Katarina Šter and Nejc Sukljan, ed.
(articles in Italian, English, German, and Slovenian).
Au... more Katarina Šter and Nejc Sukljan, ed.
(articles in Italian, English, German, and Slovenian).
Authors:
Giovanni Varelli,
David Hiley,
Eva Veselovská and Eduard Lazorík,
Nejc Sukljan,
Klemen Grabnar,
Katarina Šter,
Matjaž Barbo,
Maruša Zupančič,
Aleš Nagode,
Sara Zupančič,
Katarina Bogunović Hočevar,
Gregor Pompe.
The article examines fragments originating from the medieval manuscripts of the library of the Kr... more The article examines fragments originating from the medieval manuscripts of the library of the Kremnica parish stored in the Slovak National Archives and presents their catalogue. In a total of 25 codices, 28 fragments were identified that have not been mentioned in the literature yet. Most of them come from Austria, Czech Lands or from the Kingdom of Hungary. The presented collection is exceptional in several aspects. The oldest fragment is a bifolio with the text Contra Symmachum dating from the late 9th or early 10th century. The pastedown of one manuscript is made up of a letter issued by Czech Landkomtur of the Teutonic Order. Another fragment contains a mention of the Prague bookbinder Ján. The high number of Latin grammars, which are rare in other Slovak collections, is also surprising.
This paper studies bookbindings of medieval manuscripts from three different collections. Twentyf... more This paper studies bookbindings of medieval manuscripts from three different collections. Twentyfive books from a Kremnica parish library are deposited in Slovak National Archives. Viennese workshops, stored in Kremnica, especially Mathias and Blasius Coniugatus produced the most blind-tooled covers from Kremnica. However, it is possible that one bookbinding was made in a regional workshop. Only five codices from a library of Bratislava Franciscan monastery stored in the University Library in Bratislava are decorated by blind tooling technique. The author identified three of them. One was made again in Vienna by Mathias, second in Tegernsee Bavarian Benedictine monastery and third in a workshop Eichel-Lilie I. Batthyaneum Library in Alba Iulia owns many manuscripts from various institutions of Eastern Slovakia. A Dominican monastery in Košice had its own bookbinding workshop. It is possible to distinguish three groups of its products. Manuscripts for the Dominican library were usually decorated with the stamp Maria. Dominicans worked also for other owners of books, and they use different stamps and compositions for them (a group with a headstamp and a probable group with dominant composition). Bookbindings from region Spiš can be divided into two other clusters apart of a known Levoča workshop. The first is characterized by a bouquet composition and the second by a stamp with an eagle.
Katarina Šter and Nejc Sukljan, ed.
(articles in Italian, English, German, and Slovenian).
Au... more Katarina Šter and Nejc Sukljan, ed.
(articles in Italian, English, German, and Slovenian).
Authors:
Giovanni Varelli,
David Hiley,
Eva Veselovská and Eduard Lazorík,
Nejc Sukljan,
Klemen Grabnar,
Katarina Šter,
Matjaž Barbo,
Maruša Zupančič,
Aleš Nagode,
Sara Zupančič,
Katarina Bogunović Hočevar,
Gregor Pompe.
The article examines fragments originating from the medieval manuscripts of the library of the Kr... more The article examines fragments originating from the medieval manuscripts of the library of the Kremnica parish stored in the Slovak National Archives and presents their catalogue. In a total of 25 codices, 28 fragments were identified that have not been mentioned in the literature yet. Most of them come from Austria, Czech Lands or from the Kingdom of Hungary. The presented collection is exceptional in several aspects. The oldest fragment is a bifolio with the text Contra Symmachum dating from the late 9th or early 10th century. The pastedown of one manuscript is made up of a letter issued by Czech Landkomtur of the Teutonic Order. Another fragment contains a mention of the Prague bookbinder Ján. The high number of Latin grammars, which are rare in other Slovak collections, is also surprising.
This paper studies bookbindings of medieval manuscripts from three different collections. Twentyf... more This paper studies bookbindings of medieval manuscripts from three different collections. Twentyfive books from a Kremnica parish library are deposited in Slovak National Archives. Viennese workshops, stored in Kremnica, especially Mathias and Blasius Coniugatus produced the most blind-tooled covers from Kremnica. However, it is possible that one bookbinding was made in a regional workshop. Only five codices from a library of Bratislava Franciscan monastery stored in the University Library in Bratislava are decorated by blind tooling technique. The author identified three of them. One was made again in Vienna by Mathias, second in Tegernsee Bavarian Benedictine monastery and third in a workshop Eichel-Lilie I. Batthyaneum Library in Alba Iulia owns many manuscripts from various institutions of Eastern Slovakia. A Dominican monastery in Košice had its own bookbinding workshop. It is possible to distinguish three groups of its products. Manuscripts for the Dominican library were usually decorated with the stamp Maria. Dominicans worked also for other owners of books, and they use different stamps and compositions for them (a group with a headstamp and a probable group with dominant composition). Bookbindings from region Spiš can be divided into two other clusters apart of a known Levoča workshop. The first is characterized by a bouquet composition and the second by a stamp with an eagle.
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Books by Eduard Lazorík
Drafts by Eduard Lazorík
Papers by Eduard Lazorík
(articles in Italian, English, German, and Slovenian).
Authors:
Giovanni Varelli,
David Hiley,
Eva Veselovská and Eduard Lazorík,
Nejc Sukljan,
Klemen Grabnar,
Katarina Šter,
Matjaž Barbo,
Maruša Zupančič,
Aleš Nagode,
Sara Zupančič,
Katarina Bogunović Hočevar,
Gregor Pompe.
(articles in Italian, English, German, and Slovenian).
Authors:
Giovanni Varelli,
David Hiley,
Eva Veselovská and Eduard Lazorík,
Nejc Sukljan,
Klemen Grabnar,
Katarina Šter,
Matjaž Barbo,
Maruša Zupančič,
Aleš Nagode,
Sara Zupančič,
Katarina Bogunović Hočevar,
Gregor Pompe.