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An Anglo-Saxon fragment of Justinus's Epitome
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 September 2008
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In 1910, Samuel Brandt published a description and photograph of a fragment of Justinus's Epitome of the Historiae Philippicae of Pompeius Trogus. The leaf, whose present location is unknown, belonged at that time to the collection of Ernst Fischer at Weinheim. Fischer dated its script, an Anglo-Saxon minuscule, to about AD 800, which, as Brandt observed, would mean that it antedated the earliest known manuscripts of the text, which are ninth-century. Although E. A. Lowe indicated in his Codices Latini Antiquiores that the fragment was lost, it has continued to attract scholarly attention. Professor Bernhard Bischoff suggested that the fragment could be identified with a copy of Justinus listed among the books of Gerward, palace librarian of Louis the Pious. This implied connection with the Carolingian court, taken together with Alcuin's naming of Justinus's work among the books described in the poem on York and his later association with the Carolingian court, has raised the possibility of an English origin for the Weinheim manuscript and therefore also for the earliest known branch of the text. As L.D. Reynolds remarked, ‘This fragment has a significance quite out of keeping with its size.’
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References
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89 My thanks are due to Dr David Dumville for drawing the Bagford fragment to my attention and for subsequent discussions and guidance on the matter, to Professor Helmut Gneuss for his prompt response to my enquiry about Fischer's fragment, and to Professor Michael Reeve, Dr Michael Lapidge and Dr Rosamond McKitterick for their comments after kindly reading this paper in draft. To n. 13 should be added McKitterick, R., ‘The Diffusion of Insular Culture in Neustria between 650 and 850: the Implications of the Manuscript Evidence’, in La Neustrie. Les pays au nord de la Loire de Dagobert à Charles le Chauve ed. H. H. Atsma (forthcoming).Google Scholar
90 There are two scribal marginal notes. Of that on the recto, only the following can be distinguished: ‘[ius iuran]du[m] ?mei [pron]us [ ] sororis’. On the verso ‘ptholemeus filius sororis interficit ipsam post nuptias in exilium mittit’.
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