images representing two Apostles (p. 107; Paul and John?), a man and a woman in secular dress, and a stag and a wild boar (p. 513). There are imprints in Carolingian minuscule on front and rear inside covers (rear inside cover: Hrabanus Maurus, De computo).
Online Since: 10/04/2011
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) | Gerardus, de Vliederhoven (Author) | Heinrich, von Meissen (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) Found in: Additional description
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) | Gerardus, de Vliederhoven (Author) | Heinrich, von Meissen (Author) Found in: Additional description
The single copyist of this paper manuscript provides the dates in which the copy was completed in May and June 1398 (p. 187 and 448). The first part of the volume (pp. 3-187) contains a series of anonymous sermons on John the Baptist, the Virgin, the dedication of a church, etc. Some pages that follow have material for other sermons whose beginning is missing (pp. 189-204), followed by a series of blank pages (pp. 205-220). The second dated part includes a treatise on the five senses and various sermons, as stated by an explicit (p. 252), then more sermons, one of which is in German (pp. 258-259). The codex has been at the Abbey of Saint Gall since at least the fifteenth century, as indicated by the ownership note (p. 1). Among the numerous quire guards, sixteen are from a Hebrew manuscript in a square Ashkenazi script of a Talmudic text from the end of the thirteenth or beginning of the fourteenth century (see the description by Justine Isserles, Books within books, 2024). The other fragments, in Latin, come from a fourteenth-century charter.
Online Since: 05/31/2024
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) | Ebendorfer, Thomas (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Dinkelspuhel, Nicolaus de (Author) | Ebendorfer, Thomas (Author) Found in: Additional description