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List of editiones principes in Latin

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In classical scholarship, the editio princeps (plural: editiones principes) of a work is the first printed edition of the work, that previously had existed only in inscriptions or manuscripts, which could be circulated only after being copied by hand. The following is a list of Latin literature works.

Latin works

[edit]

15th century

[edit]
Date Author, Work Printer Location Comment
1453-1454[1] Aelius Donatus, Ars minor [pl][2][3] Johannes Gutenberg[1][2] Mainz[1][4] or Strasbourg[3] This is the 27-line Donatus that only survives in fragments. Gutenberg made at least 24 impressions of this popular schoolbook; of all of these editions have reached us incomplete. As yet, dating remains problematic. Albert Kapr believes the first printed 27-line Donatus were made in Strasbourg in the late 1440s, while the last in Mainz.[1][3]
c. 1454[1][5] Biblia Vulgata[6] Johannes Gutenberg[1] Mainz[1] This is the well-known 42-line Bible, a major venture that was started in 1451. Undated, Gutenberg and his associate Johann Fust first promoted the results of their job in Frankfurt in October 1454 and cardinal Enea Silvio Piccolomini attested in March 1455 that either 158 or 180 bibles had been completed.[1]
1465[7] Cicero, De Officiis and Paradoxa Stoicorum[7] Johann Fust[7] Mainz[7] Ulrich Zell may have printed earlier the De Officiis in Cologne (but not the Paradoxa); but the Cologne edition does not bear any indication of date.[7]
1465[7] Cicero, De Oratore[7] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[7] Subiaco[7] This edition was published without date but it is believed to be before September 1465.[7]
1465[8] Lactantius, De opificio Dei [de], Divinae Institutiones and De ira Dei[8] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[8] Subiaco[8]
c. 1465[9] Augustinus, De doctrina christiana[9] Johannes Mentelin[9] Strasbourg[9] This is thought to be the first edition of any of Augustine's works. The volume is incomplete as it has only the last of the four books that make up De doctrina christiana; the remaining three books were printed by Kaspar Hochfeder in Kraków in 1475.[9][10]
1465–1470[11] Augustinus, Confessiones[11] Johannes Mentelin[12] Strasbourg[11]
1466[13] Rabanus Maurus, De rerum naturis [de; fr][13] Adolf Rusch[13] Strasbourg[13]
1466[14]-1468[15] Hieronymus, Epistulae[14] and De viris illustribus,[16] Contra Rufinum,[15] Altercatio Luciferiani et Orthodoxi[15] et Adversus Iovinianum[15] Sixtus Riessinger[14] Rome[14] Sine nomine, sine data and sine loco, this compilation in two volumes of Jerome's works was edited by Theodorus Laelius. Titled Epistolae et tractus, 131 of Jerome's 154 surviving letters are collected here together with 24 of his tracts and excluding only his biblical commentaries.[17][15] The issue of the editio princeps remains open due to this imprint being undated; thus the 1468 Roman edition of the Epistulae printed by Sweynheym and Pannartz and edited by Joannes Andreas is also considered a possible first edition. This edition shares Riessinger's structure and tracts since this too is based on Laelius' efforts.[14][18] In both printings Rufinus' Expositio is misattributed to Jerome.[19] Two of the very few differences between these texts are represented by Gennadius and the Epistula Aristeae, available in Riessinger but not in Pannartz and Sweynheim.[16][15]
Rufinus Aquileiensis, Expositio symboli,[19] Apologia ad Anastasium,[15] Apologia contra Hieronymum[15]
Origenes, Libri X in Canticum canticorum[20] and In Canticum canticorum homiliae II[21]
Gennadius Massiliensis, De viris illustribus[22][16]
Augustinus, De pastoribus[15]
1467[23][24] Augustinus, De Civitate Dei[23] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[25] Subiaco[23]
1467[26] Cicero, Ad familiares[26] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[26] Rome[26] Sweynheym and Pannartz reprinted it in 1469; Johannes de Spira published a new edition in 1469 in Venice.[26]
1467[27] Cicero, De senectute[27] and De amicitia[28] Ulrich Zell[27] Cologne[27]
1467–1469[29][30] Juvenalis, Saturae[30] Udalricus Gallus[30] Rome[30]
1467[31]-1468[32] Gregorius Magnus, Moralia in Job[31][32] Berthold Ruppel[31] Basel[31] Undated, it may be earlier than 1468, but not later.[32]
1468[33] Institutiones[33] Peter Schöffer[33] Mainz[33]
1468[34] Ps.-Lactantius, De ave phoenice[34] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[34] Rome[34] This is the second edition of Lactantius' works; Venantius Fortunatus' De Pascha is here due to its wrong attribution to Lactantius.[34]
Venantius Fortunatus, Carmen de Pascha[34]
1468[35][36] Pseudo-Matthaei evangelium[35] Arnoldus Pannartz and Conradus Sweynheym[35] Rome[35] Only parts of the text were edited by Joannes Andreas in his impression of Hieronymus' Epistolae. William Caxton in 1477 printed another edition which included the latter half and also the pars altera, a later addition to the gospel's narrative. The full text came out only in 1832, when Johann Karl Thilo edited it for his collection Codex apocryphus Novi Testamenti.[35]
1468[37]-1470[38] Rufius Festus, Breviarium [la][37] Sixtus Riessinger[37] Rome[37] or Naples[38] Riessinger's edition of the 'De viris illustribus omits 9 lives (Caesar, Octavianus, Cato, Cicero, Brutus, Sextus Pompeius, Marcus Antonius, Cleopatra); these were first published by Andreas Schottus in 1577.[39]
Ps.-Aurelius Victor, De viris illustribus[40]
1469[41] Cicero, Brutus and Orator[42] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[42] Rome[41] Printed together with the De Oratore.[41]
1469[43] Apuleius[18][43] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[18] Rome[43] Edited by Joannes Andreas[18] Together with Apuleius' works, this edition contains the spurious Asclepius and a Latin translation of Epitome disciplinarum Platonis by Alcinous.[44]
Ps.-Apuleius, Asclepius[44][45]
1469[46][47] Livius, Ab Urbe condita[46] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[46] Rome[46] Edited by Joannes Andreas.[18] The Rome edition included only Books 1–10, 21–32, 34–39 and a portion of 40. In a 1518 Mainz edition, the rest of Book 40 and part of 33 were published, while in a 1531 Basel edition, Books 41-45 were published, edited by Simon Grynaeus. He had discovered the only surviving manuscript of the fifth decade in 1527 while searching in the Lorsch Abbey in Germany. In 1616 the remaining part of Book 33 was published in Rome, by which all extant Livy had reached print.[47][48]
Periochae[49]
1469[50] Lucanus, Pharsalia[18][50] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[18] Rome[50] Edited by Joannes Andreas.[18]
1469[51][52][53] Vergilius, Aeneis, Georgica and Bucolica[18] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[18] Rome[51] Edited by Joannes Andreas.[18] Together with the three standard Virgilian works, Bussi included Donatus' Vita Vergilii. He also included a selection of the Priapeia and five poems from the Appendix Vergiliana, such as the Catalepton [ru], Aetna [ru] and Ciris [la; nl; ru]. The missing pieces were added to the Priapeia and Appendix by Bussi in 1471 when he made a second Roman edition of Virgil's works.[52][53][54][55][56]
Priapeia[53]
Appendix Vergiliana[52]
Aelius Donatus, Vita Vergilii[52]
1469[57] Julius Caesar, Commentarii de Bello Gallico and Commentarii de Bello Civili[18][57] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[18] Rome[57] Edited by Joannes Andreas.[18]
De Bello Hispaniensi[58]
De Bello Alexandrino[58]
De Bello Africo[58]
1469[59] Plinius Maior, Naturalis historia[59] Johannes de Spira[59] Venice[59]
1469[60] Cicero, Tusculanae Disputationes[60] Udalricus Gallus[61] Rome[60]
1469[62] Aulus Gellius, Noctes Atticae [de; it; fr; es][18][62] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[18] Rome[18] Edited by Joannes Andreas.[18][62]
1469[63]-1470[64] Terentius, Comoediae[64] Johannes Mentelin[63] Strasbourg[64] This is disputed, as others believe that the Venetian edition printed by Vindelinus de Spira may come first.[63]
1469–1470[65] Persius, Saturae [ru][65] Udalricus Gallus[65] Rome[65]
c. 1470[66] Valerius Maximus, Facta et dicta memorabilia [it; de; pt; es][66] Johannes Mentelin[66] Strasbourg[66] Not after 1470.[66]
c. 1470[67] Isidorus Hispalensis, Sententiae [it][67] Johannes Sensenschmidt[67] Nuremberg[67] Undated, it was not printed after April 1470.[67]
c. 1470[68] Isidorus Hispalensis, De Fide Catholica contra Iudaeos [it][68] Georgius Herolt[68] Rome[68]
c. 1470[69] Ambrosius, De officiis [it; pl][69] Ulrich Zell[69] Cologne[69]
1470[70] Priscianus Caesariensis[70] Vindelinus de Spira[70] Venice[70] Edited by Benedictus Prunulus.[71]
Rufinus Antiochensis [nl; hu], Commentaria in metra Terentiana[72] and De compositione et de numeris oratorum[73]
c. 1470[74][75] Statius, Thebais and Achilleis[74][76] Rome[74]
1470[77] Augustinus, Sermones[77] Ulrich Zell[78] Cologne[77] This edition is made of 50 sermons. The first large scale edition came out in Basel in 1494 by Johann Amerbach, who gathered together for the first time most of the augustinian medieval collections of sermons. In 1564 Jean Vlimmerius published in Leuven for the first time a further 42 sermons; later on in Paris in 1631 Jacques Sirmond and in 1654 Jérôme Vignier [fr] made further additions.[79] The complete works of Augustine by the Maurists were printed in 1683: 394 sermons, of which 364 are believed to be Augustinian; further discoveries have added 175 sermons to these. Among the main recent discoveries, Germain Morin in 1917 added 34 sermons, from the Codex Guelferbytani; Dom André Wilmart in 1921–1930 added 15 sermons from the Codex Wilmart; Dom Cyrille Lambot found 24 new sermons, seven in fragments, in the Codex Lambot. The last major discovery was made in 1990, when François Dolbeau [fr] discovered in Mainz a manuscript with 26 sermons.[80]
c. 1470[81][82] Cicero, Philippicae[81] Udalricus Gallus[81] Rome[81] Edited by Johannes Antonius Campanus.[81]
c. 1470[83] Cicero, De finibus[83] Ulrich Zell[27] Cologne[83]
c. 1470[84] Gregorius Magnus, Regula Pastoralis[84] Ulrich Zell[85] Cologne[84]
c. 1470[83] Cicero, De Legibus[83] Venice[83] According to others, the editio princeps is instead the one printed in 1471 in Rome by Pannartz and Sweynheim.[86]
1470[87] Cicero, Somnium Scipionis[87] Vindelinus de Spira[87] Venice[87] Printed in an impression that included also De officiis, De amicitia, Paradoxa and De senectute.[87]
1470[88] Sallustius, Bellum Catilinae and Bellum Iugurthinum[89] Vindelinus de Spira[88][89] Venice[88]
1470[90] Suetonius, De Vita Caesarum[91] Johannes Philippus de Lignamine[91] Rome[90] Edited by Johannes Antonius Campanus.[42][90]
1470[92][93] Quintilianus, Institutio Oratoria[92] Johannes Philippus de Lignamine[91] Rome[93] Edited by Johannes Antonius Campanus.[91][93][92]
1470[87][94] Cicero, De Inventione[94] Nicolaus Jenson[94] Venice[94] Edited by Omnibonus Leonicenus [it; fr].[87]
Rhetorica ad Herennium[94]
c. 1470[95] Servius, Commentarii in Vergilii opera[95] Udalricus Gallus[95] Rome[95]
1470[94] Justinus, Epitoma Historiarum Philippicarum[94] Nicolaus Jenson[94] Venice[94]
1470[94] Cicero, Epistulae ad Brutum, Epistulae ad Quintum fratrem, and Epistulae ad Atticum[94] Nicolaus Jenson[94] Venice[94] There are good chances that this publication is preceded by the edition in the same year of Cicero's letters printed in Rome by Sweynheym and Pannartz and edited by Joannes Andreas.[18][94] Thus, they are generally considered both editiones principes.[96]
Cornelius Nepos, Vita Attici[97]
c. 1470[98] Disticha Catonis[98] Printer of the Speculum[98] Utrecht[98] Sine loco et anno, so both the year and place of impression are uncertain.[98]
c. 1470[99][100] Tacitus, Historiae, Annales, Germania and Dialogus[99] Vindelinus de Spira[100] Venice[100] This edition only has books 11–16 of the Annales. Books 1–6 were rediscovered in 1508 in the Corvey Abbey (now in Germany) and brought to Rome. There they were printed by Étienne Guillery in 1515 together with the other books of the Annales while the edition was prepared by Philippus Beroaldus.[99][101][102]
1470[103] Leo Magnus, Sermones and Epistulae[18] Johannes Philippus de Lignamine[103] Rome[103] Undated. In the same year Sweynheym and Pannartz printed in Rome an edition of the same writer, so there is some ambiguity regarding which came first. In either case, Joannes Andreas was the editor of both volumes.[18][103] Both the editions are incomplete as they present 92 of Leo's 96 extant sermons and just 5 of his 173 surviving letters.[104]
c. 1470[105] Ilias Latina[105] Utrecht[105] The undated Dutch edition only printed excerpts for a total of 500 of the 1070 lines that compose the Ilias Latina in a volume titled Speculum Meonii homeri greci poetarum maximi opus insigne cui yliada titulus inscribitur e greco in latinum versa. The first complete edition was instead printed by Filippo di Pietro in Venice in c. 1476.[106][105]
1470[107] Pamphilus Caesariensis, Apologia pro Origene[107] Petrus Schoeffer[107] Mainz[107] Available in an edition of Jerome's works.[107]
Rufinus Aquileiensis, De adulteratione librorum Origenis[107]
1470[108]-1471[109] Horatius[108] Printer of the Basilius[109] Venice[109]
1470–1471[110] Curtius Rufus, Historiae Alexandri Magni[110] Vindelinus de Spira[110] Venice[111]
1470–1471[112] Isidorus Hispalensis, Synonyma [it][112] Johannes Sensenchmidt[113] Nuremberg[113]
1470-1471[28] Martinus Bracarensis, Formula vitae honestae [gl][28] Printer of the Historia S. Albani[28] Cologne[28]
Ps.-Seneca, De moribus, De remediis fortuitorum and Proverbia Senecae[28]
1470–1475[114] Ps.-Dictys Cretensis, Ephemeris belli Troiani [it; fr][114] Ulrich Zell[114] Cologne[114] An ancient Latin translation made by Lucius Septimius of a lost Greek original.[114]
1470[115]-1475[116] Nonius Marcellus, De compendiosa doctrina [it][115] Georgius Lauer[116] Rome[115] Edited by Julius Pomponius Laetus. An undated edition, the year of print is much debated: often attributed to c. 1470, it has been countered that the printing types used do not precede 1474. Apart from this the text presented is incomplete, as it lacks Book III of De compendiosa doctrina, a lacuna that was repeated in the following Venetian edition printed by Nicolaus Jenson in 1476. This was first printed in 1511 in Pesaro and edited by Johannes Baptista Pius [it; fr].[116][115]
1471[89] Ps.-Sallustius, Invectiva in Ciceronem [it; de][89] Vindelinus de Spira[89] Venice[89] These two speeches were included by Vindelinus in his second edition of Sallust's works.[89] The Venetian edition's priority is doubted as the real editio princeps for both texts may very well be the undated edition printed in Cologne in probably the same year. Differently from the Venice edition the Cologne edition does not include Catilina and Iugurtha.[117]
Ps.-Cicero, Invectiva in Sallustium[89]
c. 1471[118] Augustinus, Epistulae[118] Johannes Mentelin[118] Strasbourg[118]
1471[87][82] Cicero, Orationes[18] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[119] Rome[87] Edited by Joannes Andreas, a total of 56 speeches were printed.[18][87]
