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English. Read; Edit; View history; Tools. ... Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; ... Pages in category "10th-century manuscripts"
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... 10th-century manuscripts (2 C, 24 P) T. 10th-century treaties (10 P) Pages in category "10th-century documents"
Codex Sinaiticus, 4th century; Codex Vaticanus Graecus 1209, 4th century; Codex Bezae, 5th century; Codex Washingtonianus, 4th or 5th century; Dead Sea scrolls; Freising manuscripts, 10th century; The Garland of Howth, late 9th to early 10th centuries; Gospels of Tsar Ivan Alexander, 1355–56; Lindisfarne Gospels, late 7th or early 8th century ...
Add MS 40618; Gospel Book, 10th-century additions to 8th-/9th-century manuscript; Add MS 47967; Tollemach Orosius, (Anglo-Saxon translation) 10th century; Add MS 49598; Benedictional of St. Æthelwold, 10th century; Arundel MS 60; Psalter (with Anglo-Saxon interlinear gloss), 11th century
The Gerona Beatus is a 10th-century illuminated manuscript in the museum of Girona Cathedral, Catalonia, Spain. The manuscript contains two separate works: the Commentary on the Apocalypse by Beatus of Liébana, a late eighth-century work popular in medieval Spain [Notes 1] [1] and Jerome's commentary on the Book of Daniel.
Sheet 3 of the Joshua Roll; Joshua and the Israelites Portion of the Joshua Roll; scenes before the battle at Gibeon – the moon and sun are seen at the right.. The Joshua Roll is a Byzantine illuminated manuscript of highly unusual format, probably of the 10th century Macedonian Renaissance, [1] believed to have been created by artists of the imperial workshops in Constantinople, [2] and now ...
& II. 5) is a 10th-century illuminated manuscript of the Commentary on the Apocalypse by Beatus of Liébana. The manuscript was probably created at the monastery at San Millán de la Cogolla. There are 151 extant folios which measure 395mm by 225mm. The manuscript is illustrated with 52 surviving miniatures.
An illustration of a ship from the Cædmon manuscript. The codex now referred to as the "Junius manuscript" was formerly called the "Cædmon manuscript" after an early theory that the poems it contains were the work of Cædmon; the theory is no longer considered credible, therefore the manuscript it is commonly referred to either by its Bodleian Library shelf mark "MS Junius 11", or more ...