Triv. 55
XV ▪ Motets italiens profanes, notation mesurée évidée sur 5 lignes. 70v-99v tablatures de luth ▪ Diamm - Manus
Triv. 513
1426-1450 ▪ Missale ambrosianum, notation ambrosienne sur lignes ▪ Manus
Triv. 1018
XIV ▪ Contre-plat sup. et inf. fragment d’un graduel, notation carrée sur 4 lignes rouges ▪ Manus
Triv. 2146
XV (1496?) ▪ Fiorenzo «musicus et sacerdos», Liber musices ▪ RISM B III 6 - Manus
Replies
I'm very happy to see the Florentius treatise online, but the digitization is not optimal, and the images can't be enlarged, as far as I can see.
Yes, the tablature section is from XVI...
Michael Scott Cuthbert a dit :
How did you find these sources? Is Triv. 193 online perchance? (Paradiso degli Alberti w/ Sachetti and Sercambi -- important for us trecento people. :-) )
between 98v and 99r of Triv 513, there's a surprisingly rare phenomenon -- there's exactly one word (the catchword "grata") missing between the gatherings. A miscommunication about where one gathering ended and the other should begin. "ut cuius honore sunt *grata*, eius nobis fiant..." I'm surprised that I've never seen this before. In my experience, usually when the catchword doesn't match the next page, there's a gathering missing.
starting from around f. 80 of Triv. 513, some jerk cut out the illuminated letters. grrr...
Tiv. 55 -- the tablature section must be later than XVe siècle, no? Someone who knows better, but I'd think at least mid XVIe.
Fantastic! Merci beaucoup!