1471[87][120] Cicero, De Natura Deorum,[121] De Divinatione,[87] Academica priora[122] and Academica posteriora[123] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[18] Rome[124] Edited by Joannes Andreas as an attempt to gather together Cicero's scripta philosophica. Thus the edition also includes De finibus, De senectute and Tusculanae disputationes.[18][87]
1471[125][126] Cyprianus[125] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[18] Rome[125] Edited by Joannes Andreas, this impression lacks the third book of Ad Quirinum [it]; it was to be printed in c. 1477 in Deventer by Richardus Pafraet [nl].[18][125][126] Also, Cyprian's epistolary [it] is here incomplete; three letters were added by Erasmus in 1520 and sixteen new letters were printed in 1563 in Rome by Paulus Manutius, together with two of Novatian's three extant letters. After Manutius, Guillaume Morel published another four letters in Paris in 1564.[127][128][129][130]
Ps.-Cyprianus, Quod idola dii non sint [it],[131] De montibus Sina et Sion and De singularitate clericorum[132]
Novatianus, Epistulae[127]
1471[133][134] Florus, Epitome rerum Romanarum [la][133] Ulrich Gering, Michael Friburger and Martin Crantz[133] Paris[133] Edited by Robert Gaguin.[133]
1471[135][136] Plinius Minor, Epistulae[135] Christophorus Valdarfer[136] Venice[135] Edited by Ludovico Carbone [it; es; ca]. The edition does not include all ten books of the Epistulae but only the first seven and the ninth, for a total of 122 letters of the currently existing 375. These were increased to 236 letters in nine books with the publication of the Roman edition in 1490. Still missing was the tenth book, found by Giovanni Giocondo between 1495 and 1500 in the Abbey of St. Victor near Paris. Giocondo made a transcription, as did briefly after another Italian, Pietro Leandro, who once returned from France gave his partial copy of the tenth book to Hieronymus Avantius [de] who printed the new 46 letters in Verona in 1502. For an edition of all Pliny's letters it was necessary to wait 1508, when Aldus Manutius printed in Venice a complete edition taking advantage of the transcript and other Plinian manuscripts Giocondo had given him.[135][136][137][138]
1471[139] Ovidius[139] Baldassarre Azzoguidi[140] Bologna[139] Edited by Franciscus Puteolanus [it]. There is some dispute regarding the possibility Ovid's first opera omnia may have been preceded by the Roman edition printed by Sweynheym and Pannartz, which is without date but thought to be also from 1471, and this is true also for the pseudoovidian Nux.[18][139][140][141]
Ps.-Ovidius, Nux[141]
1471[142] Ps.-Ovidius, Consolatio ad Liviam [it; de][142] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[143] Rome[142] This poem is inserted in a volume of Ovid's works edited by Joannes Andreas.[18][142]
1471[144] Eutropius, Breviarium [de; it; fr; la][144] Georgius Lauer[144] Rome[144]
Paulus Diaconus, Historia Romana [la; an][145]
1471[94] Cornelius Nepos, Vitae Imperatorum [de; it; ru][94] Nicolaus Jenson[94] Venice[94]
1471[146] Cicero, De fato[146] Vindelinus de Spira[147] Venice[146] Published together with De natura deorum, De divinatione, De legibus and the Academica under the title M. Tulli Ciceronis De natura deorum libri III, De divinatione libri II, De fato liber, De legibus libri III, Academicorum libri II. It may have been preceded by the Opera philosophica printed in the same year in Rome by Arnold Pannartz and Konrad Sweynheim.[147]
c. 1471[148] Claudianus, De raptu Proserpinae[148] Christophorus Valdarfer[148] Venice[148] Being undated, it is not certain whether this is the editio princeps; others have proposed as first edition the incunable from printers Nicolaus Ketelaer [fr] and Gerardus de Leempt, which appears in Utrecht in 1473–1475, that also results to be undated.[149][148]
1471[150][151] Orosius, Historiae adversum paganos [it; es; la][150] Johannes Schüssler[151] Augsburg[150]
1471[152][153] Pomponius Mela, De chorographia [it; la][153] Panfilo Castaldi[152] Milan[153] While the press was owned by Castaldi he seems to have had limited himself to an organizational role while the everyday activity was done by his associates Gabriele Orsoni and the brothers Fortunato and Antonius Zarotus [it].[152]
1471[154] Martialis, Epigrammata [it; fr; es][154] Andreas Gallicus[155] Ferrara[154] The priority issue is highly controversial. The Roman undated edition printed by Sweynheym and Pannartz circa 1470–1471 is often thought to be the editio princeps; also, there is a Venetian edition that is possibly the first printed edition.[156] The Ferrara edition does not include the Liber de spectaculis [es; la], which is instead present in the Roman and Venetian incunables.[157]
1471[158] Silius Italicus, Punica[158] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[158] Rome[158] Edited by Joannes Andreas that published together Silius Italicus, Calpurnius and Hesiod.[18][158] To this edition of the Punica 58 newly found lines were added by Jacobus Constantius in 1508.[159]
Calpurnius, Carmina bucolica[160]
Nemesianus, Carmina bucolica[161]
1471[162] Ps.-Probus, Vita Vergilii[162] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[163] Rome[162] Edited by Joannes Andreas as part of his second edition of Virgil's works.[162][163]
c. 1471[164] Boethius, De Consolatione Philosophiae[164] Johannes Glim[164] Savigliano[164] Undated, others have suggested the incunable's date to be 1473 or 1474. This would probably make the editio princeps the lavish edition that came out in Nuremberg in 1473 from Anton Koberger's press, containing a commentary traditionally attributed to Thomas of Aquin and a German translation.[165]
1471–1472[166][167] Aelius Donatus, Ars Maior [pl][166][167] Christophorus Valdarfer[167] or Paulus Butzbach and Georgius de Augusta[166] Venice or Verona[166] Book III or De barbarismo had been previously printed separately by an unknown printer in Venice in c. 1471.[167] There is much uncertainty regarding the printer: according to an interpretation it was made by Valdarfer in Venice, according to another by Paulus and Georgius in Verona.[166]
1471-1472[168] Paulus Diaconus, Epitome Festi De verborum significatu[168][169] Georgius Lauer[168] Rome[168] Edited by Julius Pomponius Laetus.[168]
1471–1472[170] Varro, De lingua latina[144] Georgius Lauer[144] Rome[144][170] Edited by Julius Pomponius Laetus[144]
1472[171][172] Epiphanius Scholasticus, Historia ecclesiastica tripartita[172] Johannes Schüssler[171] Augsburg[172]
1472[173] Plautus, Comoediae[173] Johannes de Colonia[63] Venice[173] Edited by Georgius Merula basing himself on the Codex Ursinianus. With a dedication to Iacopo Zeno, bishop of Padua.[173][174]
1472[94][175] Macrobius, In Somnium Scipionis[94] and Saturnalia[175] Nicolaus Jenson[94] Venice[94]
1472[176] Cicero, Topica [it; de; fr][176] Antonius Zarotus [it][177] Milan[177]
c. 1472[178][179] Gregorius Magnus, Registrum epistularum [it][178] Gunterius Zainer[179] Augsburg[180]
1472[94] Cato Maior, De agri cultura[173] Nicolaus Jenson[94] Venice[173] Edited by Georgius Merula and Francesco Colucia under the collective title Scriptores rei rusticae. Merula took care of the first three texts to which he also added three glossaries, one for each author; Colucia instead occupied himself with Palladius.[173] While Palladius' edition contains the poem that represents the fifteenth book (De insitione), it lacks the fourteenth (De veterinaria medicina); this one was only found later and published by Josef Svennung in Gothenburg under the title Palladii Rutilii Tauri Aemiliani viri illustris Opus agriculturae - quartus decimus De veterinaria.[181][182]
Varro, De re rustica [it; de; es; la][173][183]
Columella, De re rustica [de; la][173]
Palladius, Opus agriculturae [la][173][184]
1472[8] Lactantius, Epitome[8] Vindelinus de Spira[8] Venice[8] An abridgement of the Divinae Institutiones. The Venice edition of the Epitome is incomplete, the full text having been first published by Christoph Matthäus Pfaff [de; fr; it] in Paris in 1712.[185][186]
1472[187][188] Catullus, Carmina[187] Vindelinus de Spira[187][189] Venice[187][188] The three poets were all published together for the first time in a quarto volume. In the volume was also Propertius.[188] There is considerable debate if this is the Corpus Tibullianum's editio princeps; others have argued that an impression printed by Federicus de Comitibus [it; fr] in Venice the same year should be considered the first edition.[190]
Tibullus, Elegiae [it; fr; ru][191]
Appendix Tibulliana[190]
Statius, Silvae[188]
1472[192][193] Propertius, Carmina [it; ru][192][193] Federicus de Comitibus [it; fr][193] Venice[192][193] This edition appeared in February and is thought to be probably the first, but the issue is controversial as another edition of Propertius printed by Vindelinus de Spira including Catullus, Tibullus and Statius also appeared in Venice in the same year.[188][193]
1472[194][195] Isidorus Hispalensis, Etymologiae[194] Gunterius Zainer[194] Augsburg[194] The editio princeps is thought to be the first printed volume ever to show a mappa mundi.[196]
1472[197] Isidorus Hispalensis, De natura rerum [de][197] Gunterius Zainer[197] Augsburg[197]
1472[87] Cicero, Partitiones oratoriae[87] Antonius Zarotus [it][198] Milan[87] Edited by Gabriel Fontana [it].[87]
c. 1472[199] Aelius Donatus, Commentum Terentii[199] Vindelinus de Spira[200] Venice[199] Edited by Raphael Zovenzonius. This volume may have been preceded by the first dated edition printed in Rome in 1472 by Sweynheym and Pannartz; otherwise, the editio princeps could alo possibly be an also undated and unnamed edition probably printed in Strasbourg by Johannes Mentelin between 1470 and 1472.[200]
1472[201] Ausonius[201] Venice[201] Edited by Bartholomaeus Girardinus, the volume also contains poetry by Ovid, Calpurnius Siculus and Gregorius Tifernas.[202][203] Ausonius' editio princeps is incomplete because it used a Z class manuscript, which represents the briefest of the surviving selections. The first additions came in 1490 in Milan when Julius Aemilius Ferrarius first added to the Ordo urbium nobilium. In 1499 Thaddaeus Ugoletus [hu] in Parma was able to use also a manuscript from the richer Y selection, adding for the first time among other works the Mosella [it; de; la], Signa caelestia and the Ludus septem sapientum. Further additions to the ausonian corpus were made by Hieronymus Avantius [de] in 1507 in Venice who published the Praefatiunculae and other texts. Finally, a new manuscript permitted Stephanus Charpinus in Lyon in 1558 to make major contributions to the corpus, such as Ephemeris, Parentalia, Professores and De herediolo.[204][203][205][206][207][208][209][210]
Faltonia Proba, De laudibus Christi[211]
1472[212] Ambrosius, Hexaemeron [it][212] Johannes Schüssler[212] Augsburg[212]
1472[213]-1473[214] Suetonius, De grammaticis et rhetoribus [it][214] Nicolaus Jenson[213] Venice[213] Undated, its position as princeps is contested by a 1474 Venetian edition and a 1478 Florentine one.[213]
c. 1473[215] Lucretius, De rerum natura[215] Thomas Ferrandus[216] Brescia[215]
1473[217][218] Servius, Centimeter[217] and De finalibus[219] Antonius Zarotus [it][217] Milan[217] These texts appear in this volume with other similar works, including Phocas [fr; ca]' De orthographia.[217]
Beda, De metris [de] and De schematibus tropis[218]
Maximus Victorinus [ca], De ratione metrorum[219] and De finalibus metrorum[220]
Ps.-Servius, De littera[219]
Phocas [fr; ca], De nomine et verbo[221]
c. 1473[222] Sidonius Apollinaris[222][223] Nicolaus Ketelaer [fr] and Gerardus de Leempt[222] Utrecht[222]
c. 1473[197] Isidorus Hispalensis, Chronica[197] Johannes Philippus de Lignamine[197] Rome[197] An incomplete edition of the chronicle. A complete version of the text was first printed in Turin in 1593 and edited by Garcia de Loaisa [es; de; pt].[197]
c. 1473[224] Sedulius, Paschale Carmen[224] Nicolaus Ketelaer [fr] and Gerardus de Leempt[224] Utrecht[224]
1473[24] Gregorius Magnus, Homiliae in Evangelia [it][24] Gunterius Zainer[24] Augsburg[24]
1473[225] Solinus, Collectanea rerum memorabilium [fr][225] Nicolaus Jenson[225] Venice[225]
c. 1473[226] Gregorius Magnus, Expositio in Canticis canticorum [it][226] Ulrich Zell[226] Cologne[226] 1473 or not much later.[226]
1473-1474[227] Prosper Aquitanus, Liber epigrammatum[227] Johannes Glim[227] Savigliano[227]
1473[134]-1474[228] Vegetius, De Re Militari[134][228] Nicolaus Ketelaer [fr] and Gerardus de Leempt[229] Utrecht[228]
1473-1474[230] Marcus Manilius, Astronomica[230] Johannes Regiomontanus[230] Nuremberg[230]
1474[109] Ps.-Acro, Scholia in Horatium[109] Antonius Zarotus [it][109] Milan[109] In two volumes, the first having Horace's works and the second Pseudo-Acro's scholia.[109]
c. 1474[231] Ps.-Lactantius, Narrationes fabularum Ovidianarum[231] Petrus Maufer[231] Padua[231] The printer misattributes the work to Aelius Donatus.[231]
1474[232] Maximianus, Elegiae[232] Nicolaus Ketelaer [fr] and Gerardus de Leempt[232] Utrecht[232] Published under the title Maximianus. Ethica suavis et periocunda; Epitaphia; Epigrammata.[232]
1474[233] Gaius Valerius Flaccus, Argonautica[233] Ugo Rugerius [fr; de; it] and Dionysius Bertochius[234] Bologna[233]
1474[235] Marius Victorinus, Explanationes in Ciceronis rhetoricam[235] Antonius Zarotus [it][235] Milan[235]
1474[236] Germanicus, Aratea [de][236] Ugo Rugerius [fr; de; it] and Dionysius Bertochius[237] Bologna[236] Together with Germanicus' translation of Aratus' Phaenomena the volume also contains Manilius' Astronomica.[237]
c. 1474[238] Serenus Sammonicus, Liber medicinalis [la][238] Venice[238]
c. 1474[239] Augustinus, De Trinitate[239] Georg Reyser[240] Strasbourg[239] Printed not later than 1474.[240]
c. 1474[241] Historia Apollonii regis Tyri[241] Nicolaus Ketelaer [fr] and Gerardus de Leempt[242] Utrecht[241]
1474[243] Ammianus Marcellinus, Res gestae [it; fr; la][243] Georgius Sachsel and Bartholomaeus Golsch[243] Rome[243] Edited by Angelus Sabinus with a dedication to the humanist Niccolò Perotti. The edition is incomplete as it contains only the first 13 of the surviving 18 books.[243] The unprinted books were published together with the others in 1533 in two different editions, one in Augsburg edited by Mariangelus Accursius and printed by Silvanus Otmar, the other in Basel edited by Sigismund Gelenius and printed by Hieronymus Froben.[244][245]
1474[246] Paulinus Diaconus, Vita Ambrosii[246] Milan[246]
1474-1475[247] Pomponius Porphyrion, Commentum in Horatium Flaccum[109] Bartholomaeus Guldinbeck[247] Rome[247] Edited by Aelius Franciscus Marchisius with support from Angelus Sabinus, this volume includes Horace's lyrical poetry and his Ars poetica with scholia by both Porphyrion and Pseudo-Acro.[247][109] In about 1481 in Treviso or Venice in an edition of Horace opera omnia all of Porphyrion's commentaries were edited by Raphael Regius.[109]
1474-1476[248] Hieronymus, Chronicon[249] Philippus de Lavagna[248] Milan[249] Due to this edition being undated, the year of impression is highly controversial, with the scholar A. Ganda dating it as early as 1468. As for the editor it was Boninus Mombritius that also added Matteo Palmieri's continuation of Jerome and Prosper.[248] It must also be added that this isn't Prosper's complete chronicle, since it extends only to year 442.[250]
