Bodleian Library
Univertiy of Oxford Manuscripts and Archives at Oxford University
  • Home
  • About
  • Help

Help with advanced searching

JUSTINIAN, Digesta 47.9.10–10.5 (binding fragment)

St John's College MS 235 (fragment 37)

St John's College, University of Oxford

Details

This item is described in 1 online catalogue.?

For the main catalogue entry, see: Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries

Description

From Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries

This is an extract only. For more information, see the catalogue record in Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries.

Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries contains descriptions of all known Western medieval manuscripts held in the Bodleian Libraries, and of medieval manuscripts in selected Oxford colleges. Learn more.

Title

JUSTINIAN, Digesta 47.9.10–10.5 (binding fragment)

Shelfmark

St John's College MS 235 (fragment 37)

Place of origin

Italy

Date

s. xiii ex. (text) and s. xiv med. (gloss)

Language

Latin

Contents

JUSTINIAN Digesta

Form

codex

Support

Vellum.

Hands

The text written in Italy in gothic textura rotunda, s. xiii ex.; the gloss in anglicana formata, s. xiv med.

Decoration

Two-line alternate red and blue lombards on flourishing of the other colour at divisions; names of legists introduced by 1-line alternate red and blue unflourished lombards; the text broken by alternate red and blue paraphs.

Provenance

MS 235 is a collection of binding fragments removed from College books (medieval portions only). This entry is for fragment 37 only.

View full record in Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries

See this item

Requesting

For information on how to request this item, see Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries.

Connections

People associated with this object

  • Justinian, I, Emperor of the East, 483?-565

View full record

See this itemFind out how to request this item

Not available online

St John's College, University of Oxford

On this page

  • Overview
  • Description from Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries
  • See this item
  • Connections
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies
  • Terms of use
  • Contact

© Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford 2025

  • Mellon Foundation
  • Bodleian Libraries, Univertiy of Oxford
We use cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. By continuing without changing your cookie settings, we assume you agree to this. Please read our cookie policy to find out more. Cookie Policy