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Many of these copies can be shown to have been made directly from the originals which were preserved in the Episcopal archives at Mainz. The facsimile edition is of a high quality and almost gives the illusion of having the actual manuscript in hand. In his short introduction Dr Franz Unterkircher, the editor, deals successively with the later history of the manuscript (pp. 9-12), description and physical composition (pp. 13-15), script (pp. 17-21), contents (pp. 23-26), cryptography (pp. 27-29). He ends (pp. 31-35) with a concordance which lists all the letters in the order in which they appear in the manuscript with cross references to the editions of Serarius and of the M.G.H. (the italics used in the section show that the manuscript is our unique source for over 60 of the texts it contains). ... The present edition is sure to be of great use both to the historian and palaeographer and it provides an ideal tool for introducing students to the delights and problems of medieval text studies. Paul Meyvaert, The Mediaeval Academy of America, Cambridge/Massachusetts, in: Speculum / A journal of mediaeval studies, July 1973 |
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