Ulrich Cubicularius

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Ulrich Cubicularius (actually Ulrich Kammerknecht ; * around 1520/23 in Bruchsal ; † 1586 probably in Pfaffenhoffen ) was a German Protestant theologian who lived in Babenhausen , in Lower Hungary (in today's Slovakia ) and in the Lichtenberg region of the County of Hanau-Lichtenberg ( in what is now the Bas-Rhin department , France ).

Life

Vdalricus Kammerer Prussellensis dioc. Wormac. (= from Bruchsal in the Diocese of Worms ) enrolled at the University of Heidelberg on October 15, 1538 . In June 1540 he acquired the Baccalaureus artium as Vldaricus Kamerknecht .

Schoolmaster in Babenhausen

Ulrich Kammerknecht was a schoolmaster in Babenhausen until 1544. The sovereign Philipp IV von Hanau-Lichtenberg had the Reformation introduced in 1544 in the Babenhausen office by the reformer Erasmus Alber , who was replaced by Erasmus Sarcerius after a dispute with the count in autumn 1545 . Ulrich Kammerknecht felt that he was being treated unfairly, probably in connection with the dispute over Alber, who “also wanted to ensure that the school in Babenhausen was properly and Christianly organized”. He asked the Count to be released, enrolled in 1544 as Huldaricus Kammerknecht Baccalaur [eus] Heid [elbergensis] at the University of Marburg and on June 6, 1545 as Vdalricus Cammerknecht Bruchsalensis Sueuus (= from Bruchsal, a Swabian) to study theology at the university Wittenberg .

Studied in Wittenberg and Jena

Philipp IV. Von Hanau-Lichtenberg wrote to Philipp Melanchthon in May 1546 that he had offered the schoolmaster Kammerknecht, who “had to study several more years and then intended to accept church administrations”, “to receive him three jars at Wittenberg in the university ", If he would commit himself to serve him as a pastor and preacher for five years" for cheap (= reasonable) remuneration ". He asked Melanchthon to influence the chamberlain in this way. Chamber servant, for his part, asked Melanchthon, together with Sarcerius and the Hanau pastor Philipp Neunheller, in a letter for advice whether he should accept the count's offer. At the request of some pastors and the Hanau-Lichtenberg councilor Johannes Knebel von Katzenelnbogen , he wanted to forget the injustice he had suffered. His letter of support to Kammerknecht, which Melanchthon mentions in August 1546, has not been preserved.

Ulrich Kammerknecht accepted the grant from Count Philip IV; possibly the correspondence with Melanchthon served above all to put the Hanau Count in a better light after the dispute over Alber. In 1547, during the Schmalkaldic War , the transfer of money from Babenhausen to Wittenberg stalled, but Kammerknecht was able to complete his studies in 1548/49 at the newly founded Higher State School Jena . He was ordained on March 13, 1549 in Wittenberg and appointed to the ministry by Count Philip IV. Since then, Kammerknecht has also increasingly used the Latinized family name Cubicularius .

Pastor of the free mountain town of Schemnitz in Lower Hungary

From autumn 1552 to 1564 Ulrich Cubicularius was a Protestant German-speaking preacher in the royal free mountain town of Schemnitz (today Banská Štiavnica ) in the Hungarian Hont county of the Habsburg Empire . Johann (Ján) Senensis († after 1597) was assigned to him as a preacher for the “ Slavic ” or “ Wendish ” ( Slovak ) -speaking community.

The Gran Archbishop Miklós Oláh (Nicolaus Olahus) tried in 1558 to oblige the clergy in his area to the decrees of the second session (1551–1552) of the Council of Trent and to collect contributions from the mining towns to finance the council. As his representative, Archdeacon Johann Deretzky submitted 18 articles to the pastors of Hont County in August, which they were supposed to sign.

A summons from the archbishop on September 16, 1558 to Kláštor pod Znievom (Znió-Váralja) in Turz county with threat of excommunication was ignored by the Schemnitz pastor, as was a second summons from September 17 to Cubicularius and Johann Senensis with 5 -day deadline. At a meeting in Kremnica ( Kremnica ), the committee of the Federation of the Seven Lower Hungarian Mountain Cities Dilln ( Banská Belá ), Libethen ( Ľubietová ), Kremnitz, Koenigsberg ( Nová Baňa ), Neusohl ( Banská Bystrica ), Pukanz ( Pukanec ) and Schemnitz adopted on 23 September 1558 a confessional document drawn up by Ulrich Kammerknecht. The confession is an expanded version of the Upper Hungarian Confessio Pentapolitana drawn up by Leonhard Stöckel in 1548 on the basis of the Confessio Augustana .

