Brian M Jensen | Stockholm University (original) (raw)
Books by Brian M Jensen
I regard theories as crutches It's obvious that they are indispensable When you have broken a leg... more I regard theories as crutches It's obvious that they are indispensable When you have broken a leg But their benefits presuppose nonetheless That you are already disabled
Edited by Brian M. Jensen. The «Lectionarium Placentinum» is contained in four parchment manuscri... more Edited by Brian M. Jensen. The «Lectionarium Placentinum» is contained in four parchment manuscripts, Piacenza, Biblioteca Capitolare codices 60-63, which have been dated to the second half of the twelfth century and form part of a collection of liturgical manuscripts produced in that period. Following medieval conventions, this lectionary has been divided in two parts, each consisting of two volumes: the Temporale contained in mss. 61-60, and the Sanctorale in mss. 62-63. In total the roughly 1300 folios of the four manuscripts contain around 300 Gospel incipits and more than 700 texts. The majority are works by Ambrose of Milan, Augustine of Hippo and the popes Leo the Great and Gregory the Great. The edition is also divided in two parts as the four manuscripts get a volume each corresponding to two manuscripts. The first volume includes an introduction to the Temporale part of the lectionary and the edition covers the period from Advent to Easter, the pars hiemalis, whilst the second volume contains the lectiones of the pars aestiua from Easter Sunday and the remaining part of the liturgical year. The lectionary in itself provides information concerning the reception and liturgical use of numerous texts of the patristic and early medieval church fathers in the twelfth century, and presents an instrument for further studies to scholars in various fields of research. It can be a useful tool not only to liturgists investigating the contents and structure of the medieval office, but also to scholars investigating and/or analysing the Latin language, liturgical literature, biblical exegesis and commentaries, theology, hagiography, philosophy, history of ideas and mentality, as well as Latin translations of Greek texts.
Papers by Brian M Jensen
arsedendi.org
I regard theories as crutches It's obvious that they are indispensable When you have broken a leg... more I regard theories as crutches It's obvious that they are indispensable When you have broken a leg But their benefits presuppose nonetheless That you are already disabled
The Lectionarium Placentinum is contained in four parchment manuscripts, Piacenza, Biblioteca Cap... more The Lectionarium Placentinum is contained in four parchment manuscripts, Piacenza, Biblioteca Capitolare, codices 60-63, dated to the second half of the twelfth century and used in the medieval liturgy in Piacenza. The lectionary is divided in two parts, the Temporale and the Sanctorale. Included in codices 60 and 61, the Temporale contains the lessons for the divine office for all the christological feasts and the sundays of the liturgical year; the pars hiemalis in codex 61 covers the period from Advent to Easter, the pars aestiva in codex 60 the period from Easter sunday and the remaining part of the year. The edition of the Temporale is divided in two volumes, the first of which contains the introduction to the lectionary and the edition of codex 61, while the second contains the edition of codex 60 and the inventory of both codices as well as indices and bibliography.
Archivum Latinitatis Medii Aevi, 2007
Page 1. This is an author produced version of a paper published in Journal of Chemical Ecology. T... more Page 1. This is an author produced version of a paper published in Journal of Chemical Ecology. This paper has been peer-reviewed but does not include the final publisher proof-corrections or journal pagination Citation for ...
Invited to Constantinople in the 1160’ies by the emperor Manuel I Komnenos to present the Western... more Invited to Constantinople in the 1160’ies by the emperor Manuel I Komnenos to present the Western view on the Trinity in the so-called Demetrius of Lampe affair, the Italian theologian and diplomat ...
With the triumph of the codex, medieval literature became more deeply hermeneutic in character. A... more With the triumph of the codex, medieval literature became more deeply hermeneutic in character. A vast range of texts, in various languages and genres, were not only copied with the commentaries and glosses of ancient tradition, but also underwent continuous reworking and transformation. Indeed, the very act of transcribing texts into a manuscript was often an incentive to rewrite them. This practice resulted in a bewildering number of textual versions that lived alongside their originals, and sometimes displaced them, but were nevertheless fundamental to their transmission and interpretation, often resulting in complex textual layers.
Reading a liturgical manuscript demands an interdisciplinary approach in order to read the conven... more Reading a liturgical manuscript demands an interdisciplinary approach in order to read the conventions and pecularities in such sources. Using the Bologna gradual and troper-sequentiary, codex Ange ...