Prosper Aquitanus, Epitoma Chronicorum[251]
1475[33] Codex Justinianus[33] Peter Schöffer[33] Mainz[33] This edition only contains the first nine books. The remaining three books were published by the same printer two years later, also in Mainz.[33]
1475[33] Digesta[33] Vitus Puecher[33] Rome[33] Puecher only published the second part of the collection, the Digestum infortiatum. The first part (Digestum vetus) was printed the following year in Foligno by Henricus Clayn; the last part (Digestum novus) also in 1476 in Rome.[33]
1475[89] Sallustius, Historiae [de; it] and Epistulae ad Caesarem[89] Arnoldus Pannartz[89] Rome[89]
1475[252][253] Seneca Philosophus, Dialogi [it; es; nl], De beneficiis, De Clementia and Epistulae morales ad Lucilium[252] Matthias Moravus[254] Naples[252] The first complete edition of Seneca's philosophical works. Due to a confusion between the son and the father the volume also includes Seneca the Elder's widely known epitomized version composed of excerpts from his Suasoriae et Controversiae; the complete surviving text was printed in 1490 in Venice by Bernardinus de Cremona together with the younger Seneca. Also in the edition is Publilius Syrus, whose Sententiae are in the so-called Proverbia Senecae. The mistake was corrected in 1514 by Erasmus when the latter published in Southwark in 1514 an edition of Publilius that is generally considered to be the real editio princeps. Erasmus was followed in Leipzig in 1550 by Georg Fabricius, who also added twenty new sentences to the print.[255][252][256][257]
Seneca Rhetor, Controversiae and Suasoriae[255]
Publilius Syrus, Sententiae [it][258]
Epistulae Pauli et Senecae[28]
1475[259][260] Historia Augusta[259] Philippus de Lavagna[261] Milan[260] Edited by Bonus Accursius.[261]
1475[262] Ps.-Quintilianus, Declamationes maiores[262][263] Johannes Schurener[264] Rome[262] Edited by Domitius Calderinus [it; fr; de] with a dedication to Aniello Arcamone, ambassador of the Kingdom of Naples to the Holy See. The edition only contained declamations 8, 9 and 10; the other declamations were published in Venice in 1481, edited by Jacobus Grasolarius with the help of Georgius Merula. These impressions may have been preceded by an undated and without place edition printed by Leonardus Achates.[173][262][263][264]
1475[265][266] Hyginus, Poeticon astronomicon[265] Augustinus Carnerius [fr][266] Ferrara[265]
1475[267] Johannes Scotus Eriugena, Vox spiritualis Aquilae[267] Bartholomaeus de Unkel[267] Cologne[267] This homily was misattributed here to Origen.[267]
c. 1475[268] Beda, Historia Ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum[268] Heinrich Eggestein[218][269] Strasbourg[268] The edition is undated, but it is agreed to have been printed between 1474 and 1482.[268]
1475[164] Boethius, Interpretatio Priorum analyticorum Aristotelis[164] Konrad Braem[164] Leuven[164]
1475[24] Hieronymus, Vitae Patrum[24] Jean Fabre[24] Caselle[24]
c. 1475[270][271][272] Diomedes Grammaticus, Ars grammatica[273][271] Nicolaus Jenson[270] Venice[270] Published together with grammatical works such as Priscian's Institutio de nomine et pronomine et verbo as well as others.[270] Regarding the Commentarius, This edition does not offer the full text but only deals with the Ars minor [pl] and the second book of the Ars maior [pl]. This shortcoming was healed in 1864 by Heinrich Keil who edited the near complete text for his series Grammatici Latini.[274] Lacking was only most of the part treating the third book of the Ars maior, which was first published in 1975 by Ulrich Schindel in Göttingen.[275]
Ps.-Caper, De orthographia[270]
Agroecius, Ars de orthographia[276]
Ps.-Servius, Commentarius in Artem Donati[272][274]
1475[139]-1477[277] Tacitus, Agricola[99] Franciscus Puteolanus [it][277] Milan[277] This is the renowned scholarly editio puteolana of Tacitus' works.[99][100][139]
1475-1478[278] Lactantius Placidus, In Statii Thebaida commentum[278] Philippus de Lavagna[279] Milan[278] Edited by Boninus Mombritius.[278]
1475–1478[164] Boethius, In Categorias Aristotelis and Commentaria in Porphirium[164] Sixtus Riessinger[164] Naples[164] These commentaries are present together with Boethius' translations from the Greek of Porphyry's Isagoge and of Aristotle's Categoriae.[164]
c. 1475[280]-1478[281] Venantius Fortunatus, Vita Sanctae Radegundis[282] Boninus Mombritius[282] Milan[282] A hagiographical compilation titled Sanctuarium sev vitae sanctorum.[282] Only excerpts of Columbanus' life were printed here. A condensed version came out in London in 1516, included in a miscellany titled Nova Legenda Anglie. A complete version was made in Basel in 1563, where the work is misplaced under Bede's complete works.[280][283]
Jonas Bobiensis, Vita Columbani[280]
Passio Sancti Clementis[283]
Passio Fructuosi, Augurii et Eulogii[284]
Sulpicius Severus, Vita Martini [it], Dialogi [it] and Epistulae [it][285]
Eucherius Lugdunensis, Passio martyrum Acaunensium[286]
1476[287] Authenticum [it; de][287] Rome[287]
1476–1477[288] Avianus, Fabulae[288] Gunterius Zainer[288] Ulm[288] Edited by Heinrich Steinhowel, it only contains 27 of Avianus' fables.[288]
1476-1478[289] Johannes Cassianus, Collationes[289] Brethren of the Common Life[289] Brussels[289]
1476-1478[33] Corpus Juris Civilis[33] Jacobus Rubeus[33] Venice[33] Published in six volumes, this was the first edition to print together all parts of the Corpus.[33]
1477[290] Asconius Pedianus, Commentarii in orationes Ciceronis[290] Johannes de Colonia and Johannes Manthen[290] Venice[290] Edited by Hieronymus Squarzaficus.[290]
Ps.-Asconius Pedianus, Commentarii in Verrinas[291]
c. 1477[127][126] Ps.-Cyprianus, Ad Novatianum[127] and Orationes ii[132] Richardus Pafraet [nl][127] Deventer[127] A new edition of Cyprian's works, Novatian's text and Ad Novatianum are there due to a misattribution to Cyprian.[127]
Novatianus, De bono pudicitiae[127]
1478[292] Aulus Cornelius Celsus, De Medicina[292] Nicolaus Laurentii[292] Florence[292] Edited by Bartolomeo della Fonte [it; de] with a dedication to the humanist and banker Francesco Sassetti.[292]
1479[293] Alcuinus, De dialectica[293] Florence[293] Erroneously published as a work by Augustine under the title Logica Beati Augustini.[293]
c. 1481[294] Ps.-Apuleius, Herbarium Apuleii Platonici[294] Johannes Philippus de Lignamine[294] Rome[294] The book is dedicated to the Cardinal Francesco Gonzaga. It is undated, but was printed between 1478 and 1482. The De herba vettonica is presented mistakenly in this edition as the first chapter of the Herbarium. Always concerning the De herba vettonica the introductory letter Epistula ad M. Agrippam is absent. This was first printed in Zürich in 1537, edited by Gabriel Humelberg [de; fr] and printed by Christoph Froschauer.[91][295]
Ps.-Antonius Musa, De herba vettonica [la][295]
c. 1481[296] Isidorus, De viris illustribus[296] Henricus Quentell [de][296] Cologne[296]
1481[297] Johannes Cassianus, De institutis coenobiorum[297] Venice[297]
1482[298] Petronius, Satyricon[298] Franciscus Puteolanus [it][299] Milan[298] The edition that also contains Tacitus' Agricola[300] This edition of Petronius was made from a manuscript of Class O, which present only short excerpts of the Satyricon and almost nothing of the Cena Trimalchionis [fr; de; la]. In 1575 a new edition was published in Lyon from a different class of manuscripts which doubled he text available. Still absent was most of the Cena which was first published in Padua in 1664 following the rediscovery of the text in Trau by Marino Statileo.[298][301]
Panegyrici Latini[135][139][302]
Plinius Minor, Panegyricus Traiani [es; fr; it][135]
1482[303][148] Claudianus[303] Iacobus de Dusa[303] Vicenza[303] Edited by Barnabas Celsanus with a dedication to the scholar Bartolomeo Pagello. The volume includes all Claudian's works except the Carmina minora.[303] These were first published in 1493 by in Parma by Thaddaeus Ugoletus [hu] together with the Carmina maiora.[148][304]
c. 1483[305] Tertullianus, Apologeticus[305] Bernardinus Benalius [it][305] Venice[305] The work is undated and can only be said for certain that it was printed before 1494.[306]
1483–1490[307] Frontinus, De aqaeductu urbis Romae[307] Eucharius Silber [de][307] Rome[307] Edited by Johannes Sulpitius Verulanus and Julius Pomponius Laetus.[307]
1484[63][252] Seneca Philosophus, Tragoediae[252] Andreas Gallicus[63] Ferrara[252]
Octavia[308]
1484[164] Boethius, In Topica Ciceronis[164] Oliverius Servius[164] Rome[164]
c. 1484[309] Consultus Fortunatianus, Ars rhetorica[309] Philippus Mantegatius[310] Milan[309] Edited by Franciscus Puteolanus [it].[309] Others put the date considerably later at about 1493.[310]
1485[311] Cicero, De optimo genere oratorum[311] Andreas Torresanus [it; fr] and Bartholomaeus de Blavis[311] Venice[311] Edited by Hieronymus Squarzaficus.[87] The treatise was printed together with De oratore, Topica, Brutus and Partitiones oratoriae.[311]
c. 1485[312] Haimo Halberstadensis, De Christianarum Rerum Memoria[312] Rudolph Loeffs[312] Leuven[312] Printed together with Petrarch's Rerum Memorandarum libri [it], to whom it was misattributed.[312]
1486[313] Probus, De notis[313] Boninus de Boninis[314] Brescia[313] Edited by Michael Fabricius Ferrarinus.[313][314]
1486[315] Augustinus, Retractationes [es][315] Antonius Zarotus [it][315] Milan[315]
1486[316]-1487[317] Vitruvius, De architectura[317] Eucharius Silber [de][318] Rome[316] Edited by Johannes Sulpitius Verulanus. The book was published together with Frontinus' De aquaeductu.[316]
1486[319] Julianus Pomerius, De vita contemplativa[319] Peter Drach [de][319] Speyer[319]
1487[307] Frontinus, Stratagemata[307] Eucharius Silber [de][307] Rome[307] Edited by Johannes Sulpitius Verulanus in the collection Scriptores rei militaris sive Scriptores veteres de re militari.[307]
1487[320] Ps.-Johannes Chrysostomus, Opus imperfectum in Matthaeum[320] Johannes Koelhoff [de][321] Cologne[321] Appeared under the title Johannes Chrysostomus super Matthaeum.[320]
1487[322]-1488[323] Tiberius Donatus, Interpretationes vergilianae[323] Florence[322] The text was heavily edited by Cristoforo Landino that did not publish the full version of Tiberius Donatus' work but instead a digest inserted as part of the author's own commentary. The first complete and unadulterated edition was printed in Naples in 1535.[323][324]
c. 1487[325] Eucherius Lugdunensis, De contemptu mundi[325] Jacobus de Breda [nl][326] Deventer[325]
1488[87][311][327] Cicero, Aratea [de][87] Antonius de Strata[327] Venice[87] Titled Astronomica, this volume also includes Germanicus' translation of Aratus and Serenus Sammonicus Liber Medicinalis. Edited by Giorgio Valla and Victor Pisanus.[87][327][311]
Avienius, Aratea [de], Ora maritima and Orbis terrae[328]
1488[329] Firmicus Maternus, Mathesis[329][330] Erhard Ratdolt[330] Augsburg[329] This volume contains Johannes Angelus's Astrolabium Planum in tabulis in which extensive excerpts from book III, IV and V were first published. The complete edition of the Mathesis came out first in Venice in 1497 by the types of Laurentius Abstemius.[329][330]
1488[331] Ambrosius, De excessu fratris[331] Uldericus Scinzenzeler[331] Milan[331] Also contains Ambrose's De officiis and De bono mortis, together with a few letters attributed to him. Also in the volume are Paulinus' Vita Ambrosii and two sermons written by Maximus of Turin.[331]
1488[164] Boethius, De institutione arithmetica[164] Erhard Ratdolt[164] Augsburg[164]
1489[164] Boethius, De Trinitate, De hebdomadibus and De praedicatione[164] Paganino Paganini[164] Venice[164] Published together with Augustine's De Trinitate.[164]
1489[332] Augustinus, Enarrationes in Psalmos[332] Johannes Amerbach[332] Basel[332] The first of Augustine's books published by Amerbach, who was to dedicate his life to printing all of the author's works.[333]
1489[334] Hilarius Pictaviensis, De Trinitate [it], Ad Constantium Imperatorem, In Constantium Imperatorem, Contra Auxentium, De synodis [it][334] Leonardus Pachel[334] Milan[334] Edited by Georgius Cribellus, the volume also contains Augustine's De Trinitate.[334]
1490[335][336] Sallustius[336] Eucharius Silber [de][336] Rome[336] First complete edition of Sallust, it was edited by Pomponius Laetus, who also added his biography of the author.[336][337]
Ps.-Cicero, Declamatio in Catilinam[335]
c. 1490[338] Iulianus Toletanus, Prognosticon futuri saeculi [it][338] Milan[338]
1490[339] Ambrosius, Epistulae[339] Leonardus Pachel[340] Milan[339] Edited by Georgius Cribellus, it was reprinted by Johannes Amerbach in Basel in 1492 in Ambrose's complete works. An independent edition of the letters was published always in Milan two months later.[339][340]
1490[252] Seneca Philosophus, Naturales quaestiones[252] Bernardinus de Cremona and Simon de Luero[341][342] Venice[252] The Naturales quaestiones were published in a complete edition of the works of Seneca the Younger. The volume also contained the Suasoriae and Controversiae written by Seneca the Elder, whose works were erroneously attributed to the younger Seneca.[341][342]
c. 1490[343] Juvencus, Historia evangelica[343] Richardus Pafraet [nl][344] Deventer[343]
1491[345] Cassiodorus, Expositio psalmorum[345] Johannes Amerbach[345] Basel[345]
1491[346][347][348] Augustinus, Contra Academicos [it; fr; pl],[346] De libero arbitrio,[347] De magistro [it; de; fr],[348] De ordine [de],[348] De immortalitate animae [de; pt][348] and De animae quantitate [de; pt][348] Angelus Ugoletus[346] Parma[346][347] Edited by Eusebius Conradus and Thaddaeus Ugoletus [hu] with other works by Augustine in the Opuscula plurima. It was reprinted in the same year in Venice by Pasquale Peregrino.[346][348]
Ps.-Augustinus, Regulae[349]
1491[350] Augustinus, Expositio evangelii secundum Johannem[350] Johannes Amerbach[350] Basel[78]
1491–1492[164][351] Boethius[164] Johannes and Gregorius de Gregoriis[164] Venice[164] First edition of his complete works, but it lacks the De fide catholica. The edition was republished in 1497–1499, and followed in Basel in 1546 by a new collection prepared by Heinrich Glareanus.[164]
1491-1492[24] Ps.-Hieronymus, Psalterium Romanum[24] Gerard Leeu[24] Antwerp[24]
1492[352] Marius Victorinus, De definitionibus[352] Johannes and Gregorius de Gregoriis[352] Venice
1492[212] Ambrosius[212] Johannes Amerbach[212] Basel[212] Ambrose's Opera omnia in three volumes.[212]
Ambrosiaster, Commentarius in epistulas Paulinas[353]
1492-1497[354] Prudentius, Carmina[354] Richardus Pafraet [nl][355] Deventer[354] Sine loco et anno. Probably edited by Alexander Hegius.[354]
1493[356] Alcuinus, De fide sanctae ed individuae Trinitatis[356] Nicolaus Kessler [de] Basel[356] Present in a volume called Homeliarum doctorum.[356]
1493[304][357] Claudianus, Carmina minora[357] Angelus Ugoletus[304] Parma[148] Edited by Thaddaeus Ugoletus [hu]. This was in the first authentically complete volume of Claudian.[148][357]
1494[358] Ps.-Prosper Aquitanus, Carmen ad uxorem[358] Peter von Friedberg[359] Mainz[358] The poem is printed in appendix to Prosper's Liber epigrammatum.[358]
1494[360] Ps.-Quintilianus, Declamationes minores[360] Angelus Ugoletus[264] Parma[360] Edited by Thaddaeus Ugoletus [hu]. The Parma edition lacks 9 declamations that have been printed in 1580 in Paris by Petrus Pithoeus.[361][360]
