Bibliotheca Arnamagnæana - 01.06.1980, Side 97
79
tudines proposuit per quas peccatores conuersos suscipiendos monstra-
ret. et alios discipulos ad p[enitentiam] uocaret.
Lee. ix. [A]it ergo homo quidam erat diues qui habebat ut supra.
Erat autem homo iste deus omnipotens, est de quo scriptum est Homo
est et quis cognoscet [eum], Qui bene diues esse dicitur quia aput illum
sunt omnes [thesauri] sapientie et scientie a[bsco]nditi. Jllius uillici
su[mus quos ad] imaginem et similitudinem suam creauit [quibus etiam
sensum et int]ellectum prebuit.
= Haymo of Auxerre, Hom. 121 = PL 118, 646C-647B (extracts); see Barré, op.
cit., loc. cit. (H II, 28);
The York Breviary 1, 629-30 = PL 118, 647A-D (extracts).
Haymo’s homiliary was widespread long before the millennium. As
breviary lessons, our homilies for Sundays 8 and 9 after Trinity appear
in twelfth-century monastic breviaries, e.g. the Winchcombe breviary,
MS Laon 116, ff. 157r sqq., which embodies the use of the Norman
monasteries reformed by William of Volpiano in the eleventh century;1
and in the St. Bertin breviary, MS Saint-Omer 354, ff. 69v sqq.2
Among the English printed breviaries, the monastic breviary of Hyde
Abbey c. 1300, and the secular York breviary make extensive use of
Haymo’s homilies. They are also extensively used in the Nidaros
Breviary of 1519, though for Sundays 8 and 9 after Trinity Nidaros
follows the homiliary of Paul the Deacon.3
b) The smaller fragment, sewn upside down to f. 202, is a narrow
strip, horizontally cut, from a bifolium with non-consecutive texts of an
1 See V. Leroquais, Les Bréviaires manuscrits des bibliothéques publiques de
France, 4 (Paris 1934), pp. 283 sqq.
2 Ibid., pp. 135 sq.
3 Three strips from a breviary leetionary of the late twelfth century also belong in this
group. They were used for the binding of MS AM 66 fol., sewn to the last gathering of
the manuscript. One strip contains lessons from the month of August from Prov. 25,22-
28,5; the two others contain a homily for Sunday 11 after Trinity with extracts from
Bede, In Luc. 18,10, but otherwise unidentified. A fourth, very small fragment, sewn to
the same gathering, belonged to a late-medieval antiphoner written in two columns with
only a few words visible of the first vespers gospel antiphon, Angelus Domini astitit of
the Office of St. Peter’s Chains, 1 August, [habitacujlo carceris p[ercussoque tatere]
petri e[xcitauit...] Ed. Jonna Louis-Jensen, Hulda. Sagas of the Kings of Norway
1035-1177. AM 66 fol. = EIM 8 (1968). Introduction, pp. 21-23; Facsimiles in
Appendix II.