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Fasciculus temporum

181. Cronaca della Napoli aragonese, MS M.801, fol. 88r
182. MS M.801, fol. 88v
183. MS M.801, fol. 89r
184. MS M.801, fol. 89v
185. MS M.801, fol. 90r
186. MS M.801, fol. 90v
187. MS M.801, fol. 91r
188. MS M.801, fol. 91v
189. MS M.801, fol. 92r
190. MS M.801, fol. 92v
191. MS M.801, fol. 93r
192. MS M.801, fol. 93v

Written and illustrated in Naples, Italy, shortly after 1498, Fasciculus temporum is a compendium of four late medieval chronicles.  The first, Fasciculus temporum, after which the manuscript takes its name, is a summary of world history compiled by the German monk Werner Rolevinck. His text and the thirty pen-and-wash drawings are based on the printed edition with woodcuts published by Erhard Ratdolt in Venice in 1481.

The second text, “Cronaca di Partenope,” is an anonymous history of Naples from the early Middle Ages to the start of the fifteenth century.  This is followed, as in many Cronaca manuscripts, by the “Bagni di Pozzuoli,” an account of the medicinal Baths of Pozzuoli.  The manuscript concludes with the “Cronaca della Napoli aragonese,” describing events in Naples from 1423 to 1498.  This last chronicle was written by the son of Francisco Ferraiolo, who witnessed the triumphal entry into Naples of King Alfonso I in 1443.  It is illustrated with 120 pen-and-ink drawings that are of considerable interest for their detailed portrayals of contemporaneous personages and historical events, as well as Neapolitan life, costume, and landscape.

This paper manuscript of 150 leaves was purchased by the Morgan at the Aldenham Library sale in London, at Sotheby’s on 24 March 1937, lot 250.