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Kniha Job v husitském výkladu strahovského sborníku

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EN
The Strahov manuscript DE IV 23 has preserved and included apart from a Hus´s and an anonymous holiday postil, also a collection of other texts by an anonymous author. It is an interpretation of a part of chapters 24 and 25 of the St. Matthew´s Gospel, completed with an intepretation of a part of three chapters of the old Testament Book of Job. The Jobian anonymous sermons are similar to the Book of Job Latin interpretations by Master Jakoubek of Stříbro (Jacobellus de Misa) in their form and content, but the evidence for Jakoubek´s authorship cannot be proved. The anonymous interpretation of the Book of Job might have originated before the Hussite Revolution broke out and although it is based on the traditional authority of the Moralia by Gregory the Great, it is unambiguously indebted to the Hussite Movement but not to its radical stream.
EN
This article presents shortly the origin of the list of the manuscripts of the National Museum in Prague which was achieved in the year 1917 by František Michálek Bartoš and published as a book in the years 1926-1927. It deals with its supplements by Václav Flajšhans and F. M. Bartoš. Bartoš´s list of the supplements having been prepared during the 1950th for stamp by its author is published here.
EN
The presented study acquaints the reader with the content of a manuscript collection from the turn of the 17th century deposited in Budapest (Budapest, Országos Széchenyi Könyvtár, shelf mark Quart. Slav. 41). It mainly focuses on the texts preserved there that are connected with the fate of the bishop of the Unity of the Brethren (Unitas fratrum) Jan Augusta († 1572) during his internment at Křivoklát Castle (1548–1564). Augusta’s texts that are new and unknown from elsewhere are presented in more detail. The study is complemented by two documents, directly preceding Augusta’s release from the prison.
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