This study deals with two short Latin annalistic texts of Czech provenance dating from the turn of the 14th and 15th century which have been written according to two different models on a free place of ms. 5483 in the holdings of the Austrian National Library in Vienna and collected in one series of annals. The article examines the reference of these texts to other similar texts coming from the Czech late middle ages environment. The contents of the Annals is information about the last Přemyslides, genealogic records about Czech Luxemburger, and news about what happened mostly in Prague in the 14th century.
This study deals with two short Latin annalistic texts of Czech provenance dating from the turn of the 14th and 15th century which have been written according to two different models on a free place of ms. 5483 in the holdings of the Austrian National Library in Vienna and collected in one series of annals. The article examines the reference of these texts to other similar texts coming from the Czech late middle ages environment. The contents of the Annals is information about the last Přemyslides, genealogic records about Czech Luxemburger, and news about what happened mostly in Prague in the 14th century.
This study deals with two short Latin annalistic texts of Czech provenance dating from the turn of the 14th and 15th century which have been written according to two different models on a free place of ms. 5483 in the holdings of the Austrian National Library in Vienna and collected in one series of annals. The article examines the reference of these texts to other similar texts coming from the Czech late middle ages environment. The contents of the Annals is information about the last Přemyslides, genealogic records about Czech Luxemburger, and news about what happened mostly in Prague in the 14th century.
The author follows the manuscript tradition of the Chronicle of Zbraslav and its reception in the historiography of the Late Middle Ages and early modern era. She claims that although the first part of the chronicle would sometimes be copied at the end of the 15th century and in the 16th century, the Chronicle of Zbraslav was not known to the authors of historical works. The only exception was found in the Cistercian environment, where the only manuscript of the whole chronicle known today was transcribed in 1393. The existence of the Chronicle of Zbraslav was pointed out for the first time by Marquard Freher in 1602, when he published its second book based on an autograph stored that time in the Bibliotheca Palatina in Heidelberg. The full text of the Chronicle wasn't discovered until after 180 years by J. P. Cerroni. Gelasius Dobner published it in 1782 in the fifth volume of the Monumenta historica Bohemiae.