This so-called Confessio Montana or Confessio Heptapolitana (Creed of the Seven Mining Cities ) from 1558 was signed by all pastors on December 6, 1559 at a synod in Schemnitz and then presented to Emperor Ferdinand I and the Archbishop of Gran Oláh. In 1577 and 1580 the Confessio Heptapolitana was reaffirmed by synods.

On May 4, 1560, Ulrich Cubicularius, Johann Senensis and the chaplains Bernhard Illés († 1583) and Abraham Sturm († after 1568), who had not participated in the Diocesan Synod of Tyrnava ( Trnava ) on April 26, 1560, of Archbishop Miklós Oláh and Auxiliary Bishop Andreas Dudith , titular provost of Felhévíz (near Óbuda ), summoned by letter to the Schemnitz city council on threat of excommunication and interdict . Cubicularius dungeon Schemnitz on 6 May and traveled to foreign countries ( " Misery ") to Olomouc in Moravia into ExiliuM . On July 22nd, 1560, the city's judges and council wrote to King Ferdinand I that, following an order from Archbishop Oláh, they “had to deal with the pastor secretly and quietly” for fear of unrest. As early as August 24, 1560, Cubicularius was notified that he could return.

When the rector of the Schemnitz high school Johann Hensel († 1580), who was councilor in 1560, was sentenced to death by the magistrate for adultery (impregnation of his maid), he was pardoned in 1563 after the intercession of Ulricus Cubicularius for expulsion from the country.

Philip IV of Hanau-Lichtenberg wanted to call his pastor back from Hungary in 1564 after 12 years. Maximilian II supported the request of the Schemnitz citizens, who had turned to him with a request for mediation, to leave “Vlrich Khamerkhnecht” with them longer. On May 3, 1564, the king wrote to Philip IV that the city of Schemnitz, "as who even sat at the hereditary estate , had such good people, not allbeg beckhomen khunde". But Cubicularius wanted to respond to the recall at the end of the year of service and also to see his “dear old and aged” father again. As early as April 6, 1564, Ambrosius Stübner († 1564), a native of Schemnitz, was appointed from Danzig by the judges and city council as successor to Cubicularius, who left Schemnitz on July 3, 1564. However, Stübner could no longer obey the call because he died shortly afterwards.

Because Ulrich Cubicularius had good certificates ( customer letters ), he received as an exile from Hungary on September 25, 1564 in Stuttgart a grant of 4 guilders from the Württemberg “ common church box ”. On April 12, 1566, he refused a request from the city of Schemnitz to return.

Superintendent of Pfaffenhoffen in the Lichtenberg domain

Since September 29th ( Michaelis ) 1565 Ulrich Cubicularius was pastor and superintendent at Pfaffenhoffen in Alsace. The previous superintendent Theobald Groscher († 1568) in Buchsweiler felt that he was no longer able to cope with the demands of the office during the visitations “for the sake of stupidity ” .

Cubicularius drafted a visitation and synodal ordinance in 1566, which was adopted as the tenth and eleventh sections of the church ordinance for the County of Hanau-Lichtenberg from 1573. In June 1571 he took - himself a Lutheran - with an appointment patent of his count as an observer at the from the Elector Friedrich III. Frankenthal religious discussion between Reformed and Anabaptists initiated by the Palatinate . In September 1571 Cubicularcius was "mercilessly forgiven the supintendur due to weakness of the body", his successor was Ludwig Brachypodius († 1596)

The Strasbourg bishop Johann IV von Manderscheid-Blankenheim , who himself supported the Catholic Counter-Reformation in his area , had the Lutheran pastor and former superintendent Ulrich Cubicularius come from Pfaffenhoffen to his residence town Saverne (Zabern) in August 1572 to meet his dying mother Margarethe von Wied-Runkel to fulfill the wish to receive the Lord's Supper sub utraque specie .

