Published under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
Born Digital
Encoding of this text has followed the recommendations of the LombardPress 1.0.0 guidelines for an article.
Peer Reviewed
File Started for the first time.
Throughout the edition we have expanded e to ae/oe, regularized late-medieval
spelling (e.g. changing sicud to sicut) and introduced modern paragraph breaks and
modern punctuation in place of late of medieval punctuation.
The choice to privilege a normalized critical text is supported by the fact that, given
the possibilities of new media, we are no longer forced to choose between providing a
modern normalized text and a diplomatic edition that records the variances and
complications of late medieval writing practices. This edition has been prepared in
conjunction with the coordinating efforts of the Scholastic Commentaries
and Text Archive (https://scta.info),
such that every section, paragraph, and quotation can be linked
to a diplomatic transcription or multiple diplomatic transcriptions, and further linked to
digital facsimiles of the manuscripts themselves. These diplomatic transcriptions are
where medieval spelling and punctuation can be recorded at various levels of detail
according to the discretion of the editor. For this reason, we offer here a normalized
edition that can and will function as an access point to subsequent diplomatic
transcriptions made available to those with an interest in this kind of textual detail.
Given that there is only one extant manuscript of Gracilis's commentary, the critical apparatus aims primarily to record editorial emendations against the text present in the manuscript as well as to identify significant scribal corrections. The encoding of the critical apparatus follows the guidelines of the SCTA, which includes a detailed classification schema of variant types. For a detailed description of these variant types see the schema documentation https://community.scta.info/pages/lombardpress-schema-critical.html . As much as possible, these variation types have been rendered according to traditional critical apparatus conventions. We hope that these rendered descriptions are clear, but we offer here a quick summary of the most common descriptions found in this rendering.
The abbreviation om. corresponds to a variation type
in textu. corresponds
to variation type add.
corresponds to add. sed. del
corresponds to
Nota bene: Peter Gracilis’s commentary on the