Studie Evy Veselovské se zabývá notovanými kodexy, které vznikly na území dnešního Slovenska od 14. do začátku 16. století a do jejichž způsobu notace se promítl vliv českého kulturního prostředí., Recent research of Slovakian medieval notated codices and manuscript fragments raised an important fact: the written culture of the late 14th and 15th centuries in Slovakia was strongly influenced by education from Czech lands. Particularly between 1370 and 1520, the direct impact of the scribal notation tradition from Czech lands to Slovak area can be detected in a number of Slovakian music sources. Codices and dozens of manuscript fragments documenting Bohemian notation in the Slovak geographical area have become the subject of research, along with the systematization, analysis and evaluation of all currently known and edited medieval notated sources from Slovakia. The main purpose of this research is to organise the information gained from these sources, and to determine the general structural features of Bohemian notation in Slovakia., Eva Veselovská., Rubrika: Studie, and Slovenské resumé na s. 376, anglický abstrakt na s. 337.
The paper presents 15 recently discovered manuscripts of Latin Herbarius by Prague master Christian of Prachatice († 1439) arranged in alphabetical order. The total sum of extant medieval copies, in which the treatise has come down to us, therefore amounts to 19. The principal text of the second redaction (surviving in 16 manuscripts) and the manner of its alphabetical ordering are discussed as well as the changes and additions in the lemmas, which were recorded in this redaction along the written tradition. The author aims to find out to what extent the newly added lemmas and the differences in ordering the original ones may help clarify relationships between the preserved manuscripts.
The number of copies of Wyclif's Latin works that derive from Bohemia and are mostly preserved now in Prague and Vienna is familiar ground. The evidence for the scrutiny of those works is less frequently mentioned: very extensive indexes were provided in Bohemia for many of the longer works, together with a catalogue of 115 items by Wyclif, listing titles, incipits and explicits and the number of books and chapters for each. Even more remarkable are the copies of the writings of some of Wyclif's English followers, though some of these followers were in correspondence with Bohemian fellows, some of the texts narrate entirely English affairs that would seem of little interest so far away. The paper surveys these manuscripts and notes the questions that they raise. and Anne Hudson.
The article presents a critical edition of a tract written by Nicholas of Dresden, entitled Sermo ad clerum factus per dominum Nicolaum, predicatorem Theutunicorum in Zacz, in anno Domini MoCCCCXVI. Based on a title preserved in one of its extant copy, the tract was written around 1416 by Nicholas of Dresden, an active supporter of the Hussites. The text is one of Nicholas's many treatises dealing with the problem of communion under both species.