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62. Paris 16093 (Charterhouse of Scillon near Bourg-en-Bresse, Sorbonne 355), 11th century, 69 folios, 280 x 210 mm, 25 lines. Contains: Part of the metrical treatise, Consolatio with scholia.
63. Paris 16678 (Sorbonne 1573), 11th century, 213 folios, 230 x 170 mm, 34 lines. Contains: Macrobius, Consolatio starting from page 2, 14 ([ex]tulisset). (Ugutio wrote it).
64. Paris 17814 (Buherianus C 45), 11th century, 123 folios, 290 x 210 mm, 25 lines. Contains: Lives, Metrical Treatise, Consolatio with scholia (cf. Paris 6401 A, above no. 50).
65. Paris, Nouv. acquis. 1478 (Cluny 49), 11th century, 91 folios, 273 x 182 mm, 2 columns, 56 lines. Contains: Consolatio with scholia, philosophical writings.
66. Pommersfelden 786, according to Schepss, not 11th century, but 14th.
67. Rome, Angelican R 6, 14; 33 folios, 252 x 170 mm, mutilated; in Narducci's catalog it is ascribed to the 14th century, but Stangel, who examined it for Schepss' sake, attributes it to the 10th.
68 a, b. St. Gall 810 and 825, 11th century. They exhibit Notker's text and version (see above p. XI).
69. St. Gall 844 (F, 186 pages, 225 x 160 mm, 21 lines) listed among the books of Abbot Grimoald (847—871) (see P. Lehmann, Mittelalt. Bibl.-Kat. Deutschlands u. d. Schweiz Medieval Library Catalogs of Germany and Switzerland I 89, 9; regarding Hartmut cf. 87, 21); the letter forms of a specimen, made by the help of light by the prefect of the library, correspond to this age. In the codex, which Schepss collated accurately, both at 29, 4 (from which passage Schepss suspected the relationship between F and T could be known) and 100, 20, words omitted by the first hand were supplemented by a second hand, which also added scholia, which in T make up one verse itself. Since the readings of both books agree wonderfully (p. 75, 1), there is no doubt that F was copied from a corrected T; it had to be used, therefore, in the gap of codex T. Regarding Lupus' treatise see above p. XI., regarding scholia Naumann p. 14:
'Of secondary importance, because through heavy use a large part, specifically of the lower marginal scholia, has become illegible.'
70. St. Gall 845, 10th century, exhibits a commentary in Schepss' Würzburg program 1880/1, 4, 31 sqq., marked with the letter S; cf. Naumann 14 sqq.