Glossa Ordinaria

Glossa Ordinaria

A "glossa ordinaria" (pl. "glossae ordinariae") was an assembly of glosses which came to be widely accepted in universities, esp. in the 13th century. Such books were official commentaries which professors read after the ordinary. Many important works would have their own "glossa ordinaria," such as that of Accursius for Justinian's "Corpus" or that of Johannes Teutonicus and Bartholomew of Brescia of Gratian. [Baldwin, John W., "The Scholastic Culture of the Middle Ages, 1000-1300, pp. 72-73 ISBN 0 88133 842 3]

Another "Glossa Ordinaria" was an influential medieval commentary on the entire Vulgate Bible. It was compiled by the school of Laon and is based on patristic sources. For many generations, it was the standard commentary on the Scriptures in Western Europe, and its influence on Western European Christian theology and culture was pervasive.

References

External links

*"Glossa ordinaria", ed. Migne, Google Books facsimile: [http://books.google.com/books?id=g6Vc4QWRohwC vol. 1] , [http://books.google.com/books?id=mf5PJIsLIXsC vol. 2]
*"Glossa ordinaria" via [http://vulsearch.sourceforge.net/ VulSearch]


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  • GLOSSA ORDINARIA — [лат. общепринятая глосса], комментарий к Свящ. Писанию или тексту правового характера, офиц. признанный и получивший статус единственного общепринятого. По форме G. o. представляет собой т. н. аппарат глосс (apparatus glossarum). В XII в. термин …   Православная энциклопедия

  • Glossa ordinaria — Glọssa ordinaria,   aus der Zusammenfassung und Bearbeitung lateinischer Glossen entstandene Glossenapparate des Mittelalters, die als Standardkommentarwerk theologischer und v. a. (bis ins 17. Jahrhundert) auch juristischen Handschriften oder… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Glossa Ordinaria — Lit. regular or standard gloss . The Glossa of the *Vulgate was begun in the school of Laon under Anselm of Laon (d. 1117) and added between the lines of text. However, it drew upon earlier collections which had been used since the 7c. Bede laid… …   Dictionary of Medieval Terms and Phrases

  • Glossa ordinaria —  (лат общепринятая интерпретация) глосса или комментарий на латинскую Вульгату, ставший в средневековье одним из важных средств для толкования Священного Писания. Заметки, добавленные на полях библейских текстов, были выписаны из сочинений отцов… …   Вестминстерский словарь теологических терминов

  • glossa — /glosa/ A gloss, explanation, or interpretation. The glossal of the Roman law are brief illustrative comments or annotations on the text of Justinian s collections, made by the professors who taught or lectured on them about the twelfth century… …   Black's law dictionary

  • glossa — /glosa/ A gloss, explanation, or interpretation. The glossal of the Roman law are brief illustrative comments or annotations on the text of Justinian s collections, made by the professors who taught or lectured on them about the twelfth century… …   Black's law dictionary

  • Accursius — (Statue an den Uffizien in Florenz) Accursius (* 1182/85 in Bagnolo all Impruneta bei Florenz; † 1260/63 in Bologna) gehörte zur Gruppe der Glossatoren. Er studierte an der Universität von Bologna die Rechtswissenschaften. Einer seiner Lehrer …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Zemeke — Johannes Teutonicus Zemeke (auch Zemeken, Semeca, Cemeca, Semeko; * ???? in der Nähe von Halberstadt; † 25. April 1245 in Halberstadt) ist der Verfasser der „Glossa ordinaria“ zum „Decretum Gratiani“ und der Glosse zu den Konstitutionen des… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Glosses, Glossaries, Glossarists — • To gloss is to interpret or explain a text by taking up its words one after another. A glossary is therefore a collection of words about which observations and notes have been gathered, and a glossarist is one who thus explains or illustrates… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Scriptural Glosses —     Scriptural Glosses     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Scriptural Glosses     I. ETYMOLOGY AND PRINCIPAL MEANINGS     The modern English word gloss is derived directly from the Latin glossa, itself a transcript of the Greek glossa. In classical… …   Catholic encyclopedia

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