Libellus
Libellus is the Latin word for "booklet, notebook, loosely folded sheets of paper " (Pl .: libelli ). It also referred to small writings and treatises ( tracts ) intended for public announcement , which found space on a few pages.
In post-ancient Latin-language scripts, it often forms part of the title commonly used today.
Examples
- "Libellus de Antichristo" ( 954 ), see Adso von Montier-en-Der
- "Libellus de institutione Herveldensis ecclesiae" (around 1073 ), see Lampert von Hersfeld
- "Libellus de conservatione ecclesiae Sancti Dionysii", see Suger from Saint-Denis
- Libellus de dictis quatuor ancillarum sanctae Elisabeth confectus , report of the four so-called servants ( Guda , Isentrud von Hörselgau and two other hospital nurses) on the life and work of Elisabeth of Thuringia
- "Libellus Monasteriensis de miraculis sancti Liudgeri" (around 1170 ), see Liudger
- "Libellus septem sigillorum", see Tilo von Kulm
- "Libellus inquisitionis veri et boni" ( 1436 ), see Nikolaus von Kues
- "Libellus de quinque corporibus regularibus", see Piero della Francesca
- "De origine, situ, moribus et institutis Norimbergae libellus" ( 1502 ), see Conrad Celtis
- "Libellus de praeclaris picturae professoribus" ( 1505 ), see Johannes Butzbach
- "Libellus de natura animalium" ( 1508 ), see bestiary
- "Libell contract" ( 1604 ), see Zug (city)
- "Libellus de vita beata" ( 1609 ), see Valentin Weigel
- "De ecclesiastica et politica potestate libellus" ( 1611 ), see Jansenism
- "Libellus disputatorus" ( 1618 ), see Valentin Weigel
- "Libellus apologeticus" ( 1624 ), see philosophy in Jakob Böhme
- "Libellus dialogorum, sive colloquia, nonnullorum Hermeticae medicinae, ac tincturae universalis" ( 1663 ), see Johann Rudolph Glauber
- "Libellus Toldos Jeshu" ( 1681 ), see Johann Christoph Wagenseil
- "Libellus ignium" ( 1703 ), see Johann Rudolph Glauber
- "Libellus de incredibilibus Graece" ( 1772 ), see Palaephatus
See also
Individual evidence
- ^ Heinrich Grimm: New contributions to the "fish literature" of the XV. to XVII. Century and through their printer and bookkeeper. In: Börsenblatt for the German book trade - Frankfurt edition. No. 89, November 5, 1968 (= Archive for the History of Books. Volume 62), pp. 2871–2887, here: p. 2877.
- ↑ Celtis, Conrad (1459-1508): Quatuor libri amorum secundum quatuor latera Germanie . Uni-mannheim.de. Retrieved July 7, 2010.