Alongside analysing the oldest records of Roman inscriptions of Austria, this work particularly emphasizes the antiquarian-epigraphic collecting activity which can be noted in the area of Austria as a consequence of the spreading humanistic attitude. It focuses on the question, whether Augustinus Prygl Tyfernus is actually to be identified as the so-called „Antiquus Austriacus” as has been pleaded repeatedly. The examination of a number of relevant known and hitherto extensively unknown copies shows that the “Antiquus-Austriacus-Collection“ is not a homogeneous compilation by a single “auctor antiquissimus” but rather an anthology derived from different copies of varying quality, collected by Johannes Fuchsmagen.
Description
Der sogenannte "Antiquus Austriacus" und weitere auctores antiquissimi
%0 Book
%1 marth201620192020sogenannte
%A Marth, Doris
%C Wien
%D 2016
%I Holzhausen
%K austria epigraphica natpisi renaissanceHumanism rukopis sergiuspolensis
%T Der sogenannte Antiquus Austriacus und weitere auctores antiquissimi
%U https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/32151
%X Alongside analysing the oldest records of Roman inscriptions of Austria, this work particularly emphasizes the antiquarian-epigraphic collecting activity which can be noted in the area of Austria as a consequence of the spreading humanistic attitude. It focuses on the question, whether Augustinus Prygl Tyfernus is actually to be identified as the so-called „Antiquus Austriacus” as has been pleaded repeatedly. The examination of a number of relevant known and hitherto extensively unknown copies shows that the “Antiquus-Austriacus-Collection“ is not a homogeneous compilation by a single “auctor antiquissimus” but rather an anthology derived from different copies of varying quality, collected by Johannes Fuchsmagen.
@book{marth201620192020sogenannte,
abstract = {Alongside analysing the oldest records of Roman inscriptions of Austria, this work particularly emphasizes the antiquarian-epigraphic collecting activity which can be noted in the area of Austria as a consequence of the spreading humanistic attitude. It focuses on the question, whether Augustinus Prygl Tyfernus is actually to be identified as the so-called „Antiquus Austriacus” as has been pleaded repeatedly. The examination of a number of relevant known and hitherto extensively unknown copies shows that the “Antiquus-Austriacus-Collection“ is not a homogeneous compilation by a single “auctor antiquissimus” but rather an anthology derived from different copies of varying quality, collected by Johannes Fuchsmagen.},
added-at = {2021-10-11T14:06:24.000+0200},
address = {Wien},
author = {Marth, Doris},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/29da96e4fc40942a73788d956b57e617e/filologanoga},
description = {Der sogenannte "Antiquus Austriacus" und weitere auctores antiquissimi},
id = {615393, OCN: 1030818002, http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/32151},
interhash = {29e1e43e258f4c5a91b471db814ef6a0},
intrahash = {9da96e4fc40942a73788d956b57e617e},
keywords = {austria epigraphica natpisi renaissanceHumanism rukopis sergiuspolensis},
publisher = {Holzhausen},
timestamp = {2021-10-11T14:06:24.000+0200},
title = {Der sogenannte Antiquus Austriacus und weitere auctores antiquissimi},
type = {book},
url = {https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/32151},
year = 2016
}