Codex: Did you mean...?

Search

Did you mean: Rhodes?

Search Results

Florentine Codex
Definition by Jordy Samuels

Florentine Codex - An Encyclopedia of Life in 16th-Century Mexico

The Florentine Codex is an encyclopedic accounting of life in 16th-century Mexico and an invaluable resource for understanding the exchange between European and Indigenous cultures during the Spanish conquest. Emerging from a time of societal...
New Testament Text-Types
Article by Peter Kauffner

New Testament Text-Types

The books of the New Testament were written in the 1st century CE. As Christianity spread in the 2nd century CE, many copies were made, some by non-professionals. Early manuscripts are considered to be closer to the original than later manuscripts...
Codex Regius of the Poetic Edda
Image by Unknown

Codex Regius of the Poetic Edda

The Codex Regius of the Poetic Edda is the oldest and most comprehensive extant source of Norse mythology. 14th century CE. It is housed at the Arni Magnusson Institute of Learning in Reykjavik, Iceland.
Codex Runicus, Runic Manuscript
Image by Asztalos Gyula

Codex Runicus, Runic Manuscript

The Codex Runicus (AM 28 8vo), a manuscript from c. 1300 CE, contains one of the oldest texts of the Scanian Law (Skånske lov), here written exclusively in the Medieval Futhork runic script. It resides at the University of Copenhagen in...
Codex Vaticanus
Image by Leszek Jańczuk

Codex Vaticanus

Codex Vaticanus, which may contain Constantine I’s original Bible. Photo taken in Warsaw in 2015.
Codex Alexandrinus
Image by British Library

Codex Alexandrinus

Codex Alexandrinus, one of the three early Greek manuscripts that preserve both the Old and the New Testaments together, copied in the 5th century. British Library, London.
Florentine Codex
Image by Bernardino de Sahagún

Florentine Codex

The General History of the Things of New Spain or Florentine Codex, an ethnographic codex by Bernardino de Sahagún, Book 7, Folio 9v, Mexico, 16th century. Written in the mid- to late 16th century, this collection of images and histories...
Duke Heinrich von Breslau in the Codex Manesse
Image by Meister des Codex Manesse (Nachtragsmaler I)

Duke Heinrich von Breslau in the Codex Manesse

Page from the early 14th-century Codex Manesse - an illuminated book of poetry composed in Middle High German - depicting Duke Heinrich von Breslau (probably Henry IV of Silesia, also known as Henryk IV Probus in Polish) participating in...
Henry I, Count of Anhalt in the Codex Manesse
Image by Meister des Codex Manesse (Grundstockmaler)

Henry I, Count of Anhalt in the Codex Manesse

Page from the early 14th-century Codex Manesse - an illuminated book of poetry composed in Middle High German - depicting Henry I, Count of Anhalt participating in a tournament.
Edda
Definition by Kimberly Lin

Edda

Edda is a term used to describe two Icelandic manuscripts that were copied down and compiled in the 13th century CE. Together they are the main sources of Norse mythology and skaldic poetry that relate the religion, cosmogony, and history...
Support Us