In 1888 K. Schenkl published the first critical edition of Proba's Cento. Schenkl knew about 25 manuscripts, only eleven of which are referred to in his apparatus. Since that time about 70 new manuscripts have been discovered; this volume provides a...
mehr
In 1888 K. Schenkl published the first critical edition of Proba's Cento. Schenkl knew about 25 manuscripts, only eleven of which are referred to in his apparatus. Since that time about 70 new manuscripts have been discovered; this volume provides a full description of the manuscript tradition in the praefatio and demonstrates that the tradition originates from a manuscript preserved near Aachen, probably at the court of Charles the Great. Alessia Fassina, University of Venice, Italy; Carlo M. Lucarini, University of Palermo, Italy. In 1888 K. Schenkl published the first critical edition of Proba's Cento. Schenkl knew about 25 manuscripts, only eleven of which are referred to in his apparatus. Since that time about 70 new manuscripts have been discovered; this volume provides a full description of the manuscript tradition in the praefatio and demonstrates that the tradition originates from a manuscript preserved near Aachen, probably at the court of Charles the Great
Bibliotheca scriptorum Graecorum et Romanorum Teubneriana ; 2017
Umfang:
CX, 58 S.
Bemerkung(en):
Description based upon print version of record
Praefatio; De Probae vita; Librorum sive servatorum sive deperditorum laterculum; Stemmata; De epigrammate praefatorio (= Anth. Lat. 719d R.); De Probae fontibus partibusqe Centonis ab ipsa Proba non absolutis; De exemplari Vergiliano a Proba adhibito; Conspectus librorum impressorum Probae editiones ·; Vergili editiones adhibitae; Subsida ad Probam praecipue pertinentia virorumqe doctorum nomina in apparatu laudata; Conspectus siglorum; Incerti auctoris (fortasse Aemili Probi) epigramma praefatorium (= AL 719d R.); Faltoniae Betitiae Probae Cento Vergilianus; Indices; Loci Vergiliani