Revue d'Etudes Augustiniennes et Patristiques
Plainsong and Medieval Music, 1999
Kompassriktning 2000 Talet Festskrift Till Catarina Ericson Roos, 2011
Classica Et Mediaevalia, 2005
Codex Angelicus 123 as a Liturgical Manuscript] [Classica et Medaevalia, 2005, 56, pp. 303-325] [... more Codex Angelicus 123 as a Liturgical Manuscript] [Classica et Medaevalia, 2005, 56, pp. 303-325] [ISSN: 0106-5815 ] [URL: http:mtp.dk] Access to the published version may require subscription. Published with permission from: [Museum Tusculam Press (Copenhagen)]
I regard theories as crutches It's obvious that they are indispensable When you have broken a leg... more I regard theories as crutches It's obvious that they are indispensable When you have broken a leg But their benefits presuppose nonetheless That you are already disabled
Edited by Brian M. Jensen. The «Lectionarium Placentinum» is contained in four parchment manuscri... more Edited by Brian M. Jensen. The «Lectionarium Placentinum» is contained in four parchment manuscripts, Piacenza, Biblioteca Capitolare codices 60-63, which have been dated to the second half of the twelfth century and form part of a collection of liturgical manuscripts produced in that period. Following medieval conventions, this lectionary has been divided in two parts, each consisting of two volumes: the Temporale contained in mss. 61-60, and the Sanctorale in mss. 62-63. In total the roughly 1300 folios of the four manuscripts contain around 300 Gospel incipits and more than 700 texts. The majority are works by Ambrose of Milan, Augustine of Hippo and the popes Leo the Great and Gregory the Great. The edition is also divided in two parts as the four manuscripts get a volume each corresponding to two manuscripts. The first volume includes an introduction to the Temporale part of the lectionary and the edition covers the period from Advent to Easter, the pars hiemalis, whilst the second volume contains the lectiones of the pars aestiua from Easter Sunday and the remaining part of the liturgical year. The lectionary in itself provides information concerning the reception and liturgical use of numerous texts of the patristic and early medieval church fathers in the twelfth century, and presents an instrument for further studies to scholars in various fields of research. It can be a useful tool not only to liturgists investigating the contents and structure of the medieval office, but also to scholars investigating and/or analysing the Latin language, liturgical literature, biblical exegesis and commentaries, theology, hagiography, philosophy, history of ideas and mentality, as well as Latin translations of Greek texts.
arsedendi.org
I regard theories as crutches It's obvious that they are indispensable When you have broken a leg... more I regard theories as crutches It's obvious that they are indispensable When you have broken a leg But their benefits presuppose nonetheless That you are already disabled
The Lectionarium Placentinum is contained in four parchment manuscripts, Piacenza, Biblioteca Cap... more The Lectionarium Placentinum is contained in four parchment manuscripts, Piacenza, Biblioteca Capitolare, codices 60-63, dated to the second half of the twelfth century and used in the medieval liturgy in Piacenza. The lectionary is divided in two parts, the Temporale and the Sanctorale. Included in codices 60 and 61, the Temporale contains the lessons for the divine office for all the christological feasts and the sundays of the liturgical year; the pars hiemalis in codex 61 covers the period from Advent to Easter, the pars aestiva in codex 60 the period from Easter sunday and the remaining part of the year. The edition of the Temporale is divided in two volumes, the first of which contains the introduction to the lectionary and the edition of codex 61, while the second contains the edition of codex 60 and the inventory of both codices as well as indices and bibliography.
Archivum Latinitatis Medii Aevi, 2007
Page 1. This is an author produced version of a paper published in Journal of Chemical Ecology. T... more Page 1. This is an author produced version of a paper published in Journal of Chemical Ecology. This paper has been peer-reviewed but does not include the final publisher proof-corrections or journal pagination Citation for ...
Invited to Constantinople in the 1160’ies by the emperor Manuel I Komnenos to present the Western... more Invited to Constantinople in the 1160’ies by the emperor Manuel I Komnenos to present the Western view on the Trinity in the so-called Demetrius of Lampe affair, the Italian theologian and diplomat ...
With the triumph of the codex, medieval literature became more deeply hermeneutic in character. A... more With the triumph of the codex, medieval literature became more deeply hermeneutic in character. A vast range of texts, in various languages and genres, were not only copied with the commentaries and glosses of ancient tradition, but also underwent continuous reworking and transformation. Indeed, the very act of transcribing texts into a manuscript was often an incentive to rewrite them. This practice resulted in a bewildering number of textual versions that lived alongside their originals, and sometimes displaced them, but were nevertheless fundamental to their transmission and interpretation, often resulting in complex textual layers.
Reading a liturgical manuscript demands an interdisciplinary approach in order to read the conven... more Reading a liturgical manuscript demands an interdisciplinary approach in order to read the conventions and pecularities in such sources. Using the Bologna gradual and troper-sequentiary, codex Ange ...
Revue d'Etudes Augustiniennes et Patristiques
Plainsong and Medieval Music, 1999
Kompassriktning 2000 Talet Festskrift Till Catarina Ericson Roos, 2011
Classica Et Mediaevalia, 2005
Codex Angelicus 123 as a Liturgical Manuscript] [Classica et Medaevalia, 2005, 56, pp. 303-325] [... more Codex Angelicus 123 as a Liturgical Manuscript] [Classica et Medaevalia, 2005, 56, pp. 303-325] [ISSN: 0106-5815 ] [URL: http:mtp.dk] Access to the published version may require subscription. Published with permission from: [Museum Tusculam Press (Copenhagen)]
Cantus Planus Papers Read at the 7th Meeting in Sopron Hungary 1995, 1998