Tancredus, Bononiensis (ca. 1185 - ca. 1236)
The Ordo iudiciarius is a work of canon law written at the beginning of the 13th century by Tancred of Bologna (ca. 1185-ca. 1236): f. 60r Explicit ordo iudiciaris magistri Tancreti. Tancred was archdeacon and professor at the University of Bologna.
Online Since: 06/22/2017
- Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author)
This composite manuscript contains legal texts, mainly from the period before Accursius (first half of the 13th century): the Dissensiones and the Insolubilia by Hugolinus de Presbyteris; the Quaestiones by Pillius de Medicina, by Azo, by Roffredus Beneventanus and others of uncertain attribution; the Libellus de iure civili, the Tractatus de bonorum possessione and the rare Tractatus de pugna by Roffredus Beneventanus; the Tractatus de reprobatione instrumentorum and the Summa arboris actionum by Pontius de Ilerda; several lecturae about titles and fragments of the Digestum Novum; the Brocarda by Azo; the Summula de testibus by Albericus de Porta Ravennate; an anonymous Tractatus de testibus; the Libellus disputatorius by Pillius de Medicina; fragments of the Notabilia about the Decretum by Gratian and about the Corpus iuris civilis; the ordo iudiciorum ‘Olim'; a part of the Catalogus praescriptionum, for a certain time attributed to Rogerius, and the ordo iudiciorum ‘Quicumque vult' by Johannes Bassianus.
Online Since: 06/23/2016
- Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Albericus, de Porta Ravennate (Author) | Azo, Porcius (Author) | Bandinus, magister (Author) | Gratianus, de Clusio (Author) | Hugolinus, de Presbyteris (Author) | Johannes, Bassianus (Author) | Otto, Papiensis (Author) | Pillius, de Medicina (Author) | Pontius, de Ilerda (Author) | Rodoicus, Modicipassus (Author) | Roffredus, de Epiphanio (Author) | Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author) Found in: Standard description
This manuscript from the library of Walter Supersaxo (ca. 1402-1482), Bishop of Sion, and of his son Georg (ca. 1450-1529), with initials in red and blue (some with pen-flourish initials, e.g. on ff. 1r and 113v; two drawings on ff. 77r and 91r), contains eight legal treatises in Latin, half of them anonymous: 1. Johannes de Blanasco, (Libellus super titulo) de actionibus (ff. 1r-45r); 2. Aegidius de Fuscarariis, Ordo judiciarius (ff. 46r-67v); 3. Ordo judiciarius “De edendo“ (ff. 68r-69v; incomplete); 4. Ordo judiciarius “Scientiam“ (ff. 69v-75v); 5. Tancred of Bologna, Ordo judiciarius (ff. 77r-113v); 6. Contentio actoris et rei (ff. 113v-117r); 7. Parvus ordo judiciarius (ff. 117r-121v); 8. [Tancred of Bologna / Raymond of Penyafort], Summa de matrimonio (ff. 121v-125v; incomplete). Johannes de Blanosco († ca. 1281 or later) from Burgundy studied and probably also taught law in Bologna before returning home and placing himself in the service of Duke Hugo IV of Burgundy. In 1256, perhaps when he was still in Bologna, he wrote his commentary on the Institutes “De actionibus“. The author of the second treatise in this manuscript, Aegidius de Fuscarariis (†1289), was the first lay teacher for canon law at the University of Bologna. His Ordo judiciarius from 1263-1266 is his most important work. Tancred of Bologna (ca. 1185-ca. 1236), the author of texts 5 and 8, was a renowned canonist and archdeacon, who associated with Popes Innocent III, Honorius III and Gregory IX; among his works, the Summa de sponsalibus et matrimonio, written around 1210-1214 and revised by Raymond of Penyafort in 1235, enjoyed some success. But he became famous through his Ordo judiciarius (ca. 1214-1216), which established itself throughout Europe as the reference work for legal procedure. Regarding the four anonymous (or not-securely attributed) treatises of manuscript S 102: number 3, better known by the title Ulpianus de edendo, was probably created in England in 1140-1170; number 4 prior to 1234 in France (its author is a certain Gualterus, perhaps identical to Gauthier Cornu, Archbishop of Sens); number 6, from the time of the papacy of Gregory IX, may be of Anglo-Norman origin; and finally number 7, which was written in the North of France in two versions in 1221 and 1238. The Supersaxo library contains numerous legal works. S 102 can best be compared with manuscript S 104 (Goffredus Tranensis, Summa super titulis Decretalium), which likewise is a 14th century work from Bologna.
