Basic Data

Numerus
F877
Genre
Breviarium notatum
Date
s. 15/in
Archives / Library / Collection
Pécs, Diocesan Library
Shelfmark
JN, olim I 65 (host volume)
Material
parchment
Extent
1 incomplete leaf, in situ
Page height
157 + 19 + 15 mm (incomplete)
Page width
238 + 18 + 17 mm (incomplete)
Written height
136 + 19 mm (incomplete)
Written width
223 + 8 mm (complete)
Number of columns
2
Number of lines
5 lines with text, 6 lines with music (left column); 17 lines with text (right column)
Width of columns
105 mm (complete)
Stave height
20 mm
Script
gothica textualis
Musical notation
Messine-German Gothic notation
Musical notation/remarks
5-line staves (3 lines in black, 2 in red), F-clef, C-clef, no custos, the colouring of the lines is incidental. Pes with flag-shaped head, the connection of the first two element of the scandicus is similar to the notation of Silesian (Wrocław) sources
Host volume / author, title
Pauli Iovii Novocomensis episcopi Nucerini Elogia virorum bellica virtute illustrium veris imaginibus supposita, quae apud Musaeum spectantur, in libros septem digesta. Basileae 1561; Elogia Heroica, Adnumerantur libris Ioannis Kovats Pestino-Apastaghensis (…); Máté Skaricza, Biography of Szegedi Kis István (excerpts)
Host volume / shelfmark
JN (olim I 65)
Owners
Inscriptus Catalogo librorum N. Seminarii 5 Ecclesiensis; (Gyula) Wajdits, Árpád Szabó 1899. márcz 30; stamp on the inside cover: Bibliotheca Facultatis Theol. Quinque ecclesiensis 1910
Content
officium S. Sophiae
Origin
Northern part of medieval Hungary

Images

Analytical Description

On April 10, 1910 Imre Hauser – at the time theology student, later priest and military chaplain on the Russian and Italian fronts during World War I – transcribed some of the text preserved on the fragment. The paper containing the transcription was glued to the inside of the book with paper tape. 4 double sheets of paper were bound to the inside front cover, the first page serving as pastedown. Two names are recorded on the second page (Gyula Wajdits, Árpád Szabó) with the date March 30, 1899. Further below: Elogica Heroica, Adnumerantur libris Ioannis Kovats Pestino-Apostagiensis (…). According to the Hungarian Catholic Lexicon Gyula Wajdits was a spiritual of the Pécs Seminary from 1899 to 1902 (cf. http://lexikon.katolikus.hu/W/Wajdits.html). On pages 3-8 parts from the biography of István Szegedi Kis by Máté Skaricza are noted (Tantum ex universo Stephani Szegediny Curriculo).

The fragment contains parts from the office of St. Sophia: two antiphons and a lesson from the Matins. Based on the antiphons’ modal assignment, on their melodies and on the psalm (Quare fremuerunt) of the first antiphon, it is clear, that they are parts of a historia following the modal order, more precisely, they represent the second and third antiphon of the first Nocturn. In late medieval Hungary the cult of the fictitious figures of Sophia, her three daughters (Fides, Spes, Charitas), and their martyrdom was primarily rooted in the folk tradition. The official liturgical books rarely commemorate the saint’s feast on the 15th of May, and the number of sources containing a historia propria for Sophia is even lesser. The historia Sancta praeconia recolentes, partly preserved on the fragment, occurs in only three breviaries, according to our current knowledge: Breviarium, Alba Iulia Biblioteca Batthyaneum, R. I. 110; Diurnale, Alba Iulia Biblioteca Batthyaneum, R. II. 125; Breviarium ex Bártfa / Bardejov, Hungarian National Museum 63.74.I.C. (cf. Andrea Kovács ed., Corpus Antiphonalium Officii Ecclesiarum Centralis Europae V/B Esztergom / Strigonium (Sanctorale. HAS Institute for Musicology, Budapest, 2006, 210–211, 286–287). Based on the liturgical content and the musical notation it is likely that the original mother codex was used in the northern areas of medieval Hungary. The fragment is of particular interest for the study of late medieval plainchant in Central Europe, since it represents the only known musical source of the historia of St. Sophia.

Zsuzsa Czagány

Content

RISM Folio Tempus Dies Hora Genre Incipit Mode Cantus ID Mel. Num.
H-P ? Sophia N1 a2 [Venit quippe dum virgo adhuc] esset* 2
H-P ? Sophia N1 a3 Veniens Romam plebis plures matronas* 3