1495[362] Ambrosius Autpertus, Sermo de Adsumptione Sanctae Mariae[362] Johannes Amerbach[362] Basel[362] Autpert's sermon is here misattributed to Augustine.[362]
1496[363] Epigrammata Bobiensia[363] Johannes Tacuinus [it][364] Venice[363] Edited by Hieronymus Avantius [de] in a collection of Ausonius' poems. Only 18 of the 71 epigrams contained in the Epigrammata Bobiensia were printed in this volume. Epigram 37 was first printed separately in Venice in 1498; after that, Thaddaeus Ugoletus [hu] added seven epigrams for the first time in Parma in 1499. Also, Avantius in 1509 issued a new Venetian copy of Ausonius which first included epigram 39. Due to the loss of the original manuscript it was only in 1955 in Rome that Franco Munari [it; de] published the complete editio princeps when a copy of the manuscript was discovered in 1950.[365][366][367]
c. 1496[368] Hucbald, Ecloga de Calvis[368] Peter von Friedberg[368] Mainz[368] Edited by Johannes Trithemius.[368]
1497[369][370] Terentianus, De litteris, syllabis et metris Horatii[370] Uldericus Scinzenzeler[371] Milan[372] Edited by Giorgio Galbiati.[371]
1497[373][374] Censorinus, De die natali[373] Benedictus Hectoris Faelli[374] Bologna[374] Edited by Philippus Beroaldus.[375] Censorinus' work is part of a miscellaneous volume including a forgery by Leon Battista Alberti and translations of Epictetus, the Tabula Cebetis and Basil of Caesarea.[376][377]
Ps.-Censorinus, Liber disciplinarum[378]
1497[379] Ambrosiaster, Quaestiones Veteris et Novi Testamenti[379] Johannes Trechsel[379] Lyon[379] Edited by Augustinus Ratisponensis.[379]
1497-1498[380][381] Hieronymus, Commentarii in Prophetas minores,[380] Liber quaestionum Hebraicarum in Genesim, Super Isaiam, Super Hieremiam, Super Ezechielem, Super Danielem, Super Matheum, Interpretatio Hebraicorum nominum and Super Ecclesiasten[381] Johannes and Gregorius de Gregoriis[380] Venice[380] An array of commentaries edited by Bernardinus Gadolus [it], all these appeared in the collection in four tomes titled Commentaria in Biblia.[380][381]
1498[382] Fabius Planciades Fulgentius, Mythologiae[382] and Expositio sermonum antiquorum[383] Uldericus Scinzenzeler[384] Milan[385] Edited by Johannes Baptista Pius [it; fr] with an extensive commentary to the first work.[384][385]
1498[367] Sulpiciae Conquestio[367] Bernardino Vitali[386] Venice[367] Published together with such Humanist poetry collections as Gregorius Tifernus' Opuscula, Johannes Jovianus Pontanus' Neniae and Epigrams, and Octavius Cleophilus' elegies.[367]
1498[387][388] Apicius, De re coquinaria[387] Guillermus le Signerre [es][388] Milan[387] Probably edited by Johannes Baptista Pius [it; fr].[388]
1498-1499[87] Cicero[87] Guillermus le Signerre [es][389] Milan[87] Cicero's opera omnia, they were edited by Alexander Minutianus [it] in four volumes.[87]
1499[390][391] Martianus Capella, De nuptiis Philologiae et Mercurii [nl; ru][390] Enrico di Ca' Zeno [de][392] Vicenza[392] Edited by Fracanzio da Montalboddo [it; de; pt] with a dedication to Giovanni Chericato, bishop of Cattaro.[392]
1499[206] Ps.-Ausonius, Periochae Homeri[393] and Septem sapientum sententiae[204] Angelus Ugoletus[204] Parma[206] Edited by Thaddaeus Ugoletus [hu] in his edition of Ausonius. These works were by him misattributed to the poet.[206][204]
1499[394] Epistola Alexandri ad Aristotelem[394] Venice[394] This is the first dated edition, but it must be added that according to Lellia Ruggini the undated incunable printed by Iacobus Catalanesis is to be considered the true editio princeps.[395]

16th century

[edit]
Date Author, Work Printer Location Comment
1500[396][397] Vibius Sequester, De fluminibus, fontibus, lacubus, nemoribus, paludibus et montibus[396] Franciscus de Silva[397] Turin[396] Edited by Martinus Salius.[396]
1500[398][169] Pompeius Festus, De verborum significatione[398] Gabriel Conagus[169] Milan[169] Edited by Johannes Baptista Pius [it; fr] in a volume that included also Nonius Marcellus' De compendiosa doctrina [it] and Varro's De lingua latina.[398]
1501[399][400] Ps.-Cyprianus, Carmen de Pascha[399] Aldus Manutius[399] Venice[399] This pseudocyprianic poem was published in the miscellany Poetae christiani veteres which also included Sedulius and Juvencus.[399] Concerning Arator, the editio princeps could also possibly be the undated impression printed in Salamanca in c. 1500.[401]
Arator, De Actibus Apostolorum [401]
1502[402] Paschasius Radbertus, In Lamentationes Jeremiae[402] Jacobus Pfortzheimius[403] Basel[402] Edited by Franciscus Wyler.[404]
1502[405] Braulio, Hymnus de Sancto Aemiliano[405] Peter Hagenbach [de] and Gaspare Gorricio[406] Toledo[405] Edited by Alonso Ortiz as part of his Breviarium secundum regulam Beati Hysidori.[405]
1503[407][408] Rabanus Maurus, De laudibus sanctae crucis[407] Thomas Anshelm[407] Pforzheim[407] Edited by Jakob Wimpfeling.[407]
1503[409] Origenes, Homiliae in Genesim, Homiliae in Exodum, Homiliae in Leviticum, Homiliae in Numeros, Homiliae in Iesu Nave, Homiliae in librum Iudicum[409] Aldus Manutius[409] Venice[409] The 4th century translations are by Rufinus of Aquileia; the original Greek text is lost. In this edition the translations' paternity is wrongly attributed to Jerome.[410]
1503[411] Asper Minor, Ars grammatica[411] Hieronymus Soncinus[411] Fano[411] Edited by Laurentius Abstemius.[411]
Ps.-Palaemon, Regulae[411]
1504[412] Epitome de Caesaribus[412] Hieronymus Soncinus[413] Fano[414] Edited by Laurentius Abstemius.[414]
1504[415][416] Ps.-Clemens Romanus, Recognitiones[415] Guido Mercator for Johannes Parvus[417][418] Paris[415] Edited by Jacobus Faber Stapulenis as part of the collection titled Paradysus Heraclidis. Epistola Clementis. Recognitiones Petri Apostoli. Complementum epistole Clementis. Epistola Anacleti. From a lost Greek original translated by Rufinus.[415][416]
1504[419][420] Ps.-Probus, De ultimis syllabis[419] Johannes Angelus Scinzenzeler[421] Milan[419] Edited by Aulus Janus Parrhasius in a sylloge of grammatical texts.[419]
Caesius Bassus, De metris[422]
Atilius Fortunatianus, De metris Horatianis[422]
1505[423]-1506[424] Augustinus[423] Johannes Amerbach[423] Basel[423] The first edition of Augustine's Opera omnia, in eleven volumes. Due to Amerbach's efforts a number of editiones principes were printed here; among these, in 1506, De Genesi ad litteram[425] and De dialectica.[293][424]
1506[426] Origenes, Commentarii in Epistulam ad Romanos[426] Simon de Lueres[426] Venice[426] Edited by Theophilus Salodianus, the ancient translation was made by Rufinus; the original Greek is lost. Here too the work is wrongly attributed to Jerome.[426]
1507[324][427] Ps.-Probus, Commentum in Bucolicas and Commentum in Georgicas[324] Bernardino Stagnino[428] Venice[324] Edited by G. B. Egnatius. The texts are present with Servius, Aelius Donatus and Cristoforo Landino's commentaries to Virgil and the works of the latter.[324][428]
1508[137] Julius Obsequens, Liber prodigiorum[137] Aldus Manutius[137] Venice[137] The only surviving manuscript was found by Giovanni Giocondo during his stay in France between 1495 and 1506. After arriving in Venice in 1506 he gave a transcription of the manuscript to Manutius, who printed it together with the first complete edition of Pliny the Younger's Epistulae.[137] The original manuscript has by now been lost, making the editio princeps the only surviving authority for the text.[114]
1508[429] Zero Veronensis, Sermones[429][430] Benedetto Fontana[430] Venice[429] Edited by Albertus Castellanus and Jacobus de Lenco.[429]
1509[431] Medicina Plinii[431] Étienne Guillery[431][102] Rome[431] Edited by Tommaso Pighinucci.[431]
Gargilius Martialis, De hortis[432]
1509[433] Ps.-Probus, Catholica Probi[433] Enrico & Giovanni Maria di Ca' Zeno [de][433][421] Vicenza[433] Edited by Aulus Janus Parrhasius in a collection of grammatical treatises.[433]
1510[434] Ps.-Hegesippus, Historiae[434] Jodocus Badius[434] Paris[434] The main text was edited by Jacobus Faber Stapulenis while the Anacephalaeosis was left to the care of Michael Hummelberg [fr; de]. Ambrose is here mistakenly considered as the translator as well of being judged the epitomator.[434][435]
Ps.-Ambrosius, Anacephaleosis[434]
1510[436] Quintus Aurelius Symmachus, Epistulae and Relationes[436] Johannes Schott[436] Strasbourg[436]
1510[437] Altercatio Hadriani Augusti et Epicteti philosophi[437] Officina Marneforum[389] Paris[437] Published together with the Berosus Babylonicus: De his quae praecesserunt inundationem, a forgery by Annius of Viterbo.[437][389]
1510[438] Hilarius Pictaviensis, In Matthaeum [it][438] and Tractatus super psalmos [it][439] Jodocus Badius[438] Paris[438] Edited by Robert Fortuné in the collection of Hilary's works titled Opera complura Sancti Hylarii Episcopi.[439][435]
c. 1510[440] Victor Vitensis, Historia persecutionis Africae provinciae[441] Johannes Parvus[440] Paris[441]
1510[407] Walafridus Strabo, Hortulus[407] Hieronymus Vietor[407] Vienna[407] Edited by Joachim Vadianus, it was followed in Nuremberg in 1512 by Johannes Weissenburger's edition. Vietor's editio princeps also contains two of Aldhelm's Aenigmata, the first thing ever to be printed of this writer.[442]
1511[276] Terentius Scaurus, De orthographia[276] Hieronymus Soncinus[276] Pesaro[276] Edited by Clarelius Lupus with the collaboration of Alessandro Gaboardo della Torricella. This is a sylloge of grammatical texts that puts together also works by Nonius Marcellus, Agroecius and the Ps.-Caper's De orthographia.[276]
Ps.-Caper, De verbis dubiis[276]
1511[441][443] Gregorius Turonensis, Vita sancti Iuliani[443] and De Gloria Martyrum[441] Johannes Parvus and Jean Marchand[441] Paris[441] This volume, a Martinellus, is a collection of medieval texts on Martin of Tours which also contains texts by Sulpicius Severus and Odo of Cluny, all edited by Hieronymus Clichtoveus.[441][443][444]
Venantius Fortunatus, Vita Sancti Martini[445]
1512[287] Epitome Iuliani [it; de; fr][287] Simon Vincent[446] Lyon[447] Edited by Nicolaus Boherius [it; fr] under a volume titled Leges Longobardorum seu capitulare divi ac sacratissimi Caroli Magni imperatoris et Francie regis ac novelle constitutiones domini Justiniani imperatoris cum praefaciuncula et annotationibus in ipsas II et constitutiones novellas.[287][447][448]
1512[441][449] Gregorius Turonensis, Historia Francorum,[443] De Gloria Confessorum[441] and In vitas patrum[443] Jodocus Badius Ascensius[441] Paris[441] Contained in this impression are also a life of Gregory of Tours by Joannes Egidius and one of Paul of Thebes by Jerome.[443]
Ado Viennensis, Chronicon[441]
1512[450] Origenes[450] Jodocus Badius and Johannes Parvus[450] Paris[450] Edited by Jacobus Merlin in four volumes in Origen's opera omnia, the great majority of which survive only in Latin translations. Here published here for the first time were the De pricipiis and the anonymous Latin translation of the Commentary on Matthew, known as the Commentariorum series in Matthaeum. This edition also contains two apologies of Origen, one penned by Origen's friend Pamphilus and the other by Merlin.[450][451]
Ps.-Origenes, Commentarii in Iob[450]
1513[252][452] Seneca Philosophus, Apocolocyntosis divi Claudii[252] Rome[452] Edited by Caius Sylvanus Germanicus.[452]
1513[453] Haito, Visio Wettini[453] Henricus Stephanus[453] Paris[453] Edited by Jacobus Faber Stapulensis. The volume contains several other editiones principes, that is the ancient Latin translation of the Sheperd of Hermas, Hildegard of Bingen's Scivias, Elizabeth of Schönau, Saint Mechtilde and Robert of Uzès visions.[453]
1514[441] Paulus Diaconus, Historia Langobardorum[441] Jodocus Badius Ascensius[441] Paris[441] An independent edition of higher quality was made the following year in Augsburg by Konrad Peutinger. A third edition was made in Basel in 1532 by Sigismund Gelenius as part of his edition of Eutropius.[441]
1515[151] Jordanes, Getica[151] Johann Miller[454] Augsburg[151] Edited by Konrad Peutinger. The volume also contains Paul the Deacon's Historia Langobardorum.[151]
1516[455][456] Paulinus Nolanus, Carmina and Epistulae[455][457] Jodocus Badius Ascensius and Johannes Parvus[457] Paris[456]
1516[458] Hermeneumata Pseudodositheana[458] Johannes Frobenius[459] Basel[459] Edited by Beatus Rhenanus together with Theodorus Gaza' Institutio grammatica. Rhenanus made his edition from the recension known as Hermeneumata Einsidlensia, but left out the Hermeneumata's glossary while making available the Colloquia.[460] Complete, but not from the Einsidlensia, was Henricus Stephanus' edition Glossaria duo e situ vetustatis eruta, published in 1573 in Paris. This impression contained two distinct recensions of the Hermeneumata, the Hermeneumata Leidensia and the Hermeneumata Stephani.[461]
1516[462][463][464] Hieronymus[462] Johannes Frobenius[464] Basel[463] First edition in nine volumes of Jerome's Opera onmia, edited by Erasmus.[462][464][465]
Ps.-Jerome, In omnes Divi Pauli epistolas commentaria[465] and Expositio Evangelii secundum Marcum[466]
1517[467] Epitome Aegidii[467] Theodoricus Martinus Alostensis[467] Antwerp or Leuven[467] Sine loco. Edited by Petrus Aegidius under the title Summae sive argumenta legum diversorum Imperatorum, ex Corpore Divi Theodosii, Novellis Divi Valentiniani Aug. Martiani, Maioriani, Severi, preterea Cai et Iulii Pauli sententiis. Aegidius erroneously took here the Epitome Aegidii for the Breviarium Alaricianum.[467][468]
Epitome Gai [it; de][469]
Ps.-Paulus, Pauli sententiae [it; de][470][468]
1519[471][472] Aquila Romanus, De figuris sententiarum et elocutionis[471][473] Nicolaus Zopinus [it][474][472] Venice[473]
Rutilius Lupus, De figuris sententiarum et elocutionis libri duo[474]
1520[475] Velleius Paterculus, Historiae Romanae[475] Johannes Frobenius[475] Basel[475] Edited by Beatus Rhenanus, who had discovered a surviving manuscript of the work in 1515 while visiting the Murbach Abbey in Alsace in today France.[476]
1520[477] Rutilius Claudius Namatianus, De reditu suo[477] Girolamo Benedetti[478] Bologna[477] Edited by Johannes Baptista Pius [it; fr].[477]
1520[129] Ps.-Cyprianus, De laude martyrii[132] Johannes Frobenius[129] Basel[129] Edited by Erasmus in his publication of Cyprian's works.[129]
Sententiae episcoporum[129]
1520[479][480] Calcidius, Timaeus, a Calcidio translatus commentarioque instructus[479] Jodocus Badius Ascensius[480] Paris[479] Edited by Augustinus Iustinianus[479]
1520[481] Mythographus Vaticanus Tertius[481] Jean de Marnef[481] Paris[481]
1521[306] Tertullianus[306] Johannes Frobenius[306] Basel[306] Edited by Beatus Rhenanus basing himself on two manuscripts, the Codex Hirsaugiensis and the Codex Paterniacensis. This volume was meant to be the first complete edition of the author, but it lacks many of Tertullian's works. Those offered for the first time by Rhenanus were De poenitentia, De patientia, Ad uxorem, De pallio, Ad martyres, De exhortatione castitatis, De virginibus velandis, De cultu foeminarum, De fuga, Ad scapulam, Adversus Marcionem, Adversus Hermogenem, Adversus Valentinianos, De carne Christi, De resurrectione carnis, De praescriptione haereticorum,[482] De Monogamia,[483] Adversus Praxean, Adversus Iudaeos and De corona militis. Also present is the previously printed Apologeticum.[306]