Cubicularius signed the concord formula on October 14, 1577 together with 65 pastors from Hanau-Lichtenberg . At the request of Count Philipp Ludwig I of Hanau-Münzenberg , "Superintendent" Cubicularius also carried out a church and school visit in the county of Hanau-Münzenberg in 1577 .

A paraphrase of Psalm 22 written by Ulrich Cubicularius was published posthumously in 1590 by the Strasbourg vicarius and deacon Paul Crusius (1557-1609).

swell

  • Letter from Count Philipp IV of Hanau-Lichtenberg from Babenhausen or Buchsweiler ( Bouxwiller ) to Philipp Melanchthon in Wittenberg dated May 1546; ( Melanchton-Online, No. 4275a of the University of Heidelberg)
  • Letter from Ulrich Kammerknecht to Philipp Melanchthon in Wittenberg dated May 1546; ( Melanchton-Online, No. 4275b of the University of Heidelberg)
  • Letter from Philipp Melanchthon from Wittenberg to Count Philipp IV von Hanau-Lichtenberg in Buchsweiler on August 22, 1546; ( Melanchton-Online, No. 4348 of the University of Heidelberg)
  • Letter from Archbishop Miklós Oláh from Vienna to the clergy of Hont County on April 10, 1558; Letter from Ulrich Cubicularius and the pastors of the Hont Seniorate to Miklós Oláh, 1558; Letter from Johann Deretzky from Gran ( Esztergom ) to Ulrich Cubicularius from August 1, 1558, letters from Miklós Oláh from Tyrnau ( Trnava ) to Ulrich Cubicularius in Schemnitz from September 3, 1558 and from Znió-Váralja (Kláštor pod Znievom) to Ulrich Cubicularius and the Slovak preacher Johann Senensis in Schemnitz on September 17, 1558
  • Letter from Johann Schader from Karpfen ( Krupina ) to Ulrich Cubicularcius ( sic! ) In Schemnitz on November 28, 1559; State Archive Neusohl (BB / BS 2344)
  • Letter from King Maximilian II of Vienna to Count Philipp IV of Hanau-Lichtenberg on May 3, 1564
  • Letter from Ulrich Cubicularcius from Pfaffenhoffen to the Hanau-Lichtenberg Council Laurentius Montanus in Buchsweiler dated June 14, 1571

Works

  • (Handwriting) Confessio Montanarum Civitatum in Synnodo Schemniciensi from omnibus eorundum VD Ministris. 1559 the 6th Decemb. subscripta, Ferdinando I. Imp. ac Archiepiscopo Strigoniensi Nicolas Olaho exhibita.
    • Confessio Ecclesiarvm Montanarvm Ciuitatu [m] , Schemnitij from omnibus earum Ministris habita Anno MD LIX. the VI. Mensis Decembris. Christoph Scholz, Neusohl 1578
    • Zoltán Csepregi ( arrangement ): Synopsis trium confessionum evangelicarum in Hungaria septemtrionali - Pentapolitanae, Heptapolitanae et Scepusianae - (Latin / German / Hungarian). Budapest 2003 ( PDF of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Hungary)
  • X. From the Visitacion and XI. From the synods or chapters of the parishioners . In: Church order, as it is held with the teaching and ceremonies in the Graffschektiven Hanaw and Herrschetzt Lichtenberg sol . Müller, Strasbourg 1573, pp. 60–72 ( digitized version from the University of Greifswald)
  • Cerva matutina. Hoc est psalmi XXII . Deus Deus meus, etc. paraphrasis ,… authore D. Ulrico Cubiculario,… Opera & studio M. Pauli Crusii,… edita… Anton Bertram, Strasbourg 1590