Online Since: 03/22/2018
- Aegidius, de Fuscarariis (Author) | Blanasco, Johannes de (Author) | Raimundus, de Pennaforti (Author) | Supersaxo, Georg (Former possessor) | Supersaxo, Walter (Former possessor) | Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author)
This 13th century manuscript is of unknown origin. It contains (front pastedown-p. 185) an abridged version of Wernher von Schussenried's Decretum Gratiani from 1207, followed by two ordines iudiciarii, i.e. writings on the Roman-canonical process, which were produced in the last quarter of the 12th century by the two Englishmen Richard de Mores (pp. 186-271) and Rodoicus Modicipassus (formerly attributed to an Otto Papiensis; pp. 276-380). In the margins of the abridged version of the Decretum Gratiani (front pastedown-p. 35), the influential 1216 Ordo iudiciarius by the jurist Tancred of Bologna was added as a third procedural document, but was left incomplete.
Online Since: 06/18/2020
- Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Otto, Papiensis (Author) | Pater Pius Kolb (Librarian) | Richardus, de Wendover (Author) | Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author) | Wernerus, Sorotensis (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Otto, Papiensis (Author) | Pater Pius Kolb (Librarian) | Richardus, de Wendover (Author) | Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author) | Wernerus, Sorotensis (Author) Found in: Additional description
This ecclesiastical law manuscript contains a collection of papal decretals generally known as the Breviarium extravagantium or Compilatio prima, compiled by Bernhard of Pavia, the first decretalist, in about 1189-1190. In addition to older glosses of unspecified origin, on some pages next to the two columns of the Textus inclusus there are extracts taken from the first review of a set of glosses by Tankred of Bologna, which he issued in about 1210-1215. The text, the initials, and the glosses date from the end of the 12th century or possibly the beginning of the 13th century in France.
Online Since: 12/19/2011
- Alanus, ab Insulis (Commentator) | Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Bernardus, Papiensis (Author) | Bernardus, Papiensis (Commentator) | Pater Pius Kolb (Librarian) | Richardus, de Wendover (Commentator) | Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author) | Tancredus, Bononiensis (Commentator) Found in: Standard description
- Alanus, ab Insulis (Commentator) | Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Bernardus, Papiensis (Author) | Bernardus, Papiensis (Commentator) | Pater Pius Kolb (Librarian) | Richardus, de Wendover (Commentator) | Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author) | Tancredus, Bononiensis (Commentator) Found in: Additional description
This manuscript, decorated with fleuronné initials and occasional pen drawings, was written in Italy in the second half of the 13th century or at the latest at the beginning of the 14th century. It preserves the Codex Justinianus (Books 1–9), the Great Gloss of Accursius associated with it, as well as many more glosses in the margins. The manuscript came to the Abbey Library at the latest in the 16th century via the two St. Gall citizens Conrad Särri and Johannes Widembach († around 1456).
Online Since: 12/18/2014
- Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Accursius, Franciscus Senior (Author) | Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Blarer von Wartensee, Diethelm (Former possessor) | Metzler, Jodokus (Librarian) | Pater Pius Kolb (Librarian) | Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author) Found in: Standard description
- Accursius, Franciscus Senior (Author) | Arx, Ildefons von (Librarian) | Blarer von Wartensee, Diethelm (Former possessor) | Metzler, Jodokus (Librarian) | Pater Pius Kolb (Librarian) | Tancredus, Bononiensis (Author) Found in: Additional description