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Show more1ste Abtheilung: Festtage des Herrn. Hymnus 1 de Dominica [Lucis creator optime] -- Hymnus 2 de Nativ Domini et Octava [Jesu redemptor omnium] -- Hymnus 3 in Epiphania Domini [Crudeles Herodes] -- Hymnus 4 Festo SS.Nomine Jesu [Jesu dulcis memoria] -- Hymnus 5 in quadragesima [Audi benigne conditor] -- Hymnus 6 tempore Paschali [Haec dies] -- Hymnus 7 Dominica in albis [Ad regias agni] -- Hymnus 8 in festo inv. et Exal. S. crucis Domino [Vexilla regis prodeunt] -- Hymnus 9 in feste ascens. Domini [Salutis humane sator] -- Hymnus 10 in festo Pentecost [Veni creator spiritus] ; Hymnus 11 in festo Trinitatis [Jam sol recedit] -- Hymnus 12 in festo SS. corporis Christi [Pange ingua gloriosi] -- Tantum ergo -- Hymnus 13 in festo dedicat Ecclo [Coelestis Urbs Jerusalem] 2te Abtheilung: Festtage der Heiligen. Hymnus 1 in festo Concept. Nativ. assump. Beatae Virg. [Ave maris stella] -- Hymnus 2 de S. Angelis [Custodes hominum] -- Hymnus 3 in festo S, Apostol. [Exultetorbis gaudiis] -- Hymnus 4 in festo Apostolor Petri et Pauli [Decora lux] -- Hymnus 5 de SS. Apostolis temp. pasc. [Tristes erant Apostoli] -- Hymnus 6 in festo Sancti Joanni Baptistae [Ut queant laxis] -- Hymnus 7 de uno Martyre [Deus tuorum militum] -- Hymnus 8 in festo S. Joanni Nep. [Invictus neras numinis] -- Hymnus 9 in festo S. Innoventi M [Salvete flores martyrum] -- Hymnus 10 de S. plur Martyr [Sanctorum meritis] -- Hymnus 11 de S. Confessore [Iste confessor] -- Hymnus 12 de S. Joseph C. [Te Joseph celebrent] -- Hymnus 13 de S.Virgine [Jesu corona virginum] -- Hymnus 14 de S. Vidua [Fortem virili pectore] -- Hymnus 15 in festo omnium Sanctorum [Placare Christe servulis]
KSL Digital Book Collection
Digital Music Scores, Kulas Music Library
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Show more"Francis Bacon presents a paradox. He is celebrated by many as the earliest thinker to grasp the implication of the scientific method. Bacon nevertheless rejected the most celebrated scientific discoveries of his own time and opposed the Copernican system with particular severity. Harvey, the discoverer of the circulation of the blood, remarked that Bacon wrote science more like a Lord Chancellor than a scientist. Bacon, however, persistently attacked scholasticism, for he wished to deliver the world from Aristotelianism, and did much with his persuasive writing to substitute for it the inductive method. The De Augmentis Scientiarum is an expansion of Bacon's earlier work, The Advancement of Learning, first published in 1605. It was part of a tremendous project, The Great Renewal, which was left far from complete. In the preface Bacon wrote, "I have propounded my opinion, naked and unarmed, not seeking to preoccupate the liberty of men's judgment by confutations." The New Atlantis,written in 1627 is a scientific Utopia; the central establishment was the so-called House of Solomon, the laboratory of co-operating scientists honored above all other men. In Wisdom of the Ancients, he tries to explain ancient fables by ingenious allegories. Bacon polished all his prose sentences until they reached a "shining beauty that was most poetic." His purpose was "teaching men to think more wisely" and his motto was, "discriminate". This work was printed by John Haviland. The title page was composed in Latin to conform with the text. Restrictions on book printing were so stringent at this time that the period has been called the darkest in the history of English printing". (Ege, Otto F.)
Original Leaves from Famous Books
Otto F. Ege Collection
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Show moreCaption: "The Books of Hours, the outcome of changes in the society in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, are the best known as well as the most artistic of all the theological volumes of the Middle Ages. With the general acceptance of the Christianity throughout Europe by the year 1300, a general prayer book for the wealthy laity was needed, and these Books of Hours, Horae, Offices, or Hours of the Virgin, as they are called, filled that they want. In general, they contain sixteen sections, including the calendar, with the Saint Days; the Gospels of the Nativity ; the eight hours of the virgin, the most important part; and the Service of the Dead. The Books of the Hours were deemed so essential a means of salvation and of obtaining indulgences that it is probable that there were few families of wealth or nobility who did not posses a copy. Emperors, dukes and merchant princes frequently ordered richly illuminated and illustrated copies as betrothal gifts. Pilgrims usually returned home from their journey to a shrine with as fine a copy as they could afford. Books of Hours were usually produced in the medieval scriptoriums with the patience engendered in a sheltered life and the skill fostered by religious devotion. All materials used, parchment, ink, colors, and quills, were prepared within monastic walls. The monastic book hands (or styles of writing), for long periods of time, were crystallized, so it is possible to allocate an example to a particular country and century, even when there is no mention in the text as to where the book was written." (Ege, Otto F.)