literature

  • Johannes Ribini : Memorabilia Augustanae confessionis in regno Hungariae a Ferdinando I. Vsqve Ad III. Lippert, Pozsony (= Preßburg; Bratislava) 1787, esp. Pp. 114f, 117, 119–122 and 184 ( full text in the Google book search)
  • Johann Samuel Klein : News of the living conditions and writings of Protestant preachers in all congregations of the Kingdom of Hungary. Vol. II, Diepold and Lindauer, Leipzig / Ofen 1789, pp. 80–86, 137 and 164 ( full text in the Google book search); Vol. III, ed. by András Fabó. Hornyánsky, Pest 1873, p. 113 ( full text in the Google book search)
  • Michael Dionys Doleschall : The most important fates of the Evangelical Church, Augsburg Confession, in Hungary ... from 1520 to 1608 . Hartmann, Leipzig 1828, pp. 156–161 ( full text in the Google book search)
  • Carl Varrentrapp: Two letters from Melanchthon to Count Philip IV of Hanau-Lichtenberg . In: Research on German History 21 (1881), pp. 341–353, esp. P. 361f ( digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • János Breznyik: A Selmecbányai Ágost. Hitv. Evang. Egyház és lyceum története (= The history of the Evangelical Church and the Lyceum Augburg Confession in Schemnitz) , Vol. I A XVI-ik századbeli események (= The events of the sixteenth century) . Ágost Özvegyénel Joerges, Selmecbánya (= Schemnitz) 1883 ( digitized by Hungaricana) (contains numerous German-language source texts)
  • Marie-Joseph Bopp: The evangelical clergy and theologians in Alsace and Lorraine from the Reformation to the present , Degener, Neustadt an der Aisch 1959, p. 108
  • Hans Dörr: Correspondence between Philipp Melanchthon and Count Philipp IV of Hanau-Lichtenberg . In: Der Odenwald 56 (2009), pp. 25–30
  • Peter Gbiorczyk: Philipp Melanchthon's relations with the county of Hanau . In: New Magazine for Hanau History (2014), pp. 2–60, especially p. 32f ( PDF )

Remarks

  1. ↑ In 1544 Knebel stood up for Erasmus Alber with Count Philipp IV. In 1554 he was bailiff in Buchsweiler.
  2. Catholic priest of Hohatzenheim , 1538 Protestant court preacher Count Philip IV, since 1542 pastor in Buchsweiler.
  3. Actually Ludwig Kurzschenkel from Gemünden an der Wohra , Magister, 1564–1568 schoolmaster in Babenhausen, 1568–1571 pastor in Kleestadt, since 1571 in Buchsweiler, from 1580 pastor and superintendent in Babenhausen.
  4. From Mühlfeld in Lower Franconia, son of Paul Crusius , from 1576 student in Strasbourg, 1579 master's degree, pastor in Furdenheim , from 1582 vicar in Strasbourg, 1587 to 1609 deacon to St. Wilhelm , father of the professor of poetry Johannes Paul Crusius (1588– 1629).
  5. Johannes Ribini (* around 1728; † 1788) from Nitra (Nyitra), in Hungarian Ribiny János, Lutheran preacher, most recently in Bratislava (Pressburg).
  6. Also Johann Breznyik (1815-1897), from 1858 director of the Lutheran Lyceum (Upper Secondary School) in Schemnitz.

