Bibliotheca Arnamagnæana - 01.06.1980, Qupperneq 73
55
[Ev. sec. Mathæum, 28, 1-7. Vespere autem sabbati que lucescit...] ubi
positus erat dominus... et ecce precedet uos in galileam. .. ecce predixi uobis.
[Seer. ] Suscipe quesumus domine preces populi tui eum oblationibus
hostiarum...
[Pref. VD] equum et salutare. Te quidem omni tempore sed in hac potis-
simum nocte gloriosius predicare...
[Infra actionem] Communicantes et noctem sacratissimam celebrantes
resurrectionis...
Hane igitur oblacionem seruitutis nostre. . . quesumus domine ut placatus
accipias.
[Postcom. ] Spiritum nobis domine tue karitatis infunde... per dominum
nostrum in unitate eiusdem.
The missal obviously ended here, and the verso, which was the back
cover of the manuscript, was left blank. It seems to have belonged to
the first part of a missal per annum, containing the liturgy from
Advent to Holy Saturday. Missals consisting of a first part, from
Advent to Holy Saturday, and of a second one, from the Resurrection
to Advent, are often mentioned in the Icelandic church charters,
sometimes also with addition of a commonsbok, a volume containing
the Common of the saints.
Sæmundr Ormsson of Svinafell (Skapt.) was chieftain {godi) in the
South-East from 1241 to 1252, when he was killed, together with his
younger brother, by their brother-in-law in a family feud related in the
Sturlunga Saga. Their obits are entered on 13 April in the calendar AM
249c fol. (see below, pp. 125-26). His decree, copied on the verso of
our missal fragment, concems the right to jetsam and whales in the
districts surrounding the HomafjorSur and the SkarSsfjoråur (Skapt.).
The last third of the text is missing.
The leaf was intact in 1631, when a copy was made in Skålholt,
witnessed by four members of the clergy, who had ‘seen and read an
old writ in an ancient vellum quire (kver)’; this copy was again copied
by Åmi Magnusson in Skålholt in 1710 (from which copy the missing
last third of the decree was edited).
After the Skålholt interlude, the leaf was mutilated. It ended up as
binding material, glued to the outward cover of a law-book, the present
MS AM 345 fol., containing Jonsbok, i.a. It was seen by Årni
Magnusson and acquired by him.
Church charters are sometimes found entered on the vacant spaces
of liturgical books. Here, the entry of a legal doeument, promulgated