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EN
This article is dedicated to the study of the history of the Cyrillic Four Gospels BJ 941 from the manuscript section of the Department of Special Collections of the Jagiellonian Library in Krakow. The study defines that the Gospels were rewritten on a paper variety, the identification of its watermarks implies that the book was created in the last third of the 16thcentury. The analysis of the manuscript margins indicates that the manuscript was rewritten and purchased in Stryi, in the former Przemyśl region. The study of four gift records of the 16thand 17th centuries draws an understanding of how the manuscript has functioned and migrated at the appointed time. First, after the purchase, the codex was donated to the church of Paraskeva Piatnytsa in the Pietniczany village in the Lviv region. In 1641 the codex was gifted over to the Church of the Beheading of John the Baptist in Rozhysche, Sataniv povit. Between 1649 and 1678 the Gospels were presented to the Church of the Intercession of the Virgin in Vinnytsia. In 1678 the book appeared in the Church of the Intercession in the village of Nekhaiky in the Cherkasy region. In the 19th century, the Gospels belonged to the private library of Stanisław Krzyżanowski, who in 1870 donated the manuscript to the Jagiellonian Library.
ELPIS
|
2013
|
vol. 15
63-68
EN
The Codex Suprasliensis (called also the Retkov Sbornik), a Cyrillic manuscript copied in the late 10th century, is the largest extant Bulgarian manuscript from the Preslav literary school. Codex Suprasliensis contains 24 vitae of Christian saints for March and 23 homilies for the movable cycle of the church year. The Codex Suprasliensis is written on parchment and shows careful writing and craftsmanship. It was discovered in 1823 in the Monastery of Supraśl by Canon Michał Bobrowski. He sent it to the Slovenian scholar Bartholomaeus (Jernej) Kopitar for study. After Kopitar’s death the first 118 folios were preserved in the University Library in Ljubljana, where they are still kept. The following 16 leaves were purchased by A. F. Byčkov in 1856 and are now located in the Russian National Library in St. Petersburg. There maining 151 leaves found themselves in the collection of the Counts Zamoyski; this so-called Warsaw part disappeared during World War II and was long considered lost until it reemerged in the USA and was returned to Poland in 1968. It is now located in the National Library in Warsaw. The Codex Suprasliensis has been listed in the UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register since 2007. The Codex Suprasliensis is very importand by all who are interested in the history of Bulgaria, the Byzantine Commonwealth, the Balkans and Slavia Orthodoxa.
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