Ps.-Tertullianus, Adversus omnes haereses[484]
1521[218] Beda, Explanatio Apocalypsis, In Epistolas VII Catholicas, Expositio Actuum Apostolorum, In Lucae evangelium expositio and In Marci evangelium expositio[218] Jodocus Badius Ascensius[218] Paris[218]
1521[485] Eginhardus, Vita Karoli Magni[485] Johannes Soter[486] Cologne[485] Edited by Hermann von Neuenar [fr; de].[487]
Annales regni Francorum[487]
1521[488] Sulpicius Victor, Institutiones oratoriae[488] Johannes Frobenius[489] Basel[488] Edited by Beatus Rhenanus in a sylloge of rhetorical treatises titled Veterum aliquot de arte Rhetorica traditiones that included also Rutilius Lupus, Aquila Romanus, Emporius, Aphthonius and Augustine's De musica [it; de; fr].[489][490][491]
Rufinianus, De figuris sententiarum et elocutionis liber[490][492]
Ps.-Rufinianus, De schematis dianoeas and De schematis lexeos[490]
Emporius Rhetor, De ethopoeia, Praeceptum de loco communi, Praeceptum deliberativae and Praeceptum demonstrativae materiae[493]
Excerpta de adtributis personae et negotio[494]
1522[495][496] Arnobius Junior, Commentarii in Psalmos[495][496] Johannes Frobenius[495] Basel[495][496] Edited by Erasmus with a dedicatory letter to Pope Adrian VI.[496] The editor mistakenly attributes the work to Arnobius Afer. The volume includes also Erasmus' personal commentary to Psalm 2.[495]
1525[497] Gildas, De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae[497] Antwerp?[498] Edited by Polydore Vergil and Robert Ridley with a dedication to the bishop Cuthbert Tunstall.[498]
1525[499] Collectio Dionysiana-Hadriana [fr; de][499] Joannes Schoeffer[499] Mainz[499] Edited by Joannes Cochlaeus.[499]
1526[500][501] Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses[500] Johannes Frobenius[500] Basel[500] The ancient anonymous Latin translation, edited by Erasmus. Irenaeus' Greek original is lost, apart from a number of fragments.[500][501]
1527[502] Laus Pisonis[502] Henricus Petri[502] Basel[502] Edited by Johannes Sichardus as an appendix to an edition of Ovid's works. Sichard claims to have personally found the manuscript of the text in the Lorsch Abbey, where the work was ascribed to Virgil.[502]
1527[402][503] Alcuinus, Expositio In Iohannis Evangelium[402] Joannes Hervagius[503] Strasbourg[402]
1527[504] Philippus Presbyter, Commentarii in librum Iob[504][505] Adam Petri[505] Basel[505] Edited by Johannes Sichardus.[505]
1527[506] Marius Victorinus, Ars grammatica[506] Adam Petri[507] Basel[506] Edited by Johannes Sichardus. Only the fourth chapter titled de orthographia was printed; the full text was edited by Joachim Camerarius in Tübingen in 1537.[506]
1527[508] Ps.-Philo, Liber Antiquitatum Biblicarum[508] Adam Petri[509] Basel[509] Edited by Johannes Sichardus.[508] This edition also contains other Latin translations of works thought to be Philo's such as Quaestiones et Solutiones in Genesim, De vita contemplativa, De Mundo and De nominibus Hebraicis.[510]
1528[511][512] Sedulius Scottus, Collectaneum in epistolas Pauli[511] Henricus Petri[512] Basel[512] Edited by Johannes Sichardus.[512]
1528[513] Scribonius Largus, Compositiones[513] Simon Du Bois for Christian Wechel [fr][514] Paris[513] Edited by Ioannes Ruellius.[513]
1528[345] Cassiodorus, Institutiones saecularium litterarum[345] Johannes Bebelius[515] Basel[345] Edited by Johannes Sichardus in his Disciplinarum liberalium orbis ex P. Consentio et Magno Aurelio Cassiodoro.[345][515] As for Consentius' work, it was published incomplete; it was only in 1605 in Hannover that Helias Putschius [fr; de] made available the full text.[516][517]
Consentius, De nomine et verbo[516][517]
1528[518][519] Marius Victorinus, Adversus Arium, Hymni and De homoousio recipiendo[518] Henricus Petri[520] Basel[518] Edited by Johannes Sichardus in his volume titled Antidoton contra diversas omnium fere seculorum haereses.[518]
Ps.-Marius Victorinus, De martyrio Macchabaeorum[521][522]
Eusebius Vercellensis, De Trinitate[523]
Ps.-Athanasius, De Trinitate[523]
Vincentius Lerinensis, Commonitorium[524]
Salvianus Massiliensis, Ad ecclesiam[525][519]
Rusticus Diaconus [it; pl; ru], Disputatio contra Acephalos[526]
1528[527] Filastrius Brixiensis, Diversarum hereseon liber[527] Henricus Petri[528] Basel[527] Edited by Johannes Sichardus together with Lanfranc's treatise De corpore et sanguine Domini, written against Berengar of Tours.[527][529][528]
1528[529] Chromatius Aquileiensis, Tractatus XVII in Evangelium Matthaeum and Sermo de octo beatitudinis[529] Adam Petri[530] Basel[529] Edited by Johannes Sichardus.[529]
1528[531] Faustinus Presbyter [es], De Trinitate[531] Johannes Faber Iuliacensis [de][531] Basel[531]
c. 1528[396] Vegetius, Digesta Artis Mulomedicinae[396] Johannes Faber Iuliacensis [de][532] Basel[396]
1528[533] Breviarium Alaricianum[533] Henricus Petri[534] Basel[534] Edited by Johannes Sichardus. The Breviarium here is mistakenly believed to be the Codex Theodosianus.[533] An epitome of the Breviarium had been already printed in Antwerp in 1517 by Petrus Aegidius, called after him Epitome Aegidiana.[534]
Lucius Volusius Maecianus, Assis distributio[535]
Aggenus Urbicus, Commentum de agrorum qualitate[535]
Frontinus, De arte mensoria[535]
1529[218][536] Beda, De natura rerum, De temporibus [de] and De temporum ratione[536] Henricus Petrus[537] Basel[536] Edited by Johannes Sichardus.[536] Chapter 66 from De temporum ratione had already been printed separately by Johannes Tacuinus in Venice in 1505 and edited by Petrus Marenus Aleander; also the first two chapters had been printed separately in 1525, by the same printer and also in Venice, in a volume that included Probus' De notis.[537]
1529[538] Caelius Aurelianus, Tardae passiones [de][538] Henricus Petrus[539] Basel[538] Edited by Johannes Sichardus.[538]
1529[171] Cassiodorus, Chronica [it][171] Henricus Petri[171] Basel[171] Edited by Johannes Sichardus.[171]
1529[402] Alcuinus, In Genesim[402] Johannes Secerius[540] Hagenau[402]
1529[541] Iustus Urgellensis, Explanatio in Cantica Canticorum[541] Hagenau[541] Edited by Menrad Molther.[541]
1530[67] Isidorus Hispalensis, Quaestiones in Vetus Testamentum [it][67] Johannes Soter[67] Cologne[67]
1530[533] Lex Ripuaria[533] Basel[542][543] Edited by Johannes Sichardus.[533]
Lex Baiuvariorum[533]
Lex Alamannorum[533]
1530[544] Salvianus Massiliensis, De gubernatione Dei[544] Hieronymus Frobenius[544] Basel[544] Edited by Johannes Alexander Brassicanus.[544]
1531[545][546][547] Eucherius Lugdunensis, Instructiones ad Salonium[548] and Formulae spiritualis intelligentiae[547] Hieronymus Frobenius[545] Basel[545] Edited by Johannes Alexander Brassicanus.[547] It must be added that not all sources agree in considering Brassicanus' Eucherius' editio princeps; others put before the impressions made by Claude Chevallon in 1528 circa in Paris and Andreas Cratander in 1530 in Basel.[549] Claudius of Turin's texts were misattributed here to Eucherius of Lyon and inserted in a collection of the latter's works.[545]
Claudius Taurinensis, Expositio Libri Geneseos[545] and Triginta quaestiones super libros Regum[550]
1531[551] Ratramnus, De corpora et sanguine Domini[551][552] Johannes Prael[552] Cologne[551]
1531[553] Jordanes, Romana[553] Johannes Hervagius[553] Basel[553] Edited by Beatus Rhenanus together wih Getica and Latin translations of Procopius's De bellis [it; la] and Agathias.[553]
1531[402] Alcuinus, In Ecclesiasten[402] Johannes Bebelius[503] Basel[402]
1532[554] Theodorus Priscianus, Euporista[554] Hieronymus Frobenius and Nikolaus Episcopus[554] Basel[554] Edited by Sigismund Gelenius, the Euporista's text is incomplete. In the same year a complete edition was printed by Johann Schott in Strasbourg and edited by Hermann von Neuenar.[554]
1532[554] Theodorus Priscianus, Physica[554] Johann Schott[554] Strasbourg[554] Edited by Hermann von Neuenar, this edition contains both the Euporista and the Physica. Also present in the volume was a Latin translation by Gerard of Cremona of an Arab work, Albucasis' Chirurgia.[554][555]
1532[556] Charisius, Ars grammatica[556] Johannes Sultzbach[556] Naples[556] Edited by Jo. Pierius Cymnius.[556]
1532[402] Rabanus Maurus, De clericorum institutione[402] Johannes Prael[557] Cologne[402]
1532[558] Salonius Genavensis, Commentarii in parabolas Salomonis et in Ecclesiasten[559][558] Johannes Secerius[560] Hagenau[559] Edited by Johannes Alexander Brassicanus.[558]
1533[561] Symphosius, Aenigmata[561] Louis Cyaneus[562] Paris[561] Edited by Joachimus Perionius [fr; de; it].[561]
1533[538] Caelius Aurelianus, Celeres passiones [de][538] Simon de Colines[563] Paris[538] Edited by Joannes Gunterius.[538]
1533[245][345] Cassiodorus, Variae and De anima[245] Henricus Siliceus[245] Augsburg[245] Edited by Mariangelus Accursius with a dedication to the Cardinal Albert of Mainz. A limited amount of excerpts from the Variae had been previously published by Johannes Cochlaeus in 1529.[171][245]
1534[564][565] Ps.-Ovidius, Halieutica[564] Aldine Press[564] Venice[564] Edited by Georgius Logus [de]. This book is a collection which includes all Nemesianus, Grattius, the pseudo-Ovidian Halieutica and Calpurnius Siculus.[564][565]
Grattius, Cynegetica[565]
Nemesianus, Cynegetica[565][566]
1534[567] Johannes Cassianus, De incarnatione Domini contra Nestorium[567] Andreas Cratander[567] Basel[567]
1534[68] Isidorus Hispalensis, De ecclesiasticis officiis [it][68] Michael Blum[568] Leipzig[68] Edited by Joannes Cochlaeus.[68]
1534[402] Rabanus Maurus, Commentaria in Jeremiam[402] Henricus Petri[569] Basel[402]
1534[218] Beda, Homeliarum evangelii libri II[218] Johannes Gymnicus [de][218] Cologne[218]
1534[570] Petrus Chrysologus, Sermones[570][571] Agapitus Vincentinus[571] Bologna[570] Edited by Giovanni Battista Fasello.[570]
1535[572] Hyginus, Fabulae[572] Joannes Hervagius[573] Basel[574] Edited by Jacob Micyllus together with Fulgentius' Mythologiae.[573][572]
1535[575] Primasius, Commentarius in Apocalypsin[575][576] Eucharius Cervicornus[575] Cologne[575]
1535[577] Maximus Taurinensis, Sermones[577] Johannes Gymnicus [de][577] Cologne[577] This edition is incomplete since it only published 74 sermons.[577] Among these, 39 have been judged to be spurious. New texts were published in 1684 and 1690 by the Congregation of Saint Maur, that in their editions of Augustine and Ambrose added 15 and 43 sermons attributed to Maximus. Jean Mabillon further put in 12 sermons, and finally Bruno Bruni edited 240 sermons in Rome; of these, many were spurious and quite a few modern forgeries. Eventually, A. Mutzenbecher in 1962 reduced the number of authentic sermons to 106.[578][579]
1536[580] Marcellus Empiricus[580] Johannes Frobenius[580] Basel[580] Edited by Janus Cornarius, who also published Galen's nine books on medicaments in the volume.[581]
1536[582][583] Smaragdus Abbas, Collectiones in epistolas et evangelia[582] Georges Ulricher[583] Strasbourg[583]
1536[584] Marius Victorius, Aletheia[584] Vincentius Portonarius[585] Lyon[584] Edited by Jean de Gagny in appendix to Alcimus Avitus' works.[584]
1536[362] Ambrosius Autpertus, Expositio in Apocalypsin[362] Eucharius Cervicornus[569] Cologne[362]
1537[84][586] Gregorius Magnus, Expositio in librum primum Regum [it][84] Bernardinus Stagninus[586] Venice[84]
1537[587] Beda, Epistula ad Wicthedum[587] Johannes Prael and Petrus Quentel[587] Cologne[587] Edited by Johannes Noviomagus. A new edition of Bede's scientific treatises after the previous one of Basel, it offers also a number of anonymous works on Paschal computation and many Carolingian glosses to Bede such as the Vetus commentarius (mostly from Abbo of Fleury) and the presumed Byrhtferth's commentaries. Novomagus also added to the volume his personal scholia to Bede.[588]
1537[589] Ps.-Primasius, In Omnes divi Pauli Epistolas Commentarii[589] Sebastian Gryphius[590] Lyon[590] Edited by Jean de Gagny.[590]
1538[591] Beda, Hexaemeron[591] Robert Winter[591] Basel[591] The work was here mistakenly thought to be by Junillus. This is the shorter version of the Hexaemeron; the longer version was first published in 1692-1693 in London by Henry Wharton. Wharton left out a substantial portion of the last part of the longer version; as a result it was Edmond Martène in 1717 in Paris that first edited this complete version.[591]
1538[592] Sextus Placitus[592] Johannes Petrieus[592] Nuremberg[592] Edited by Franz Emmerich. Also in the volume is the Tractatus de Lacte, a contemporary work written by Gerolamo Accoramboni.[592][593]
1538[594] Pacianus, Epistulae ad Sympronianum, Paraenesis ad paenitentiam and Sermo de baptismo[594] Charlotte Guillard[594] Paris[594] Edited by Ioannes Tillius.[594]
1538[595] Apponius [it; pl], In Canticum Canticorum Expositio[595][596] Johannes Faber Iuliacensis [de][596] Freiburg[596] Only the first six books were published in 1538. After that Angelo Mai made available in Rome in 1841 the books from the seventh to part of the eleventh; finally, Girolamo Bottino and Giuseppe Martini first put in print in Rome all twelve books of the Expositio.[595][596]
1539[362] Ambrosius Autpertus, Sermo de cupiditate and Sermo in purificatione Sanctae Mariae[362] Cologne[362] Autpert's sermons are here misattributed to Alcuin and thus are printed in the Homiliae Alcuini.[362]
1543[597] Arnobius Afer[597] Franciscus Priscianenses and Girolamo Ferrari[598] Rome[597] Edited by Faustus Sabaeus. Here Minucius Felix's Octavius is treated not as a separate work by Minucius Felix, but instead as the last book of Arnobius' Adversus Nationes. It will only be in the 1560 Heidelberg edition, edited by Franciscus Balduinus, that the Octavius will be correctly identified as a work of Minucius Felix.[597][599]
Minucius Felix, Octavius[599]
1543[600] Eiricus Altissiodorensis, Vita divi Germani[600] Simon de Colines[600] Paris[600] Edited by Pierre Pesselier.[600]
1543[496] Arnobius Junior, Expositiunculae in Evangelium[496] Basel[496] Edited by Gilbertus Cognatus [fr; de]. This edition in incomplete; the rest was published by Germain Morin in 1903 in Oxford in the Anecdota Maredsolana.[496]
1543[601][602] Victorinus Poetovionensis, Commentarii in Apocalypsim Ioannis[602] Paris[602] Edited by Johannes Lonicerus [de; fr] as an appendix to Theophylactus' Enarrationes in Pauli epistolas et in aliquot prophetas minores. This is the heavily revised text made by Jerome of which two recensions exist, of which Lonicerus made available the shorter one. After that in Bologna in 1558 B. Millanius published the longer recension. Victorinus' original commentary came out only in Vienna in 1916 when an unrevised manuscript was edited by Johannes Haussleiter [de].[601][602]
1544[402] Rabanus Maurus, In Ecclesiasticum commentarii[402] Simon de Colines[603] Paris[402]
1545[604] Tertullianus, De testimonio animae, De anima, De spectaculis, De baptismo, Scorpiace, De idolatria, De pudicitia, De ieiunio, De oratione[604] Charlotte Guillard[604] Paris[604] Edited by Joannes Gagneius. A new complete edition of Tertullian with many additions, known as Mesnartiana. Novatian's works were added due to their misattribution to Tertullian.[604]
Novatianus, De Trinitate and De cibis iudaicis[604]
