Codex Parisinus Graecus 1115 and Its ArchetypeDumbarton Oaks Alexander Alexakis ISBN: 088402234X price: $70.00
For almost three centuries, scholars have debated the
credibility of the information provided in the colophon of Codex
Parisinus graecus 1115. According to this inscription, the
manuscript was copied in the year 1276 from another manuscript
dating back to the year 774/5; the archetype originated in the
papal library at Rome and contains a partial record of the Greek
holdings of the library.
The majority of the texts included in the manuscript come from
florilegia related to the ecumenical councils. This volume
examines the use of florilegia-anthologies of earlier writings-
by these councils. Analysis of the contents of the manuscript
provides new information concerning, among other things, the
beginning of the Filioque controversy and the use of Iconophile
florilegia by the seventh ecumenical council in 787. Also
revealed is the archetype's role in the negotiations between Rome
and Constantinople that led to the Union of the Churches,
proclaimed at the Council of Lyons II in 1274, and the indirect
involvement of Thomas Aquinas through his Contra Errores
Graecorum.
Codex Parisinus Graecus 1115 and Its Archetype has been awarded
the Giovanni-Domenico Mansi Prize,
sponsored by the Societas Internationalis Historiae Conciliorum
Investigandae and the Annuarium Historiae Conciliorum.
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