Notae Latinae: An Account of Abbreviation in Latin, Mss; Of the Early Minuscule Period (C. 700-850) (Classic Reprint)

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FB&C Limited, 27 jul 2015 - 528 pagina's
Excerpt from Notae Latinae: An Account of Abbreviation in Latin, Mss; Of the Early Minuscule Period (C. 700-850)

This book is entitled 'an account, ' not 'a history.' Its main Object is to provide statistics of the actual use of symbols in the early minuscule period, not theories of how or why this symbol is used here and that symbol there. Those who prefer it may galvanize a dull record of facts, such as: 'at for autem is found in English scriptoriums earlier than Irish, ' into a more animated statement such as: 'irish scribes learned the use of at for autem from their English neighbours.' Nec veto nec jubeo. But let them remember that even the genius of Traube could not keep him' (in his article on the abbreviation of 'autem') from some speculations which new material shews to be mistaken or improbable. His Summary History of Latin Abbreviation in 'nom. Pp. 252 - 266, must be corrected here and there with the help of the tedious statistics furnished in this volume. These statistics have usually been printed in small type. If a reader is bored by details and wishes merely to get a general idea of how the symbols were used, he should skip the small type passages.

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Over de auteur (2015)

W.M. Lindsay was Professor of Humanity at the University of St. Andrews.

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