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Making the Renaissance Manuscript

Title

Sententiae (Sentences)

Description

This manuscript is a twelfth-century copy of the Sententiae of Saint Isidore (ca. 560–636). As bishop of Seville, Isidore was instrumental in converting the Visigothic kings to Christianity, but he is most famous for his encyclopedic summa of universal knowledge, the Etymologies, which has led him to be called “the last scholar of the ancient world.” The Sentences, though less influential than the Etymologies, consist of a collection of theological writings meant to serve as a manual for the clergy and were gleaned from the works of Gregory the Great and Saint Augustine. The work is divided into three parts and covers subjects such as creation, the nature of evil, ecclesiastical orders, and the judgment of God. Though this manuscript was produced in the Iberian Peninsula, the interlaced initial S depicted here resembles initials produced by Florentine scribes and illuminators in the fifteenth century.

Creator

Author: Isidore of Seville

Date

12th c.

Format

Manuscript on parchment, 154 fols.

Identifier

The Free Library of Philadelphia, Lewis E 137

Coverage

Spain

Tags

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Citation

Author: Isidore of Seville, “Sententiae (Sentences),” Making the Renaissance Manuscript, accessed May 2, 2024, http://makingrenmanuscripts.exhibits.library.upenn.edu/items/show/12.

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