1547[402] Alcuinus, Enchiridion in Psalmos[605] and In Cantica graduum expositio[402] Nicolas Le Riche[606][605] Paris[402]
1548[607] Marius Victorinus, Ad Candidum Arianum[607] Johannes Oporinus[607] Basel[607] Edited by Iacobus Ziegler in appendix to Ziegler's Conceptionum in Genesim mundi et Exodum Commentarii.[607]
1548-1549[608] Lex Salica[608][609] Charlotte Guillard[610] Paris[608] Sine data, it may have been printed as late as 1557. It is also sine nomine, thus the attribution to Guillard is doubtful.[610] Having said that, it was edited by Ioannes Tillius in a volume titled Libelli seu decreta a Clodoveo, et Childeberto et Clotario prius aedita ac postrema a Carolo lucide emendata, auctaque plurimum.[608][609]
Lex Gundobada[611]
1549[612] Optatus Milevitanus, Contra Parmenianum Donatistam[612] Franciscus Behem[612] Mainz[612] Edited by Joannes Cochlaeus.[612]
1549[613] Ps.-Ulpianus, tituli ex corpore Ulpiani[613] Guilelmus Morelius[614] Paris[614] Edited by Ioannes Tillius.[613]
1550[615][616] Codex Theodosianus[615] Charlotte Guillard and Guillaume Desboys[610] Paris[610] Edited by Ioannes Tillius. Tillius only published books IX-XVI, while books VI-VIII were first published in 1566 in Lyon by Iacobus Cujacius.[615][617] The missing Books I-V were partly salvaged by a palimpsest when Amedeo Peyron [it; de] added 84 constitutions with the publication in Turin in 1824 of the Fragmenta Taurinensia.[618] Also in 1824 Walther Friedrich Clossius [ru] published in Tübingen 79 constitutions from the Code's first two books that he had found interspersed in a copy of the Breviarium Alaricianum together with a copy of book I.[619]
1550[402] Paschasius Radbertus, De Corpore et Sanguine Domini[402] Cologne[402] Edited by Nicolaus Mameranus.[402]
1551[402] Rabanus Maurus, De Sacramento Eucharistiae[402] Cologne[402]
1552[620][621] Notitia Dignitatum[620] Hieronymus Frobenius[620] Basel[620] Edited by Sigismund Gelenius.[622]
De rebus bellicis[621]
1552[623] Ps.-Abdias, Virtutes apostolorum[623] Johannes Oporinus[624] Basel[623] Edited by Wolfgang Lazius.[623]
1554[402] Jonas Aurelianus, Libri tres de cultu imaginum[402] Arnold Birckmann [de][625] Cologne[402]
1554-1555[626][627] Corpus Agrimensorum Romanorum[627] Adrianus Turnebus[626] Paris[626] Edited by Pierre Galland [fr] under the title De agrorum conditionibus et constitutionibus limitum.[626] Three of the texts of the gromatici's corpus were published previously by Johannes Sichardus in Basel in 1528 together with his edition of the Codex Theodosianus. Galland's volume while being considered the editio princeps, did not cover all texts; the Liber regionarum appeared only in 1563 when Paulus Manutius printed it in Rome. More texts appeared in 1607 in Leiden when Petrus Scriverius added other texts using the Codex Arcerianus.[628][535][629]
1555[218] Beda, Hymni[218] Georgius Cassander[218] Cologne[218] There are 11 hymns attributed to Bede in a collection made of different authors and titled Hymni Ecclesiastici.[218]
1556[630] Sulpicius Severus, Chronica [it][630] Johannes Oporinus[631] Basel[630] Edited by Matthias Flacius. It is generally but not universally considered the editio princeps, as according to another theory the first edition was printed in Milan in c. 1479 by Bonino Mombrizio.[630]
1557[632] Edictum Rothari[632] Basel[632] Edited by Johannes Basilius Herold [fr; de] in his compilation Originum ac Germanicarum antiquitatum libri. Due to his manuscript of the Edictum being incomplete, he used the Lex Lombarda [it] to fill the gaps present in the text.[632]
Lex Frisionum[633]
1558[151] Orosius, Liber Apologeticus[151] Leuven[151] Edited by Johannes Costerius.[151]
1560[634][635] Cyprianus Gallus, Heptateucos[634] Guilelmus Morelius[636] Paris[636] This volume is titled In Hexamerone and presents metrical accounts of the creation by Cyprian, Dracontius, Marius Victor, Avitus and Hilary.[637] Regarding the Heptateucos, only parts of the Genesis were printed here. In 1643 Jacques Sirmond made a few further additions to the Genesis, and Edmond Martène did the same in 1724. In Paris in 1852, Jean Baptiste François Pitra in his Spicilegium Solesmense completed the Genesis and also first added Exodus, Deuteronomy and Joshua plus parts of Leviticus and Numbers. Pitra in 1883 in his Analecta sacra et classica published in Paris and Rome published further findings, i.e. the Book of Judges and new pieces from Leviticus, Deuteronomy and Numbers.[634]
Ps.-Cyprianus, Carmen de Sodoma[634][635]
Dracontius, Carmina christiana[638]
Laudes Domini [it; de][639]
1562[329] Firmicus Maternus, De errore profanarum religionum[329] Strasbourg[329] Edited by Flacius Illyricus.[329]
1563[640] Beda[640] Joannes Hervagius[218] Basel[640] This is the first complete edition of Bede's works, published in eight volumes. A number of texts by other authors erroneously attributed to Bede are present in the edition, such as works by Jonas and Wigbod, while some of Bede's titles are missing.[640][641][642] This represented the first printed edition for many titles, such as De locis sanctis, Libri quatuor in principium Genesis, De orthographia, In primam partem Samuhelis, In Tobiam, In Proverbia, In Cantica Canticorum, Vita sancti Cuthberti prosaica, De tabernaculo, In Regum librum XXX quaestiones, Retractatio in Actus Apostolorum, In Ezram et Neemiam, De templo and Aliquot quaestionum liber.[218]
Jonas Bobiensis, Vita Eustasii, Vita Bertulfi, Vita Attalae and Vita Burgundofarae[642]
Wigbodus, Commentarius in Optateuchum[643]
1563[644] Novatianus, De spectaculis[644] Paulus Manutius[644] Rome[644] Edited by Latinus Latinius.[644]
1564[645][646] Ps.-Cyprianus, Adversus aleatores,[645] Carmen ad quendam senatorem,[647] Cena Cypriani,[646] Adversus Judaeos[127] Guilelmus Morelius[645] Paris[645] The spuria are inserted in a collection of Cyprian's works.[646]
De duodecim abusivis saeculi[132]
c. 1564[648] Ps.-Tertullianus, Carmen adversus Marcionitas[648] Johannes Oporinus[585] Basel[648] Edited by Georgius Fabricius, Tertullian's spuria were published as genuine in this miscellany of Poetarum Veterum Ecclesiasticorum Opera Christiana.[648]
Ps.-Cyprianus, De resurrectione mortuorum[649][650]
Rusticius Helpidius, Tristicha and Carmen de Iesu Christi beneficiis[651]
1564[652] Querolus[652] Robertus Stephanus[653] Paris[654] Edited by Petrus Daniel.[652]
1566[345] Cassiodorus, Institutiones divinarum litterarum[345] Christophe Plantin[345] Antwerp[345] Edited by Jacobus Pamelius.[345]
1566[655] Lex Romana Burgundionum[655] Gulielmus Rovillius[656] Lyon[655] Edited by Jacobus Cujacius together with the Codex Theodosianus.[655][656]
1568[657] Ps.-Fredegarius[657] Basel[657] Edited by Flacius Illyricus. The volume also contains Gregory of Tours' Historia Francorum as well as the editio princeps of the Continuations to the Chronica Fredegarii. The Continuations are incomplete as they break off at chapter 24.[657]
1568[658] Luciferus Calaritanus[658] Michael Sonnius [fr][658] Paris[658] Edited by Ioannes Tillius.[658]
1569[659] Ennodius[659] Henricus Petri[660] Basel[659] Edited by Johann Jakob Grynaeus as part of a corpus of church fathers it is reputed a work of low quality, titled Monumenta Patrum Orthodoxographa. Also, Ennodius was not here fully complete, an issue that was solved in 1611 when two complete editions were made by Andreas Schottus in Tournai and by Jacques Sirmond in Paris. As for Gaudentius, Tract XX had already been published in 1508 in Venice; also, in 1554 Tracts XVI and XXI were edited in Venice by Aloysius Lipomanus.[661][660]
Gaudentius Brixiensis, Tractatus[660]
Tyconius, Liber Regularum[662]
1570[663][664] Phoebadius, Contra Arianos[663] Henricus Stephanus[664] Geneva[664] Edited by Theodorus Beza in a volume that also contains Athanasius' Orationes contra Arianos, Basil's Adversus Eunomium and the Explicatio, wrongly attributed to Athanusius and Cyril.[663]
1572[665][666]-1573[667] Seneca Philosophus, Epigrammata[665][668] Gulielmus Rovillius[667] Lyon[668] The volume was edited by Joseph Justus Scaliger in his volume titled Appendix Vergiliana. these first used the poetic sylloge contained in the Codex Vossianus Q. 86. Most of the epigrams were printed here among the Catalecta, where Scaliger first used the poetic sylloge contained in the Codex Vossianus Q. 86. Claude Binetus [fr] added in Poitiers in 1579 an epigram by Seneneca together with twelve new poems by Petronius; Petrus Pithoeus in 1590 also put in Seneca's epigrams from the Codex Tuaneus.[665][668][669]
Petronius, Epigrammata[666]
Phocas [fr; ca] Vita Vergilii[670][667]
1573[671] Collatio legum mosaicarum et romanarum [it; de; fr][671] Robertus Stephanus [fr][672] Paris[671] Edited by Petrus Pithoeus in his Fragmenta Quaedam Papiniani, Pauli, Ulpiani, Gaii, Modestini, aliorumque veterum Iuris auctorum ex integris ipsorum libris ante Iustiniani Imp. tempora collecta, et cum Moysis legibus collata.[671]
De manumissionibus[672]
1573[282] Baudovinia[282] Laurentius Surius[282] Cologne[282] Published in the De probatis sanctorum historiis compilation.[282]
1574[673] Venantius Fortunatus, Carminum libri octo and De vita Sancti Martini[673] Niccolò Canelles[673] Cagliari[673] Edited by Giacomo Salvatore Solanio.[673]
1574[674][675] Asser, Vita Ælfredi regis Angul Saxonum[674] John Day[675] London[675] Edited by Matthew Parker.[674] The text had many interpolations taken from the Annals of St Neots due to Parker's persuasion that Asser was the author of the Annals.[675]
1576[676] Hilarius Arelatensis, Vita Honorati[676] Cologne[676] Edited by Laurentius Surius in the first volume of his De probatis sanctorum historiis.[676]
1577[677] Pervigilium Veneris[677] Paris[677] Edited by Petrus Pithoeus.[677]
1577[678] Consultatio veteris cuiusdam iurisconsulti [it; de][678][679] Paris[679] Published by Iacobus Cujacius in his Consultationes.[678]
1578[547] Eucherius Lugdunensis, De laude eremi[547] Aegidius Gorbinus[680] Paris[547] The volume was first to be edited by Dionysius Faucherius, but due to the former's death the editing was completed by Gilbertus Genebrardus, who also added to the impression Hilary of Arles' Vita Honorati.[547][680]
1579[345] Cassiodorus[345] Sebastianus Nivellius[681] Paris[345] The first complete edition of Cassiodorus' works, it was edited by Guilielmus Fornerius and Petrus Pithoeus. The collection lacks the Historia Tripartita and the Expositio Psalmorum, already printed, as it misses also the Complexiones, as yet undiscovered; it does contain a number of Cassiodorus' works until then available only in manuscript, such as the De Ortographia. Inserted in the volume are also several works not by Cassiodorus but linked to his age and the Goths, such as Jordanes' Getica, Ennodius' Panegyricus.[345][681][682]
Edictum Theoderici[682][683]
Liber iudiciorum[684]
Isidorus Hispalensis, Historia de regibus Gothorum, Vandalorum et Suevorum[197]
1579[685] Aurelius Victor, De Caesaribus[685] Antwerp[685][686] Edited by Andreas Schottus. The editor had obtained in Paris view of a transcription of the Monumentum Ancyranum made by the diplomat Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq and put it at the end of the volume as a comment to the Epitome de Caesaribus [685]
Origo gentis romanae[685]
Res Gestae Divi Augusti[687][686]
1580[688] Salvianus Massiliensis, Epistulae[688] Sebastianus Nivellus[689] Paris[689] Edited by Petrus Pithoeus in the Opera omnia of Salvian's works.[689] As for Epistula ix, it had already been published by Johannes Sichardus in his Antidoton in Basel in 1528.[519]
1580[690] Calpurnius Flaccus, Declamationes[690] Paris[690] Edited by Petrus Pithoeus.[690]
1580[112] Isidorus Hispalensis[112] Paris[691] First edition of Isidore's Opera omnia,[112] edited by Marguerin de la Bigne, it included works as yet unpublished such as the De differentiis Libri II [it]. Only the first book was printed here; the complete text of the De differentiis first came out in 1599 in Madrid when A. Gomez and J. de Grial edited again Isidore's opera omnia.[691][68]
1580[692] Iulianus Aeclanensis, Tractatus Prophetarum Osee, Iohel et Amos[692][693] Michael Sonnius [fr][693] Paris[693] Edited by Renatus Laurentius Barreus [fr] in a collection of works of Rufinus of Aquileia. Julian's commentary is here attributed to the latter.[692]
1581[694] Corippus, In laudem Iustini Augusti minoris[694] Christophorus Plantinus[695] Antwerp[696] Edited by Michael Ruizius Assagrius.[694]
1583[443] Gregorius Turonensis, De virtutibus sancti Martini[443] Maternus Cholinus [it; fr][697] Cologne[443] This edition also contains Gregory's De gloria martyrum and De gloria confessorum.[443]
1585[635] Ps.-Cyprianus, Carmen de Iona[635] Paris[698] Edited by François Juret.[635]
1587[699] Velius Longus, De orthographia[699] Rome[700] Edited by Fulvius Ursinus.[699]
1588[701] Macrobius, De verborum graeci et latini differentiis vel societatibus[701][702] Paris[702] Edited by Johannes Opsopoeus [fr; it]; three years earlier Henricus Stephanus had already printed a short piece of the text's preface in his edition of Macrobius' works.[701]
1588[703] Fulgentius Ferrandus, Breviatio canonum[704] Claudius Chappelet[703] Paris[703] Edited by Petrus Pithoeus. This incomplete edition only presents Cresconius' Praefatio and capitulatio; it was only in 1661 in Paris that Guilelmus Voellus and Henricus Justellus published Cresconius' complete text in their Bibliotheca iuris canonici veteris.[703]
Cresconius, Concordia Canonum[703]
1588[705] Annales Fuldenses[705] Paris[706] Edited by Petrus Pithoeus in his Annalium et historiae Francorum ab anno 708 ad annum 990 scriptores coetanii XII.[706]
1589[707][708] Fabius Planciades Fulgentius, Expositio continentiae Virgilianae[708] Officicina Sanctandriana[708] Heidelberg[708] Edited by Jerome Commelin. The text is present in an edition of Virgil's works which also contains Junius Philargyrius' commentary to Virgil, Fulvius Ursinus' notes to Servius, Velius Longus' De orthographia and also a title of Cassiodorus' also known as De orthographia.[708]
1590[709][710] Passio Scillitanorum[710] Tipographia Vaticana [it; es; pt][709] Rome[709] Several recensions of the original text survive. The editio princeps edited by Caesar Baronius in the second volume of the Annales Ecclesiastici is a recensio longior. In 1685 Jean Mabillon published in Paris for the fourth volume of the Vetera analecta what survived of another recension; to this Thierry Ruinart added a new one in 1689 in his Acta martyrum sincera. In the 19th further recensions surfaced, beginning with B. Aubé who published one in Paris in 1881 in Les chrétiens dans l'empire Romain and followed one printed in 1889 in the Analecta Bollandiana. A shorter version was found by Armitage Robinson who printed it in Cambridge in 1891.[709][710][711]
1590[712] Optatianus, Carmina[712] Paris[712] Edited by Petrus Pithoeus in his anthology Epigrammata et poemata vetera.[712]
1591[713] Collectio Avellana[713] Rome[713] Partly edited by Antonio Carafa in the first volume of the Epistolarum decretalium summorum pontificum. Only 166 letters contained in the collection were printed, while many others were first published in Rome by Caesar Baronius in the Annales Ecclesiastici in several volumes between 1593 and 1596.[713] A complete edition came out only in 1895-1898 in Vienna due to the efforts of Otto Günther.[714]
