Rauner 003203: A Sixteenth-Century AntiphonerMain MenuThe Dartmouth College Digital ScriptoriumThe Making of the BookConservation of Rauner 003203Digitization of the ManuscriptLacunae and Other Damage to the ManuscriptFeast: Common of ApostlesFeast: St. Matthew, ApostleFeast: St. Thomas, ApostleFeast: Common of a MartyrFeasts: Martyred Popes Martin, John, Silverius, Pontianus, and MarcellinusFeast: Common of Several MartyrsSaturdays, when the Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary is celebrated, from the Octave of Easter until AdventFeast: Commemoration of the Cross TPFeast: Commemoration of the CrossGlossaryBibliographyAcknowledgementsThe Dartmouth College Digital Scriptorium41219092ef3888c0b9c161351d60a48559b8ad38The Dartmouth College Digital Scriptorium
Folio numbers on folios 064r and 065r of Rauner 003203
12020-07-13T03:20:09+00:00The Dartmouth College Digital Scriptorium41219092ef3888c0b9c161351d60a48559b8ad384383A Roman numeral XLIIII on the upper right corner of folio 064r of Rauner 003203, with the Roman numeral LXV visible on the upper right corner of folio 065r behind it; note that the two numerals are written in different hands, and in different inks, presumably because the LXIIII was written later, when the previous folio number was cropped off during a rebinding.2020-07-13T03:31:58+00:002019-01-29Dartmouth College Digital ScriptoriumimagejpgLatinIsPartOf Rauner Manuscript 00320316th centuryJohn Bell95368f97d82dceffed8038b36e9c51da6c29afe3
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12020-11-30T21:18:35+00:00Lacunae and Other Damage to the Manuscript5plain2020-12-02T14:58:45+00:00Medieval books often required rebinding, and each time this occurred, the edges of the leaves might be planed off to even up the edges of the text block. This was evidently the case in our manuscript, where the folio numbers, written on the upper right corner of the folios, have often been partially or entirely cropped away, and sometimes rewritten in a different hand). (DeHamel, p. 141)
The folio numbers that remain allow us to determine that four folios (66-69) are missing after folio 65 in our codex. Examination of the codex shows that folios 65 and 70 belong to a single bifolium which was once the outside of a quire; the two bifolia which were nested within (folios 66 and 69, and folios 67 and 68) fell out or were removed. In the gutter between folios 65 and 70, the stitching which once held the quire together is visible, as is the manner in which 65 and 70, were originally single sheets of vellum, glued together to make a bifolium. The next two quires, containing folios 71-76 and folios 77-82, are complete. The last quire in the codex, however, is damaged. There are no folio numbers visible on the extant folios in this last portion of the codex, which made it more difficult to determine the length of the lacuna. However, examination of the manuscript shows that the first four folios of the last quire, folios 83-86, have been torn out; the fifth folio, 87, remains intact. The original folio 88 is missing, but a folio of settings of the Benedicamus Domino appropriate to various ranks of feast has been glued to its stub; the quality of the parchment for this new folio 88 is lower, it is written only in black ink, and in a much less practiced hand.