Individual evidence

  1. Cf. Carl Varrentrapp: Two letters from Melanchthon to Count Philip IV of Hanau-Lichtenberg . In: Research on German History 21 (1881), pp. 341–353, especially p. 347.
  2. a b See letter from Ulrich Kammerknecht to Philipp Melanchthon from May 1546 (MBW, no. 4275b).
  3. ^ Letter from Count Philipp IV. Von Hanau-Lichtenberg to Philipp Melanchthon dated May 1546 (MBW, No. 4275a); Carl Varrentrapp: Two letters from Melanchthon to Count Philip IV of Hanau-Lichtenberg . In: Research on German History 21 (1881), pp. 341–353, especially p. 352.
  4. ^ Letter from Philipp Melanchthon to Count Philipp IV. Von Hanau-Lichtenberg dated August 22, 1546 (MBW, No. 4348).
  5. See Peter Gbiorczyk: The Relationship of Philipp Melanchthon to the County of Hanau . In: Neues Magazin für Hanauische Geschichte (2014), pp. 2–60, especially p. 33.
  6. Cf. Georg Mentz, Reinhold Jauernig (edit.): Die Matrikel der Universität Jena , Vol. I. Gustav Fischer, Jena 1944, p. 71: “ Cubicularius, Ulr., Bruchsellen, 1548 and 1549a ”.
  7. Cf. Georg Buchwald : Wittenberger Ordiniertenbuch , Vol. I. Georg Wigand, Leipzig, 1894, No. 988, p. 63.
  8. See Johann Kachelmann: History of the Hungarian Mining Cities and their Surroundings , Vol. III. Stephan Mihalik, Schemnitz 1867, p. 165 ( Google Books ); János Breznyik: A Selmecbányai Ágost. Hitv. Evang. Egyház és lyceum története , Vol. I. Ágost Ö. Joerges, Selmecbánya 1883, pp. 287f.
  9. Cf. Johann Samuel Klein: News of the living conditions and writings of Protestant preachers in all communities of the Kingdom of Hungary , Vol. III. Victor Hornyánszky, Pest 1873, pp. 389–393 ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library in Munich).
  10. a b c Cf. Victor Hornyánsky: Contributions to the history of Protestant communities in Hungary . Hornyánsky & Hummel, Pest 1863, esp. Pp. 243–246 ( Google Books ) and a.
  11. See Viliam Cifaj: The Reformation in the western Slovak cities . In: Gustav Reingrabner, Gerald Schlag (Ed.): Reformation and Counter-Reformation in the Pannonian area . (Scientific work from Burgenland 102). Bürgenland State Museum, Eisenstadt 1999, pp. 157–164 ( PDF ).
  12. impression in: John Ribini: memorabilia Augustanæ confessionis in Regno Hungariae a Ferdinando I. Vsqve Ad III. Lippert, Bratislava 1787, pp. 112-114.
  13. Cf. Michael Dionys Doleschall: The most important fates of the Evangelical Church, Augsburg Confession, in Hungary . Hartmann, Leipzig 1828, p. 158.
  14. Márta Fata: Hungary, the kingdom of the St. Stephen's crown, in the age of the Reformation and denominationalization . (Catholic life and church reform in the age of religious schism 60). Aschendorff, Münster 2000, p. 69, u. a.
  15. In Passau ordained a priest by Bishop Wolfgang von Salm , chaplain in Schemnitz since 1555, took leave of there in 1568 (“vacation”); see. János Breznyik: A Selmecbányai Ágost. Hitv. Evang. Egyház és lyceum története, Vol. I. Ágost Ö. Joerges, Selmecbánya 1883, pp. 164 and 288.
  16. Cf. János Breznyik: A Selmecbányai Ágost. Hitv. Evang. Egyház és lyceum története , Vol. I. Ágost Ö. Joerges, Selmecbánya 1883, pp. 160–162 (note).
  17. Cf. János Breznyik: A Selmecbányai Ágost. Hitv. Evang. Egyház és lyceum története , Vol. I. Ágost Ö. Joerges, Selmecbánya 1883, pp. 163 and 166f.
  18. Cf. János Breznyik: A Selmecbányai Ágost. Hitv. Evang. Egyház és lyceum története , Vol. I. Ágost Ö. Joerges, Selmecbánya 1883, p. 165.
  19. Cf. Johann Samuel Klein: News of the living conditions and writings of Protestant preachers in all parishes of the Kingdom of Hungary. Vol. II, Diepold and Lindauer, Leipzig / Ofen 1789, pp. 85f.
  20. ^ Later teacher in Košice ; see. István Monok: Reading material for German citizens in Košice in the early modern period . In: Journal for Central European German Studies 4 (2014), pp. 127–144, esp. Pp. 132 and 139.
  21. Cf. Dániel Kanka: Brevis notitia clariorum gymnasii Evangelicorum Schemnitziensis rectorum . In: Examen publicum anniversarium in gymnasio ECA Schemnitziensi… 1807 . (High school program). Sulzer, Schemnitz 1807; János Breznyik: A Selmecbányai Ágost. Hitv. Evang. Egyház és lyceum története , Vol. I. Ágost Ö. Joerges, Selmecbánya 1883, pp. 334-337.