1594[715] Severus Minoricensis, Epistula de miraculis sancti Stephani[715][716] Tipographia Vaticana [it; es; pt][717] Rome[716] Edited by Caesar Baronius in the fifth volume of his Annales Ecclesiastici.[716]
1595[718] Arnobius Junior, Conflictus cum Serapione[718] Cologne[718] Edited by François Feuardent.[718]
1596[719] Phaedrus, Fabulae[719] Johannes Odotius[720] Troyes[719] Edited by Petrus Pithoeus.[719]
1597[721] Lucilius[721] Franciscus Raphelengius[722] Leiden[723] Edited by Franciscus Dousa.[721]
1599[724] Alcuinus, Compendium in Canticum canticorum[724] Typographia Regia[725] Madrid[724] Edited by Johannes Grial [es] as Isidore of Seville's work.[724]

17th century

[edit]
Date Author, Work Printer Location Comment
1600[95][324] Servius Danielis[95][726] Paris[324] Edited by Petrus Daniel as part of his edition of Virgil; some notes concerning Varro from this commentary had been published by Joseph Justus Scaliger in 1573.[95][324]
1600[727][728] Victor Tunnunensis, Chronica[727] Ingolstadt[727] Edited by Henricus Canisius. Together with these two authors the volume also contains the Synodus Bavarica and Liutprand of Cremona's Relatio de Legatione Constantinopolitana.[727]
Iohannes Biclarensis[728]
1600[729][730] Ps.-Lactantius Placidus, Scholia in Statii Achilleida[730] Paris[730] Edited by Friedrich Lindenbrog [de; fr] in a publication of Statius' Opera omnia. It also included Domizio Calderini [it; de; fr]'s commentary to the Silvae and Lactantius Placidus' commentary to the Thebaid.[729][731]
1601[405] Braulio, Vita Sancti Aemiliani[405] Madrid[405] Edited by Prudencio de Sandoval as part of his Primera parte de las fundaciones de los monesterios del glorioso padre San Benito.[405]
1601[732] Ps.-Sisbertus, Exhortatio paenitendi, Lamentum paenitentiae and Oratio pro correptione vitae[732] Michael Sonnius [fr][732] Paris[732] Edited by Jacques du Breul [fr] in the Opera omnia of Isidore of Seville due to a misattribution.[732]
1601[733] Desiderius Cadurcensis, Epistulae[733] Ingolstadt[734] Edited by Henricus Canisius as part of his Lectiones antiquae.[734]
1602[735] Liber Pontificalis[735] Joannes Albinus[736] Mainz[735] Edited by Johannes Busaeus.[737]
1602[738] Hydatius, Chronicon[738] Ingolstadt[738] Edited by Henricus Canisius, it is contained in his vast and miscellaneous compilation Antiquae Lectiones. Canisius used an abridged version of the chronicle; it was only in Rome in 1615 that the full work was published, edited by L. Sanllorente. Another complete edition came out in the same year in Pamplona due to Prudencio de Sandoval.[738]
1604[218][739] Beda, Vita sancti Cuthberti metrica[218] Andreas Angermarius[218] Ingolstadt[218] Edited by Henricus Canisius, these texts are contained in his vast compilation Antiquae Lectiones, seu antiqua monumenta ad historiam mediae aetatis illustrandam.[218] The Vita Columbae first printed here is the short recension of the saint's Vita;[739] the long recension and the complete text was first published by Johannes Colganus in Leuven in 1647 as part of his Trias Thaumaturga jointly with lives of Patrick and Brigit.[740]
Adamnanus, Vita Columbae[739]
Ruricius, Epistulae[741]
1605[742] Alcuinus, De ortographia[742] Hanau[742] Edited by Helias Putschius [fr; de] in the collection Grammaticae Latinae auctores antiqui. Alcuin's text is here misattributed to Bede.[742]
1605[743] Agobardus[743] Paris[744] Edited by Jean-Papire Masson who had discovered a 9th-century manuscript in a Lyon bookshop with many previously unknown texts. It was followed in Paris in 1666 by a better second edition carefully edited by Stephanus Baluzius.[745]
1608[746] Dungalus, Responsa contra perversas Claudii Taurinensis episcopi sententias[746] Paris[747] Edited by Jean Papire Masson.[746]
1613[748] Paulus Diaconus, Gesta episcoporum Mettensium[748] Hanau[748] Edited by Marquand Freher in the collection Corpus Francicae Historiae.[748]
1613[749] Favonius Eulogius [de; it; ca], Disputatio de Somnio Scipionis[749][750] Martinus Nutius[750] Antwerp[750] Edited by Andreas Schottus in his Cicero a calumniis vindicatus.[749][750]
1615[751] Martinus Bracarensis, Sententiae Patrum Aegyptiorum[751] Antwerp[751] Edited by Heribertus Rosweydus.[751]
1616[752] Beatus Liebanensis and Eterius [es], Adversus Elipandum libri duo[752] Ingolstadt[752] Edited by Petrus Stevartius.[752]
1617[753] Columbanus, Oratio Sancti Columbani[753] Nivelle[754] Paris[754] Edited by Andreas Quercetanus in a collected edition of the works of Alcuin; Columbanus' prayer was misattributed to Alcuin.[753]
Ps.-Alcuinus, Officia per ferias[753]
1619[755] Adamanus, De Locis Sanctis[755] Ingolstadt[755] Edited by Jacobus Gretser.[755]
1619[756] Eugenius Secundus Toletanus, Carmina[756] Sebastianus Cramoisy[756] Paris[756] Edited by Jacques Sirmond.[756]
1620[757] Hosidius Geta[757] Leiden[757] Edited by Petrus Scriverius as part of his Collectanea Veterum Tragicorum aliorumque fragmenta, his edition offers only the first 134 lines of Hosidius' Medea. The editio princeps of the complete text came out in Amsterdam in 1759, edited by Petrus Burmannus Secundus as part of his Anthologia Veterum Epigrammatum et Poematum.[758]
1625[759] Tertullianus, Ad nationes[759] Geneva[759] Edited by Jacques Godefroy.[759]
1626[760] Erchempertus, Historia Langobardorum Beneventanorum[760] Naples[760] Edited by Antonio Cacacciolo.[760]
1628[761] Expositio totius mundi et gentium[761] Geneva[761] Edited by Jacobus Gothofredus.[761]
1630[762] Ps.-Tertullianus, De execrandis gentium diis[762] Rome[762] Edited by Josephus Maria Suaresius.[762]
1630[763] Ps.-Marius Victorinus, Ad Iustinum Manichaeum[763] and De verbis scripturae[764] Paris[764] Edited by Jacques Sirmond as part of his Opuscula dogmatica veterum quinque scriptorum.[764][763][765]
Leporius [ca; ru], Libellus emendationis[765]
1631[766] Constitutiones Sirmondianae[766] Paris[767] Edited by Jacques Sirmond.[766]
1633[768] Vitas patrum Emeritensium[768] Madrid[768] Edited by Bernabé Moreno de Vargas, it was followed by a more careful edition in Antwerp in 1638, made by Thomas Tamayo de Vargas.[768]
1636[769][770] Excerpta Valesiana[769] Henricus Valesius Paris Edited by Henricus Valesius. The Excerpta are two independent texts from the same only surviving manuscript.[769][770]
1638[771][772] Ampelius, Liber Memorialis[771] Leiden[772] Edited by Claudius Salmasius as an appendix to Florus' Epitome.[771][772]
1641[773] Annales Bertiniani[773] Paris[773] Edited by François Duchesne.[773]
1643[774] Praedestinatus[774] Paris[774] Edited by Jacques Sirmond.[774]
1648[775] Ps.-Cyprianus, De rebaptismate[775][132] Paris[775] Edited by Nicolas Rigault as part of his publication of Cyprian's works.[775]
1649[776] Fulgentius Ferrandus[776] Dijon[776] Edited by Pierre-François Chiffletius.[776]
Ps.-Fulgentius Ferrandus, Vita Fulgentii[776] and Liber de Trinitate[777]
1649[778] Anastasius Bibliothecarius, Chronographia Tripertita[778] Paris[778] Edited by Carolus Annibalus Fabrotus.[778]
1649[779] Commodianus, Instructiones[779] Toul[779] Edited by Nicolas Rigault.[779]
1650[551][267] Ratramnus, De Praedestinatione[551] Paris[551] Edited by Gilbert Mauguin in a miscellaneous volume titled Veterum Auctorum qui IX saeculo de Praedestinatione et Gratia scripserunt Opera et Fragmenta.[551]
Johannes Scotus Eriugena, De Praedestinatione Liber[267]
1650[531] Faustinus presbyter [es] and Marcellinus Presbyter, Libellus precum[531] Sebastianus et Gabrieles Cramoisy[780] Paris[780] Edited by Jacques Sirmond.[531]
1652[751] Martinus Bracarensis, Opus Tripartitum and De ira[751] Lyon[751] Edited by Juan Tamayo de Salazar as part of the Anamnesis sive Commemorationis sanctorum hispanorum.[751]
1656[164] Boethius, De fide catholica[164] Franciscus Hackius[781] Leiden[164] Edited by Renatus Vallinus. The volume includes also Boethius' Opuscula sacra and the De consolatione.[164]
1656[782] Patricius[782] London[783] Edited by Sir James Ware in his Sancto Patricio adscripta Opuscula.[783] An edition by the Bollandists followed two years later.[782]
1663[784] Passio Perpetuae[784] Giacomo Dragondelli[785] Rome[784] A manuscript was first discovery in 1661 by Lucas Holstenius in Monte Cassino. Holtenius having died before publication, the edition was completed by Pierre Poussines, who published it together with two other works in Holtenius' collection of manuscripts.[784][786]
1664[218] Beda, Epistula ad Plegvinam, Epistula ad Ecgbertum episcopum[218] and Historia abbatum[787] John Crook[218] Dublin[218] Edited by Sir James Ware.[218]
1665[788][789] Collatio Alexandri et Dindimi[788] Thomas Roycroft[789] London[788] Edited by Edoardus Bissaeus in his edition of Palladius.[788]
1666[790] Ebbo, Apologeticum Ebbonis[790] Paris[791] Edited by Luc d'Achery, the text passed through at least seven reprints in historical and ecclesiastical collections.[790] It was printed in a large collection titled Spicilegium.[791]
1667[792] Columbanus[792] Leuven[792] Edited by Patricius Fleming in his Collectanea Sacra.[792] Since Fleming had been killed in 1631, the work was published by Thomas Sirinus who added to the corpus of Columbanus' works also Ailerán's Interpretatio mystica progenitorum Christi, a penitential misattributed to Comininianus and Jonas' Vita Columbani, the latter thoroughly commented by Fleming that in the commentary also placed an old life of Comgall and excerpts of lives of eCainech, Coemgen, Fintan and Carthach. Lives of Molua and Mochoemoc.[793]
1671[794] Ps.-Firmicus Maternus, Consultationes Zacchei christiani et Apollonii philosophi [hu][794] Edited by Dom d'Achéry in the tenth volume of his Veterum aliquot scriptorum qui in Galliae bibliothecis maxime Benedictinorum latuerunt spicilegium.[795][794]
1675[796] Collectio Quesnelliana[796][797] Paris[797] Edited by Pasquier Quesnel, who inserted as an appendix to his Sancti Leonis Magni Opera.[796][797]
Faustinus Presbyter [es], Confessio fidei[531]
1677[798] Paschasius Radbertus, Epitaphium Arsenii[798] Paris[799] Edited by Jean Mabillon who found the only surviving manuscript, a 9th-century copy from Corbie.[798] It is contained in the massive collection Acta sanctorum Sancti Benedicti.[799]
1679[800] Lactantius, De mortibus persecutorum[800] Paris[800] The only surviving manuscript of the work was found in 1678 in the Saint-Pierre abbey in Moissac, France. The following year it was edited by Stephanus Baluzius with other texts in the Miscellaneorum Liber Secundus.[800]
1681[801] Johannes Scotus Eriugena, De divisione naturae[801] Oxford[801] Edited by Thomas Gale. In appendix to the volume is Eriugena's translation of Maximus the Confessor's Ambigua.[802][803]
1682[804] Ps.-Cyprianus, De Pascha computus[132] Oxford[132] The De pascha computus Was edited by John Wallis as part of John Fell and John Pearson's edition of Cyprian.[805][804]
Pontius, Vita Cypriani[806]
1688[218] Beda, Martyrologium[218] John van Meurs[218] Antwerp[218] Edited by Godfrey Henschen and Daniel Papebroch, it is contained in the second volume of the Acta Sanctorum.[218]
1688[807] Dhuoda[807] Paris[807] A limited number of extracts from Dhuoda's Liber Manualis were published by Stephanus Baluzius as an appendix to Pierre de Marca's Marca Hispanica. The first complete edition was printed in Paris in 1887 and edited by Édouard Bondurland.[807]
1688[808] Ravennatis Anonymi Cosmographia[808] Placidus Porcheron[808] Paris[808]
1688[601][809] Victorinus Poetovionensis, De fabrica mundi[601] London[601] Edited by William Cave in the volume Scriptorum ecclesiasticorum historia literaria.[601]
1690[810] Victor Tunnunensis, De Poenitentia[810] Paris[810] Edited by the Benedictine fathers of St. Maur among the complete works of Ambrose, but certainly not his.[810]
1693[218] Beda, In Habacuc[218] Samuel Roycroft[218] London[218] Edited by Henry Wharton, the volume also included Aldhelm's De virginitate and Ecgbert's Dialogus ecclesiasticae institutionis together with a reprint of Bede's Historia abbatum.[218][787]
1693[811][812] Hilarius Pictaviensis, Apologetica responsa[811] Paris[811] Edited by Pierre Coustant in his publication of Hilary's works for the Congregation of Saint Maur.[811][813] Two short passages were discovered later by Pierre Smulders who published them in the Bijdragen. Tijdschrift voor Philosophie en Theologie in 1978.[812]
1694[382][449] Fabius Planciades Fulgentius, De Aetatibus Mundi et Hominis[382] Paris[449] Edited by P. Jacob Hommes.[449]
1697[814] Ps.-Paulinus Nolanus, Poema ultimum[814] Milan[814] Edited by Ludovico Antonio Muratori in his Anecdota together with Paulinus' poems, including three of his Natalicia.[814]
1698[815] Ps.-Hegemonius, Acta Archelai[815] Rome[815] Edited by Lorenzo Alessandro Zaccagni in the first vokume of his Acta Collectanea monumentorum veterum.[815]

18th–20th centuries

[edit]
Date Author, Work Printer Location Comment
1708[816] Andreas Agnellus, Liber Pontificalis Ravennatis ecclesiae[816] Modena[816] Edited by Benedetto Bacchini.[816]
1717[817] Polemius Silvius, Laterculus[817] Joannes Paulus Robyns[818] Antwerp[818] Edited by Conrad Janninck in the seventh volume of the Acta sanctorum. Janning only printed the calendar, excluding the preface, the opening chapters and the other parts; it was up to Theodor Mommsen to first print the unedited parts in 1857 in the article “Polemii Siluii Laterculus” for the journal Abhandlungen der philologisch-historische Classe der königlich Sächsischen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften.[817]
1717[819] Evagrius Gallus [ca; hu], Altercatio legis inter Simonem iudaeum et Theophilum christianum[819] Paris[819] Edited by Edmond Martène and Ursin Durand in the fifth volume of the Thesaurus novus anecdotorum.[819]
1721[345] Cassiodorus, Complexiones in epistolas et acta Apostolorum[345][820] Florence[820] Edited by Scipione Maffei, who had found in 1712 a manuscript of the supposedly lost work in the Capitular Library of Verona.[345]
1726[821] Ps.-Cyprianus, Ad Plebem Carthaginis[821] and Ad Turasium[132] Paris[821] Edited by Stephanus Baluzius.[821]
1728[822] Andreas Bergomas, Adbreviatio historiae Langobardorum[822] Leipzig[822] Edited by Joannes Burchardus Menckenius [de] as part of the collection Scriptores rerum germanicarum praecipue saxonicarum.[822]
1728[823] Isaac Judaeus, Fides Isatis[823] Venice[823] Published in Jacques Sirmond's Opera omnia.[823]
1733[362] Ambrosius Autpertus, Homelia de Transfiguratione Domini[362] Paris[824] Edited by Edmond Martène and Ursin Durand in the miscellaneous Veterum scriptorum amplissima collectio.[362]
1739[825] Victricius, De laude sanctorum[825] Paris[825] Edited by Jean Lebeuf in Recueil de divers écrits pour servir d'éclaircissements à l'histoire de France.[825]
1740[826] Canon Muratorianus[826] Milan[826] Edited by Ludovico Antonio Muratori as part of his Antiquitates italicae medii aevi.[826]
Lactantius, De motibus animi[827]
1743[828] Vetus Latina[828] Reims[828] In three volumes, it was edited by Petrus Sabatier [de; it; ru].[828]
1751[829] Ps.-Cyprianus, Exhortatio de paenitentia[829] Bologna[829] Edited by Giovanni Crisostomo Trombelli [it] as part of his Veterum Patrum Latinorum opuscola.[829]
1755[830] Mallius Theodorus, De metris Wolfenbüttel Edited by Johann Friedrich Heusinger.
