https://www.fragmentology.ms/issue/feedFragmentology2023-12-31T12:32:01+00:00William Dubafragmentarium@unifr.chOpen Journal Systems<p><em>Fragmentology</em> is an international, peer-reviewed Open Access journal, dedicated to publishing scholarly articles and reviews concerning medieval manuscript fragments. Fragmentology welcomes submissions, both articles and research notes, on any aspect pertaining to Latin and Greek manuscript fragments in the Middle Ages.</p>https://www.fragmentology.ms/article/view/3635Hannah Ryley, Re-using Manuscripts in Late Medieval England: Repairing, Recycling, Sharing (York Manuscripts and Early Print Studies, 4), York: Medieval Press 2022, 240 pp., ISBN 9781914049064.2023-02-08T21:59:25+00:00Margaret Connollymc29@st-andrews.ac.uk2023-12-31T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2023 Margaret Connollyhttps://www.fragmentology.ms/article/view/4499Finding the Prior Leaf2023-11-06T17:12:11+00:00William Dubawilliam.duba@unifr.ch<p>Fragments of Latin-script medieval manuscript books evoke the whole to which they once belonged, encouraging us to build a mental model of the now-broken whole. Discussing fragments thus requires a way to describe not just the surviving objects and how they relate to their current context, but also how they related to the original. At the most basic level, relating individual pieces to an original codex requires identifying the fragment’s physical role and orientation in the codex. Then, if the text of the fragment is known, extrapolation can be used to reconstruct leaves, gatherings, and codicological units. An extrapolative method is documented and validated using experimental data and examples from the Fragmentarium web platform.</p>2023-12-31T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2023 William Dubahttps://www.fragmentology.ms/article/view/3097Carolingian Bible Fragments in Dublin2022-07-02T08:54:12+00:00Elizabeth Mullinselizabeth.mullins@ucd.ie<p>Fragments from an early-ninth century Carolingian Old Testament are used as sewing guards in two incunabula currently held in the Special Collections Department of the James Joyce Library, University College Dublin. The host volumes are part of the four-volume 1481–1482 Nuremberg printing of Alexander of Hales’ Summa. The provenance of the UCD incunabula establishes that the two volumes bearing the Carolingian fragments were in the Bavarian abbey of Benediktbeuern in the fifteenth century. The fragments in these books can be associated with similar material in the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek in Munich and in the Sir George Grey Collection in Auckland Central Library.</p>2023-12-31T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2023 Elizabeth Mullinshttps://www.fragmentology.ms/article/view/4665Binding Waste as Evidence for the Reconstruction of a Lost Aristotelian Manuscript2023-12-26T09:56:12+00:00Pieter Beullenspieter.beullens@kuleuven.be<p>This note discusses the hypothetically reconstructed content of a fourteenth-century Latin manuscript of Aristotle's Parva naturalia, from which two bifolia survive as flyleaves in an incunable binding. The note argues that the lost manuscript contained a collection of Aristotelian treatises in combination with short texts by Avicenna and Thomas Aquinas, which had a limited circulation in German-speaking regions.</p>2023-12-31T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2023 Pieter Beullenshttps://www.fragmentology.ms/article/view/3623A Folio from the Somnium Viridarii2023-01-28T17:05:47+00:00Chris Schabelschabel@ucy.ac.cy<p>The auction of a folio from an otherwise unidentified manuscript of the Somnium Viridarii coincides with a recent re-examination of the textual tradition, thus providing an opportunity to position the fragment within that tradition and to determine its philological value. The Somnium Viridarii, a dialogue on papal vs. royal power surviving in eight other manuscripts, was completed in 1376 by Évrart de Trémaugon and quickly translated into French for King Charles V as Le songe du Vergier, extant in at least 25 medieval witnesses. The critical edition of the section contained in the fragment from the oldest known manuscript reveals that the folio is independent from the complete codices and contains a text that is at least as clean as the best of those other copies.</p>2023-12-31T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2023 Chris Schabelhttps://www.fragmentology.ms/article/view/4667An Offset Fragment in Uncial from Montpellier2023-12-26T11:25:16+00:00Leonardo Costantinieu20184@bristol.ac.uk<p>This paper examines a hitherto unknown eighth-century offset fragment of the Vulgate (Luke 24:7–10), probably of Insular origin, found on the lower board of MS Montpellier, Bibliothèque Universitaire Historique de Médecine, H 226.</p>2023-12-31T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2023 Leonardo Costantinihttps://www.fragmentology.ms/article/view/4666Fragmentology 62023-12-26T11:01:45+00:00William Dubawilliam.duba@unifr.ch<p>Editorial for Fragmentology 6</p>2023-12-31T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2023 William Dubahttps://www.fragmentology.ms/article/view/4668Fragmente und Fragmentierungen. Neue Zugänge zur mittelalterlichen deutschsprachigen Überlieferung.2023-12-27T11:31:11+00:00Robert Schöllerrobert.schoeller@unifr.chLuke Cooperluke.cooper@unifr.ch<p>Report on the 28th colloquium of the Wolfram von Eschenbach-Gesellschaft</p>2023-12-31T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2023 Robert Schöller, Luke Cooperhttps://www.fragmentology.ms/article/view/4675Index of Shelfmarks2023-12-31T06:59:37+00:00William Dubawilliam.duba@unifr.ch<p>An index of all shelfmarks and accession numbers cited in reference to manuscript or early print material in Fragmentology 6 (2023).</p>2023-12-31T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2023 William Duba