  22. ^ A b Regest in: Anton Ritter von Perger: Excerpt from King Maximilian II's Copey book from 1564 . In: Archive for Customer Austrian History Sources 31 (1864), pp. 193-272, esp. No. 143, p. 225 ( Google Books ); Printed by: János Breznyik: A Selmecbányai Ágost. Hitv. Evang. Egyház és lyceum története , Vol. I. Ágost Ö. Joerges, Selmecbánya 1883, p. 188f ( digitized from Hungaricana).
  23. Cf. János Breznyik: A Selmecbányai Ágost. Hitv. Evang. Egyház és lyceum története , Vol. I. Ágost Ö. Joerges, Selmecbánya 1883, p. 187.
  24. Ordained May 15, 1561; Cf. Georg Buchwald: Wittenberger Ordiniertenbuch , Vol. II. Georg Wigand, Leipzig, 1895, No. 103, p. 6.
  25. a b cf. János Breznyik: A Selmecbányai Ágost. Hitv. Evang. Egyház és lyceum története , Vol. I. Ágost Ö. Joerges, Selmecbánya 1883, p. 191.
  26. Cf. Hermann Freytag: The relations between Danzig and Wittenberg in the time of the Reformation . In: Journal of the West Prussian History Association 38 (1898), pp. 1–137, esp. P. 125; see. P. 77.
  27. Cf. Gustav Bossert: The love activity of the Evangelical Church of Württemberg from the time of Duke Christoph to 1650 , Part II. In: Württembergische Jahrbücher für Statistik und Landeskunde (1905, Issue 2), pp. 66-107, esp. P. 102 .
  28. ↑ It is sometimes assumed that Cubicularius stayed in Schemnitz again in April 1565.
  29. a b cf. Karl Klein: Pastor's book and church chronicle of the older Protestant community in Buchsweiler . (Contributions to the history of the former county of Hanau-Lichtenberg and its residence city Buchsweiler 2). Jahraus, Strasbourg 1914, pp. 24–31.
  30. Cf. Gerald Dörner ( arrangement ): The church order of the County of Hanau-Lichtenberg from 1573/1578 . In: The Evangelical Church Orders of the XVI. Century , Vol. XX Alsace , Volume 2 The Territories and Imperial Cities (except Strasbourg) . Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen 2013, p. 33.
  31. ^ Letter from Ulrich Cubicularcius to Laurentius Montanus dated June 14, 1571.
  32. See report by Johannes Pappus (1549–1610) in Aloys Meister : Der Strassburger Kapitelstreit 1583-1592 . Heitz & Mündel, Strasbourg 1899, p. 5 Note 2 ( Google Books ); Dagobert Fischer: History of the city of Zabern in Alsace from its creation to the present day . F. Fuchs, Zabern 1874, p. 33f ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library in Munich).
  33. See Concordia. Christian repeated unanimous confessions of the following electoral princes, princes and stends of the Augspurgian Confession and the same at the end of the book theologians sign doctrine and faith . Gruppenbach, Tübingen 1580, sheet 350 ( Google Books ).
  34. See Heinrich Heppe : Church history of both Hesse , Bd. II. Kraatz / Sipmann, Marburg 1876, p. 231f; Sabine Arend (arrangement): The counties Nassau, Hanau-Münzenberg and Ysenburg . In: The Evangelical Church Orders of the XVI. Century , Vol. X Hessen , Volume 3. Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen 2012, pp. 377 and 396f.
  35. Jump up In: Johannes Ribini: Memorabilia Augustanae confessionis in regno Hungariae a Ferdinando I. Vsqve Ad III. Lippert, Bratislava 1787, pp. 110-121.
  36. Cf. Mikuláš Čelko (arrangement): German-language manuscripts in Slovak archives , Bd. II Central Slovakia . Walter de Gruyter, Berlin 2009, p. 647; Printed by: János Breznyik: A Selmecbányai Ágost. Hitv. Evang. Egyház és lyceum története , Vol. I. Ágost Ö. Joerges, Selmecbánya 1883, p. 144 ( digitized by Hungaricana).
  37. Cf. Manfred Krebs (arrangement): Sources for the history of the Anabaptists , Vol. IV Baden and Palatinate . (Sources and research on the history of the Reformation 22). Bertelsmann, Gütersloh 1951, No. 185, p. 192f ( Google Books ).
  38. impression in: John Ribini: memorabilia Augustanæ confessionis in Regno Hungariae a Ferdinando I. Vsqve Ad III . Lippert, Bratislava 1787, pp. 133-147 ( Google Books ); Johannes Borbis: The Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hungary in its historical development . Beck, Nördlingen 1861, pp. 21-29 ( Google Books ).
  39. Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel (H: P 2164.8 ° Helmst. (6); incomplete, sheet B missing); Library Sainte-Geneviève Paris (8 D 6842 INV 8507 (P.3)).