Fragmenta Vindobonensia, also known as the Vienna folios (German: Wiener glagolitische Blätter; Serbo-Croatian: Bečki listići), is the name of two illuminated Glagolitic folios that most likely originate from 11th or 12th-century Croatia and Dalmatia.
They were discovered and first described by Vatroslav Jagić in 1890 and are kept in the National Library in Vienna, the origin of their modern namesake.[1][2] Some research puts their origin in western Croatia.[3]
Contents
The folios include text from Genesis 12:17–13:14 and Genesis 15:2–15:12.[4] In addition, they contain the beginning of Paul's first letter to the Corinthians 4:9-16. It is an expanded Gregorian sacrament, and is relatively small. Scholars theorize that it was meant as a book used by a travelling missionary, due to its small size.[5]
Vajs, Josef (1948). Najstariji hrvatskoglagoljski misal [The Oldest Croato-Glagolitic Missal] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti.
Birkfellner, Gerhard (1975). Glagolitische und kyrillische Handschriften in Österreich [Glagolitic and Cyrillic Manuscripts in Austria] (in German). Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences. ISBN3-700-1-0141-4.
Hercigonja, Eduard (1999). "Glagolists and Glagolism" Croatia in the Early Middle Ages. pp. 387–390.
References
^Josip Bratulić & Stjepan Damjanović, Hrvatska pisana kultura, 1. svezak, 8. - 17. stoljeće, p. 69, ISBN953-96657-3-6.