Original Leaves from Famous Books
Otto F. Ege Collection
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Digital Music Scores, Kulas Music Library
Show moreEntered in the register of the Stationers' Company on 7 December 1599. Printer's device on title page. Coat of arms of William Gilbert on title page verso. Roman type. Decorative headpieces, tailpieces and initial letters. Errata: p. 240.; ''De magnete'', which influenced Bacon, Galileo, Kepler and Newton, has been described as the'"first major original contribution to science that was published in England."' Gilbert's work on magnetic attraction, the existence of electricity and the movements of the compass was pioneering. The last section of ''De magnete'' is devoted to the system of the universe, and was influenced by Giordano Bruno. Gilbert was physician to Elizabeth I. (John L. Thornton and R.I.J. Tully, "Scientific Books, Libraries and Collectors" ; "Dictionary of National Biography", XXI, p. 338).
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Show moreFor mixed chorus with chamber orchestra, or with organ Violone part has figured bass for organ for use with orchestra; separate organ part to replace orchestra
KSL Digital Book Collection
Digital Music Scores, Kulas Music Library
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Show moreImprint from colophon, Printed in double columns in red and black ink, Includes music in plainsong notation on 4-line staves, Bound in vellum with two clasps and decorative bosses front and back
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Show moreCaption "Breviaries were seldom owned by laymen. They were service books and contained the Psalter with the versicles, responses, collects and lections for Sundays, weekdays, and saints' days. Other texts could be included. A Breviary, therefore, was lengthy and usually bulky in format. Miniature copies like the one represented by this leaf are rare. The angular gothic script required a skilled calligrapher. It would be difficult for a modern engrosser to match, even with steel pens, the exactness and sharpness of these letters formed with a quill by a XIIIth century scribe. Green was a decorative color added to the palette in the late XIIIth century in many scriptoria. The medieval formulae for making it from earth, flowers, berries, and metals are often elaborate and strange. This manuscript was written on fine uterine vellum, i.e., the skin of an unborn calf. It evidently had hard use, or may have been buried with its owner." (written by Otto F. Ege) In Angular Gothic Script. This manuscript is probably from England.
Vellum leaf from set 37 of the collection of: Fifty Original Leaves From Medieval Manuscripts, Western Europe, XII-XVI Century, compiled by Otto F. Ege.
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Show moreCaption "Epistolaries are among the rarest of liturgical manuscripts. Their text consists of the Epistles and Gospels with lessons from the Old Testament for particular occasions. Sometimes, as in this leaf, they had interlinear neumes in red to assist the deacon or sub-deacon in chanting parts of this section of the church service while he was standing on the second step in front of the altar. The text is written in well executed rotunda gothic script with bold Lombardic initials. Some of the filigree decoration which surrounds the initial letters has faded because it was executed in some of the fugitive colors which were then prepared from the juices of such flowers and plants as tumeric, saffron, lilies, and prugnameroli (buckthorn berries)." (written by Otto Ege) This vellum leaf was created in mid-fifteenth century Italy. In Rotunda or Round Gothic Script, Square Rhetorical Neumes.
Vellum leaf from set number 37 of the collection of: Fifty Original Leaves From Medieval Manuscripts, Western Europe, XII-XVI Century, compiled by Otto F. Ege
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KSL Digital Boo
Show moreFor mixed chorus with instrumental ensemble 2 parts for "Organo et violone", unfigured ; 2 horn parts on separate pages of uncut bifold
KSL Digital Book Collection
Digital Music Scores, Kulas Music Library
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Show moreFor mixed chorus ; tracks 1-2 with orchestra, tracks 6-8 with harp ; track 12 with harpsichord ; tracks 13-14 with organ ; remainder unaccompanied. University Circle Chorale ; Paul L. Reynolds, conductor. Gloria ; Cum Sancto / Vivaldi -- Psallite ; Lo, how a rose e're [sic] blooming / Praetorius -- O magnum mysterium / Victoria -- Wolcum Yule ; There is no rose ; Deo gracias / Britten -- Exultate Deo / Poulenc -- Der Pharisaer und der Zoellner / David -- Sing we and chant it / Morley -- Final chorus from Jepthe / Carissimi -- Credo, from Missa brevis ; Agnus Dei, from Missa brevis / Kodaly
Digital Media, Kulas Music Library
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