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The paper examines some critical aspects of the manuscript tradition of Boccaccio's Corbaccio, starting from the results of the very few studies on the subject. Besides proposing an updated list of all the 79 available manuscripts that hand down the work, whose yet we don't have any critical edition, he then demonstrates, through a number of examples, the benefits of widening perspective to the codes of the non-α family, but also of a comprehensive reconsideration of the status of α itself. In the absence of a solid classification of the whole manuscript tradition, the "traditional" hypothesis that the α2 group (and in particular the Mannelli codex) represents an advanced redaction of Boccaccio's «umile trattato» risks to be too conditioning if assumed at such a preliminary stage.
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The paper examines some critical aspects of the manuscript tradition of Boccaccio's Corbaccio, starting from the results of the very few studies on the subject. Besides proposing an updated list of all the 79 available manuscripts that hand down the work, whose yet we don't have any critical edition, he then demonstrates, through a number of examples, the benefits of widening perspective to the codes of the non-α family, but also of a comprehensive reconsideration of the status of α itself. In the absence of a solid classification of the whole manuscript tradition, the "traditional" hypothesis that the α2 group (and in particular the Mannelli codex) represents an advanced redaction of Boccaccio's «umile trattato» risks to be too conditioning if assumed at such a preliminary stage.
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Manuscripts --- China
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"The famous German excavations between 1906 and 1908 of Elephantine Island in Egypt produced some of the most important Aramaic sources for understanding the history of Judeans and Arameans living in 5th century BCE Egypt under Persian occupation. Unknown to the world, many papyri fragments from those excavations remained uncatalogued in the Berlin Museum. In New Aramaic Papyri from Elephantine in Berlin James D. Moore edits the remaining legible Aramaic fragments, which belong to letters, contracts, and administrative texts"--
Manuscripts, Aramaic (Papyri) --- Aramaic papyri --- Manuscripts (Papyri)
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