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The Lapidaire chrétien its composition, its influence, its sources ...Baisier, Léon. January 1936 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Catholic University of America, 1936. / At head of title: The Catholic University of America. "Lapidaire du roi Philippe": p. 111-125. Bibliography: p. 127-129.
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Index of the stones in the lapidary of Alfonso X with identification in other lapidariesNunemaker, John Horace, January 1928 (has links)
Thesis--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1928. / With this are bound 4 reprints: The lapidary of Alfonso X, from Philological quarterly, Vol. VIII, No. 3, July, 1929, p. 248-254 ; Noticias sobre la alquimia en el "Lapidario" de Alfonso X, de la Revista de filologia española, 1929, XVI, p. [161]-168 ; The Chaldean stones in the lapidary of Alfonso X, from Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, Vol. XLV, No. 2, June, 1930, p. 444-453 ; The Madrid manuscript of the Alfonsine lapidaries, from Modern philology Vol. XXIX, No. 1, August, 1931, p. 101-104. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 36-45).
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Windows on a medieval world : medieval piety as reflected in the lapidary literature of the Middle Ages /Beinert, Richard A., January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Memorial University of Newfoundland, 2003. / Bibliography: leaves 139-149. Also available online.
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Étude d'un lapidaire alphabétique du XVe siècle en prose, d'après le manuscrit Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, fonds français, 2007.Jolin, Audray 04 1900 (has links)
En raison de l’hétérogénéité et de l’extravagance de leur contenu, les lapidaires ont souvent été délaissés et restent, encore à ce jour, très peu considérés dans les études sur la littérature médiévale. Le nombre important de manuscrits répertoriés attestent pourtant de leur grande popularité et de la place qu’occupaient les pierres précieuses dans la société et la littérature médiévales.
Le lapidaire anonyme tanscrit par le manuscrit Paris, BnF, fonds français, 2007, un lapidaire en prose daté du XVe siècle, n’est à ce jour abordé que dans une seule étude, celle de Barbara Geromel, qui s’est intéressée surtout à un autre témoin (le Turin, Biblioteca Reale, Varia 110) dont le contenu – même s’il est incomplet – correspond en tout point à celui du manuscrit de Paris. Ce lapidaire en prose s’inscrit dans une histoire longue et riche, celle des pierres précieuses depuis l’Antiquité, mais s’en démarque également par son organisation complexe de la matière, puisqu’il adopte de manière partielle et imparfaite le paradigme alphabétique, jusqu’alors très peu employé dans les encyclopédies dû aux tensions qu’il incarnait vis-à-vis l’ordre théologique.
Témoin matériel d’une sphère plus considérable encore – celle de l’encyclopédisme médiéval –, ce lapidaire participe à la compilation du savoir de jadis et invite à une étude plus approfondie, à la fois de la matière qu’il recèle, de ses sources, issues d’une quantité importante de traditions manuscrites, et de son classement alphabétique. / Regarding the heterogeneity and extravagant nature of their content, the lapidaries have too often been put aside from studies concerning medieval literature, and, still to this day, only a few of them have been studied by scholars. However, the very high number of known manuscripts of such texts does tell us a lot about the popularity and the role played by precious gems within medieval society and litterature.
The prose lapidary copied in ms Paris, BnF, fonds français, 2007, a prosaic lapidary dated from the XVth century, has yet only been mentioned once, in a study by Barbara Geromel, who was mostly interested by another manuscript – albeit incomplete – of the same text : ms Turin, Biblioteca Reale, Varia 110. The content remaining in this manuscript corresponds precisely to the one found within the Paris manuscript. This manuscript written in prose represents one single step in a long and rich history (the tradition of describing precious stones dating back to the Antiquity). Nervertheless, it also differs from this tradition by its complex inner organisation of the subject, since it puts to use to this effect an imperfect and incomplete alphabetical paradigm as a mean of classification, an unpopular paradigm at the time, as it embodied elements difficult to correlate with the theological order.
This lapidary, a material witness of an even larger intelectual context – the world of mediaeval encyclopedism –, participates to the compilation of knowledge from older times, and calls for deeper studies of its general content, sources (themselves coming from varied manuscript traditions) and usage of an alphabetical classification.
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