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Necrologium Lundense (Lund, UB Mh 6) is a 12th-century illuminated manuscript probably made in Lund (then part of Denmark, today part of Sweden) to serve as a book of rules for the canons of Lund Cathedral, with texts used by them in their daily life. Its oldest parts date from around 1123, and it is considered the oldest still intact manuscript written in Scandinavia. It is preserved in a late medieval binding and the text is partially adorned with decorated initials, including one which displays influences from Viking art. The book is today kept in the University Library of Lund University.

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  • Necrologium Lundense (Lund, UB Mh 6) is a 12th-century illuminated manuscript probably made in Lund (then part of Denmark, today part of Sweden) to serve as a book of rules for the canons of Lund Cathedral, with texts used by them in their daily life. Its oldest parts date from around 1123, and it is considered the oldest still intact manuscript written in Scandinavia. It is preserved in a late medieval binding and the text is partially adorned with decorated initials, including one which displays influences from Viking art. The book is today kept in the University Library of Lund University. (en)
  • Necrologium Lundense är en pergamentcodex, nu i Universitetsbiblioteket i Lund, som tillhört kaniksamfundet vid Sankt Laurentius kyrka i Lund och förelåg upplagd vid mitten av 1130-talet. Dess kärna utgörs av det egentliga, i kalendarieform anordnade, 1123 tillkomna nekrologiet, Memoriale fratum, i vilket gjorts anteckningar om avlidna personer, för vilka gudstjänster skulle hållas i Lunds domkyrka. Memoriale fratrums notiser är till 1145 införda i samband med själva dödsfallen, senare notiser till omkring 1170 gruppvis överförda från den 1145 upplagda Liber daticus. Till Memoriale fratrums notiser är fogade dels en serie listor av lokal natur, dels stadgar och skrifter av uppbygglig art, däribland de för Sankt Laurentius gällande statuterna, Consuetudines lundenses. (sv)
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  • Necrologium Lundense (Lund, UB Mh 6) is a 12th-century illuminated manuscript probably made in Lund (then part of Denmark, today part of Sweden) to serve as a book of rules for the canons of Lund Cathedral, with texts used by them in their daily life. Its oldest parts date from around 1123, and it is considered the oldest still intact manuscript written in Scandinavia. It is preserved in a late medieval binding and the text is partially adorned with decorated initials, including one which displays influences from Viking art. The book is today kept in the University Library of Lund University. (en)
  • Necrologium Lundense är en pergamentcodex, nu i Universitetsbiblioteket i Lund, som tillhört kaniksamfundet vid Sankt Laurentius kyrka i Lund och förelåg upplagd vid mitten av 1130-talet. Dess kärna utgörs av det egentliga, i kalendarieform anordnade, 1123 tillkomna nekrologiet, Memoriale fratum, i vilket gjorts anteckningar om avlidna personer, för vilka gudstjänster skulle hållas i Lunds domkyrka. Memoriale fratrums notiser är till 1145 införda i samband med själva dödsfallen, senare notiser till omkring 1170 gruppvis överförda från den 1145 upplagda Liber daticus. Till Memoriale fratrums notiser är fogade dels en serie listor av lokal natur, dels stadgar och skrifter av uppbygglig art, däribland de för Sankt Laurentius gällande statuterna, Consuetudines lundenses. (sv)
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  • Necrologium Lundense (en)
  • Necrologium Lundense (sv)
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