This library is built in the open.
If you spot an error, have a suggestion, or just want to say hello — we’d love to hear from you.

51. Paris 6639 (Puteanus, Colbertinus), 10th century, 148 folios, 230 x 185 mm, 26 lines. Contains: Consolatio with scholia and a few metrical explanations, Arithm.; cf. Schepss, N. Arch. f. dt. Gesch. XI 134.
52. Paris 7181 (Puteanus, Regius 5365) P, 9th century, correctly assigned by Schepss, as is confirmed by a facsimile of folio 168 which I would attribute to about the middle of the century, received from the most learned Henry Omont; 174 folios, 280 x 220 mm, 35 lines. Contains: Arithmetica, Musica, Consolatio (up to 120, 28; missing 51, 24—52, 21) without scholia. Very rare metrical explanations are appended; at 48, 15 and 51, 4 marginal notes have crept in. Errors are not lacking, but the text does not seem to have been changed intentionally; cf. 2, 26; 9, 7; 19, 11; 21, 23 sq.; 26, 20; 29, 13; 35, 17; 37, 27; 45, 13; 49, 12. 16; 51, 5; 54, 1. 21. 27; 58, 14; 59, 26; 60, 12; 116, 30; 120, 10. 12.
53. Paris 7183 (St. Denis, Colbertinus 5078, Reg. 5449), 10th/11th century. The third part (280 x 190 mm, 26 lines) exhibits the Consolatio (starting from 16, 6 of my edition); rare metrical explanations do not agree with Lupus, and likewise rare scholia agree with Froumund (Y).
54. Paris 7730, 11th century. Contains: Metrical Treatise, Consolatio.
55. Paris 7925 (St. Martial of Limoges, as it seems), 9th century, see S. G. de Vries, Boethii fragmentum notis Tironianis descriptum A fragment of Boethius written in Tironian notes in the collection of commentaries offered to the most illustrious Constantine Contos by Dutch philologists, Leiden 1893, 127—135 (Consol. III m. v [p. 55, 26 sqq.]; v. 3 ne = T², 7 tile = K, 9 querellae = DK).
56. Paris 8039 (Thuaneus), 10th century, 77 folios. Contains: Lucan, Consolatio with scholia and certain metrical explanations.
57. Paris 10400, 10th century, folios 90—93 (240 x 160 mm, 32 lines). Contains: Consolatio 104, 1—113, 5 (iudicat).
58. Paris 12961 (St. Maur-des-Fossés, St. Germain), 11th century, 129 folios. Contains: Metrical Treatise, Consolatio with scholia and metrical explanations, Opuscula sacra.
59. Paris 13026 (Corbie, St. Germain), 9th century, 181 folios, 260 x 190 mm; exhibits the poems.
60. Paris 14380 (St. Victor of Paris 303), 10th century, 64 folios, 400 x 240 mm, 30 lines. Contains: Life, metrical treatise, Consolatio with scholia (cf. Paris 6401); at the end, folios 1—36 have been added, containing the Lincoln commentary written in the 14th century.
61. Paris 15090 (St. Victor 751), 10th century, 89 folios, 240 x 220 mm, 20 lines. Exhibits the Lives, part of the metrical treatise (also explanations), Consolatio with scholia; the fact that the codex was written by Ainardus (cf. f. 12 and 26), which is made out from words written on folio 89 (by Vallinus?), seems to be of some importance because it also provided Persius (Par.).