The international database of 15th-century European printing
istc/ia01098500 ia01098500
Ars moriendi "Cum de praesentis exilii miseria mortis transitus...". Add: Ad S. Michaelem carmen. De meditatione mortis. Bruno Carthusiensis: De meditatione mortis carmen. De iudicio mortis et variis casibus eius. Pseudo- Augustinus: Speculum peccatoris. Pseudo- Bernardus Claravallensis: De contemptu mundi
ISTC No.ia01098500
TitleArs moriendi "Cum de praesentis exilii miseria mortis transitus...". Add: Ad S. Michaelem carmen. De meditatione mortis. Bruno Carthusiensis: De meditatione mortis carmen. De iudicio mortis et variis casibus eius. Pseudo- Augustinus: Speculum peccatoris. Pseudo- Bernardus Claravallensis: De contemptu mundi
NotesArs moriendi sometimes attributed to Matthaeus de Cracovia or to Albertus Magnus (and in Italian editions to Dominicus Capranica, Cardinal of Fermo); cf. A. Madre, Nikolaus von Dinkelsbühl (Beiträge zur Geschichte der Philos. u. Theol. des Mittelalters 40 (1965) p.292-295), and D. Mertens, Iacobus Carthusiensis (Göttingen, 1976) p.181
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandLondon, British Library (IA.40532) Oxford, Bodleian Library
Number of holding institutions3
Last Edit2023-11-01 12:00:00.00
Copies in MEI
ⓘ
Material Evidence in Incunabula (MEI)
is an external database which provides copy-specific information on some of the copies listed in ISTC.
Ars moriendi "Cum de praesentis exilii miseria mortis transitus...". Add: Ad S. Michaelem carmen. De meditatione mortis. Bruno Carthusiensis: De meditatione mortis carmen. De iudicio mortis et variis casibus eius. Pseudo- Augustinus: Speculum peccatoris. Pseudo- Bernardus Claravallensis: De contemptu mundi
ISTC No.ia01098500
TitleArs moriendi "Cum de praesentis exilii miseria mortis transitus...". Add: Ad S. Michaelem carmen. De meditatione mortis. Bruno Carthusiensis: De meditatione mortis carmen. De iudicio mortis et variis casibus eius. Pseudo- Augustinus: Speculum peccatoris. Pseudo- Bernardus Claravallensis: De contemptu mundi
NotesArs moriendi sometimes attributed to Matthaeus de Cracovia or to Albertus Magnus (and in Italian editions to Dominicus Capranica, Cardinal of Fermo); cf. A. Madre, Nikolaus von Dinkelsbühl (Beiträge zur Geschichte der Philos. u. Theol. des Mittelalters 40 (1965) p.292-295), and D. Mertens, Iacobus Carthusiensis (Göttingen, 1976) p.181