1759[751] Martinus Bracarensis, De correctione rusticorum[751] Madrid[751] Edited by Henricus Florez as part of his España Sagrada.[751]
1759[831] Anthologia Latina[831] Amsterdam[832] Edited by Petrus Burmannus Secundus in the first volume of the Anthologia veterum Latinorum epigrammatum. Among the many poems that were printed for the first time is included Reposianus [it]' De concubitu Martis et Veneris.[831][833]
1760[638] Dracontius, Orestis tragoedia[638] Bern[638] Edited by J. R. Sinner [de]. This edition only presented the verses 1-2 and 752–770; the first 53 were first published by Angelo Mai, while the complete poem was first published in Jena in 1858, edited by Karl Wilhelm Ludwig Müller.[638]
1770[834] Beatus Liebanensis, Commentarius in apocalypsin[834] Madrid[834] Edited by Henricus Florez.[834]
1773[835] Luxorius, Epigrammata[835] Amsterdam[835] Edited by Petrus Burmannus Secundus in the second volume of his Anthologia Veterum Latinorum Epigrammatum. 86. A few epigrams had been previously published by Claude Binetus [fr] in Paris in 1579 in his Petronii Arbitri itemque veterum Epigrammata, while some others had been made available by Petrus Pithoeus in Paris in 1590 in his Epigrammata et Poematia Vetera.[835]
1775[405] Braulio, Epistularium[405] Madrid[405] Edited by Manuel Risco as part of his España Sagrada.[405]
1777[402] Alcuinus, Epistulae[402] Regensburg[402] Edited by Froben Forster.[402]
1789[836] Lex Romana Curiensis[836] Sebastianus Coletius and Franciscus Pitterius[836] Venice[836] Edited by Paulus Canciani [it; fr; ru] in the Barbarorum Leges Antiquae cum notis et glossariis.[836]
1797[837] Iulianus Toletanus, Ars grammatica [it][837] Rome[837] Edited by Francisco de Lorenzana.[837]
1807[838] Dicuilus, De mensura Orbis terrae[838][839] Firmin Didot[840] Paris[840] Edited by Charles Walkenaer.[840]
1814[87] Scholia Bobiensia[87] Milan[87] Edited by Angelo Mai.[87]
1814[87] Cicero, Pro Scauro [it][87] Milan[87] First partially edited by Angelo Mai from a Milanese palimpsest, further parts were later added in 1824 in Stuttgart by Amedeo Peyron [it; de].[87]
1815[841] Fronto[841] Milan[841] Edited by Angelo Mai under the title M.Cornelii Frontonis Opera inedita cum epistulis item ineditis Antonini Pii M. Aurelii L. Veri et Appiani, nec non aliorum veterum fragmentis. Fronto's text was found in a palimpsest together with letters by Marcus Aurelius, Lucius Verus and Antoninus Pius, also published. A new augmented edition was printed by Mai in 1823. As for Arusianus' Exempla, it was mistakenly attributed to Fronto.[841][842][843]
Arusianus Messius, Exempla elocutionum[844]
1815[845] Symmachus, Orationes[845] Milan[845] Edited by Angelo Mai who found the text in the Bobbio palimpsest he was to use also for Fronto and Cicero. A new edition made in Rome by Angelo Mai in 1825 availed itself of a new Vatican text, thus adding some unknown material.[845]
1817[846] Cicero, Pro Tullio[846] Milan[846] Edited by Angelo Mai combining a palimpsest from Milan with fragments from Turin.[846] It only survives in fragments.[847]
1817[394] Julius Valerius, Res gestae Alexandri Macedonis[394] Milan[848] Edited by Angelo Mai and titled Julii Valerii Res Gestae Alexandri Macedonis, translatae ex Aesopo Graeco.[848]
1817[849] Consentius, De barbarismis et metaplasmis[849] Berlin[849] Edited by Philipp Karl Buttmann.[849]
1817[848] Itinerarium Alexandri[848] Milan[848] Edited by Angelo Mai under the title Itinerarium Alexandri ad Constantium Augustum Costantini Magni filium. An excerpt had previously been published by Ludovico Antonio Muratori in Milan in 1740 as part of the collection Antiquitates Italicae Medii Aevi.[848]
1818[850] Scholia Veronensia[850] Milan[850] Edited by Angelo Mai under the title Virgilii Maronis interpretes veteres, Asper, Cornutus, Haterianus, Longus, Nisus, Probus, Scaurus, Sulpicius et Anonymus.[850]
1820[851] Corippus, Johannis[851] Milan[851] Edited by Pietro Mazzucchelli.[851]
1820[852] Gaius, Institutiones[852] Berlin[852] Edited by Johann Friedrich Ludwig Göschen [de; it].[852]
1820[853] Pompeius Grammaticus, Commentum artis Donati[853] Leipzig[853] Edited by [[Johann Friedrich Lindemann [de].[853]
1822[854] Cicero, De re publica[854] Rome[842] Edition based on a palimpsest found in the Vatican Library by Angelo Mai. Of the six original books the edition contained much of the first two and a lesser amount of the following three. The Somnium Scipionis, in the last book, was preserved independently.[854]
1822[855] Glossa Taurinensis [de][855] Heidelberg[856] Edited by Friedrich Carl von Savigny as an appendix to the third volume of his Geschichte des römischen Rechts im Mittelalter.[855][857]
1823[858] Fragmenta Vaticana[858] Rome[858] Edited by Angelo Mai in the volume Iuris civilis anteiustiniani reliquiae.[858]
1824[619] Gesta senatus Romani [fr][619] Tübingen[619] Edited by Walther Friedrich Clossius [ru].[619]
1828[859] Marius Victorinus, Commentarii in Epistulas Pauli ad Galatas, ad Philippenses, ad Ephesios[859] Rome[518] Edited dy Angelo Mai in his Scriptorum veterum nova collectio.[859][518] As for Nepotianus, the work's dedicatory letter had been previously published by Philippus Labbeus in Paris in 1657.[860] As for Paris, he had already been used in Leipzig in 1501 by Martinus Herbipolensis [de] to fill a lacuna that appears in all of Valerius Maximus' manuscripts.[861]
Ps.-Marius Victorinus, Liber de physicis[764]
Januarius Nepotianus [fr; it; la], Epitoma librorum Valerii Maximi[860]
Julius Paris [it], Valerii Maximi decem libi dictorum et factorum memorabilium in epitomen redacti[861]
1831[862] Ps.-Lactantius Placidus, Glossae[863] Rome[862] Edited by Angelo Mai and published in the third volume of his Classicorum Auctorum e Vaticanis codicibus editorum collectio.[863][862]
1833[864][865] Ps.-Probus, Instituta artium[864] Rome[865] Edited by Angelo Mai and published in the fifth volume of his Classicorum Auctorum e Vaticanis codicibus editorum collectio.[865][864]
1833–1838[267] Johannes Scotus Eriugena, Carmina[267] Rome[267] Edited by Angelo Mai as part of the miscellaneous collection Classi auctores e codicibus Vaticanis editi. A complete collection of Eriugena's poetry was edited in Paris in 1853 by Heinrich Joseph Floss for the Patrologia Latina.[267]
1837[866][867] Anonymus Bobiensis[866] Wien[867] Edited by Joseph von Eichenfeld e Ladislus Endlicher in the Analecta grammatica maximam partem anecdota.[866]
Sacerdos, Artes grammaticae[868]
Ps.-Probus, Appendix Probi[869]
1839[870] Carmen de figuris vel schematibus[870] Edited by Jules Quicherat in the journal Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartres. his impression was lacking of vv. 1-3, 33, 99; these missing verses were found and published in 1857 by Léopold Delisle in the same journal.[870]
1846[871] Archidiaconus Romanus, Sermones[871] Paris[871] Edited by J. B. Caillau among an edition of Augustine's works.[871]
1847[872][873] Codex Euricianus[872] Halle[873] Edited by Friedrich Bluhme [de; fr] as part of his Die Westgotische Antiqua oder das Gesetzbuch Reccared des ersten.[872]
1849[267] Johannes Scotus Eriugena, Commentarius in Iohannem[267] Paris[267] The original manuscript was discovered by Félix Ravaisson-Mollien who edited it in the Catalogue general des manuscrits des bibliothèques publiques des départements.[267]
1852[874] Aethicus Ister[874] Paris[874] Edited by Armand D'Avezac and presented as an appendix to his Mémoire on the author and his work.[874]
1853[267] Johannes Scotus Eriugena, Ex positiones in Ierarchiam Coelestem[267] Paris[267] Edited by Heinrich Joseph Floss in the Patrologia Latina.[267]
1852[875] Commodianus, Carmen apologeticum[875] Paris[875] Edited by J. B. Pitra in his Spicilegium Solesmense.[875]
1853[876] Gregorius Turonensis, De cursu stellarum ratio[876] Breslau[876] Edited by Friedrich Gottlob Haase. Previously only unidentified excerpts were published first in Rome by Angelo Mai in 1828 and then in Leipzig by Moriz Haupt in 1838.[876]
1854[877] Origo Gentis Langobardorum[877] Turin[877] Edited by Carlo Baudi di Vesme as part of his Edicta Regum Langobardorum, itself a volume of the series Monumenta Historiae Patriae.[877]
1857[878] Granius Licinianus, Annales[878] Berlin[878] Edited by Georg Heinrich Pertz.[878]
1861 Assumption of Moses Antonio Ceriani Milan
1861 Book of Jubilees Antonio Ceriani Milan
1862[879] Johannes Scotus Eriugena, Annotationes in Marcianum[879] Only parts from the fourth book were published by Barthélemy Hauréau in the journal Notices et Extraits des manuscrits de la Bibliothèque Impériale. After that Enrico Narducci in 1882 selected glosses from the seventh book while Max Manitius made available excerpts from the first three books in 1912 and 1913 in the Didaskaleion.[879] A complete edition was finally made by Cora E. Lutz in 1939 for the Medieval Academy of America.[880]
1863[881] Grillius [fr], Commentum in Ciceronis Rhetorica[881] Teubner[881] Leipzig[881] Edited by Karl Felix Halm in his collection of the Rhetores latini minores, ex codicibus maximam partem primum adhibitis emendabat. Halm only published excerpts of the commentary; the full text came out in 1927 in Paderborn due to Josef Martin [de].[881][882]
1867[883] Zacher Epitome[883] Halle[883] An epitome of Julius Valerius' Res gestae, it was edited by Julius Zacher under the title Julii Valerii epitome.[883]
1867[884] Vinidarius, Excerpta Apici[884] Heidelberg[884] Edited by Christian Theophil Schuch together with the Apicius in the volume Apici Caeli De Re Coquinaria Libri Decem.[884]
1867[885] Carmen contra paganos[885] Edited by Léopold Delisle in the article "Note sur le manuscrit de Prudence n. 8084 du fond latin de la Bibliothèque impériale" in the journal Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartres.[885]
1869[886] Carmina Einsidlensia[886] Edited by Hermann Hagen [de] in the journal Philologus.[886]
1869[887] Caelius Aurelianus, Gynaecia[887] Edited by Franz Zacharias Ermerins.[887]
1870[888][887] Anthimus, De observatione ciborum[888] Berlin[888] Edited by Valentin Rose. These treatises are found in a general collection titled Anecdota Graeca et Graecolatina.[888][887]
Caelius Aurelianus, Medicinales responsiones[887]
1870[405] Braulio, Confessio vel Professio Iudaeorum civitatatis Toletanae[405] Madrid[889] Edited by Fidel Fita in the Spanish journal Ciudad de Dios.[405]
1871[890][891] Dositheus, Ars grammatica[890] Halle[890] Edited by Heinrich Keil.[890]
1871[892] Aegritudo Perdicae [it][892] Leipzig[892] Edited by Emil Baehrens in his Unedirte lateinische Gedichte.[892]
1877[893] Audax, De Scauri et Palladii libris excerpta[893] Halle[893] Edited by Heinrich Keil for his series Grammatici Latini.[893]
1878[894] Victorinus Poetovionensis, De decem virginibus[894] Paris[894] Edited by Léopold Delisle as part of his Notice sur un manuscrit mérovingien de la la bibliothèque d'Épinal.[894]
1878 Latin Life of Adam and Eve W. Meyer Munich
1879[345] Cassiodorus, Ordo generis Cassiodororum[345] Leipzig[345] Only survives through an epitome commonly called Anecdoton Holderi and edited by Hermann Usener.[345]
1879[895] Cassius Felix[895] B. G. Teubner[896] Leipzig[896] Edited by Valentin Rose.[895]
1885[897] Ps.-Cyprianus, De voluntate Dei[897] Published by Carl Paul Caspari as an article titled "En kort Cyprian tillagt Tale om det christelige Liv. Efter cod. Einsiedl. s. VIII eller IX. Sermo sancti Cypriani episcopi de voluntate dei" in Theologisk Tidsskrift.[897]
1886[898][899] Metz Epitome[898] Edited by Dietrich Volkmann.[899]
1886[900] Fragmenta Gaudenziana [es][900] Bologna[900] Edited by Augusto Gaudenzi [de; it] in his Un'antica compilazione di diritto romano e visigoto con alcuni framenti delle leggi di Eurico tratta da un manoscritto della biblioteca di Holkham.[900]
1887[901] Hilarius Pictaviensis, De mysteriis [it] and Hymni [it][901] Rome[901] Edited by Gian Francesco Gamurrini.[901]
Egeria, Peregrinatio Aetheriae[902]
1891[903] Actus Petri cum Simone[903] Leipzig[903] Edited by Richard Adelbert Lipsius in the collection Acta Apostolorum Apocrypha. An ancient partial Latin translation of the lost Acts of Peter.[903]
1893 Apocalypse of Paul M. R. James Cambridge
1897[904] Ps.-Fulgentius, Super Thebaiden[904] Published by Rudolf Helm in the article "Anecdoton Fulgentianum" in the journal Rheinisches Museum für Philologie.[904]
1897[905] Iulianus Aeclanensis, Expositio libri Iob[905] Edited by Ambrogio Amelli [it; de] in the third volume of the Spicilegium Cassinense. Here Amelli erroneously gave the paternity of the work to Philip the Presbyter.[905]
1897[906] Prophetiae[906] Monte Cassino[907] Edited by Ambrogio Amelli [it; de] in his Miscellanea Cassinense.[907]
1899[908] Paulus Diaconus, Ars Donati[908] Montecassino[908] Edited by Ambrogio Amelli [it; de] under the title Ars Donati quam Paulus Diaconus exposuit.[908]
1899[909] Fragmenta Augustodunensia [de][909] Edited by Émile Chatelain in the Revue de Philologie.[909]
1900[910] Liber de Morte Alexandri Magni[910] Strasbourg[910] Edited by O. Wagner together with the Metz Epitome.[910]
1900[911] Hippolytus, Traditio apostolica[911] Teubner[911] Leipzig[911] Edited by Edmund Hauler from the Verona Palimpsest in the Didascaliae apostolorum fragmenta Veronensia latina. Accedunt canonum qui dicuntur Apostolorum et Aegyptiorum reliquiae. Probably a Latin translation of the Greek original.[911]
1900[912] Apringius, Tractatus in Apocalypsim[912] Alphonse Picard[912] Paris[912] Edited by Marius Férotin [ca; es; fr].[912]
1907[913] Dicuilus, Liber de astronomia[913] Dublin[839] Edited by Mario Esposito in the Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy.[839]
1913[914] Arnobius Junior, Liber ad Gregoriam[914] Picard[914] Paris[914] Edited by Germain Morin in the first volume of the Anecdota Maredsolana.[914]
1914[915] Ps.-Cyprianus, De centesima, sexagesima, tricesima[915] Edited by Richard Reitzenstein in the article "Eine früchristliche Schrift von den dreierlei Früchten des christlichens Lebens" published in the journal Zeitschrift für die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft.[915]
1920[916][917] Fortunatianus Aquileiensis, Commentarii in Evangelia[917] Two excerpts edited by André Wilmart in "Deux expositions d'un évêque Fortunat sur l'évangile" in Revue Bénédictine; a further excerpt was published by Bernhard Bischoff in 1954. But the proper editio princeps came out only in 2017 when a complete manuscript was found and published in Berlin by Lukas J. Dorfbauer for the Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum.[918][919][917]
1925 Epistle of Pseudo-Titus D. de Bruyne
1926[920] Pelagius, Expositiones XIII epistularum Pauli[920] Cambridge University Press[921] Cambridge[921] Edited by Alexander Souter.[920]
1937[922] Ps.-Marius Victorinus, De soloecismo et barbarismo[922] Neuchâtel[922] Edited by M. Niedermann together with Consentius' Ars de barbarismis et metaplasmis.[922]
1939[923] Vincentius Lerinensis, Excerpta[923] Madrid[923] Edited by José Madoz in the Estudios Orienses. Ambrogio Amelli [it; de] had edited the first part in 1888 in the Spicilegium Cassinense, but he had not identified the author.[923]
1944[924][925] Cyprianus, Epistula ad Silvanum et Dontianum[924] Edited by Maurice Bevénot in the article "A New Cyprianic Fragment" in the journal Bulletin of the John Rylands Library.[924][925]
1951[926] Mundus origo[926] Edited by Bernhard Bischoff in the article "Die lateinischen Übersetzungen und Bearbeitungen aus den Oracula Sibyllina" in Mélanges Joseph de Ghellinck, S.J..[926]
1962-1965[927] Remigius Autissiodorensis, Commentum in Martianum Capellam[927] Brill[927] Leiden[927] Edited by Cora E. Lutz in two volumes.[927]
1974[928] Anonymus Budapest[928] Herder[928] Freiburg[928] Edited by Hermann Josef Frede [de] under the title Ein neuer Paulustext und Kommentar.[928]
1984[929] Epistola Anne ad Senecam[929] Stuttgart[930] Edited by Bernhard Bischoff as an entry titled “Der Brief des Hohenpriesters Annas an den Philosophen Seneca – eine jüdisch-apolotegetische Missionsschrift (Viertes Jahrhundert?)” in his collection of recent findings Anecdota novissima: Texte des vierten bis sechzehnten Jahrhunderts.[929]

Latin Translations

[edit]
Date Author, Work Printer Location Comment
c. 1466[931] John Chrysostom, Nonaginta homiliae in Mattheum[931] Johannes Mentelin[931] Strasbourg[931] Latin translation by Georgius Trapezuntius. The translation was made between 1448 and 1450.[931]
1469[43][932] Alcinous[44] Conradus Sweynheym and Arnoldus Pannartz[933] Rome[933] Translated sometime before 1461 by Petrus Balbus with a dedication to Nicholas of Cusa. This author is contained in the editio princeps of Apuleius' works edited by Joannes Andreas.[932][934]
1470[94] Eusebius, Praeparatio Evangelica[94] Nicolaus Jenson[94] Venice[94] Translated by Georgius Trapezuntius between 1448 and 1450. The edition omits the last of the 15 books due to the use of an incomplete manuscript. Beginning with that of Andreas Contrarius in 1454, this translation was object of many criticisms.[931][935]
1471[45] Corpus Hermeticum[45] Gerardus de Lisa Treviso[45] Translation finished by Marsilio Ficino in 1463 following a request by Cosimo de' Medici. The volume, entitled Pimander, sive De potestate et sapientia Dei, only includes the translation of 14 of the 18 texts that compose the Corpus Hermeticum.[936][937][938]
1471 Letter of Aristeas Matthias Palmerius Rome
1472 Diodorus Siculus Baldassarre Azzoguidi[140] Bologna Partial Latin translation by Poggio Bracciolini; complete Greek edition 1559.[939]
1474 Homer, Iliad Henricus de Colonia and Statius Gallicus Brescia Translated by Lorenzo Valla. A partial Latin translation by Nicolaus de Valle was published earlier in the same year.
1475[931] Aristoteles, Rhetorica[931] Iohannes Stoll and Petrus Caesaris Wagner[931] Paris[931] Latin translation by Georgius Trapezuntius. The translation had been accomplished between 1443 and 1446.[931]
1481[173] Themistius, De anima[173] Treviso[940] Translated and edited by Hermolaus Barbarus, with a dedication to the humanist Georgius Merula.[173][940]
1482 Euclides Erhard Ratdolt Latin edition.[941]
1484 Plato Laurentius de Alopa Florence Opera Omnia Latin edition. Translated by Marsilio Ficino.[942]
1498[943] Aristoteles, Ars Poetica[943] Translated by Giorgio Valla[943]
1527 Philo Adam Petri Basel Edited by Johannes Sichardus.[944] First part published by Agostino Giustiniani (Iustianus), O.P. in Paris (1520)[945]
1552 Gospel of James Guillame Postel Basel
1558 Marcus Aurelius, Meditations Andreas Gessner Zürich Edited and translated into Latin by Wilhelm Xylander (title: De seipso, seu vita sua, libri 12)
1562 Sextus Empiricus Henri Estienne[946] Geneva Latin translation of Sextus's "Outlines", followed by a complete Latin Sextus with Gentian Hervet as translator in 1569.[947] Petrus and Jacobus Chouet published the Greek text for the first time in 1621.
1575 Diophantus Eusebius Episcopius & heirs of Nicolaus Episcopius Basel Edition of Rerum Arithmeticarum Libri sex translated by Xylander[948]

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