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script without divisions between words, probably originating in Rome. There are about twenty-five long lines per page. The only ornamentation in the manuscript consists of penwork initials in red, green and yellow (above). It contains the full revised text.
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The personal, intellectual and moral standards
Gregory enjoined parish priests to possess, though noble, were considered in certain quarters to be unrealistic given the limitations imposed by 6th century realities. For example, one letter from the
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directed that it be translated and distributed to every bishop within the empire (Demacopoulos). Indeed, among the works of all the Latin authors in the patristic period, Gregory's alone were translated into Greek during his own lifetime.
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inauguration. It became one of the most influential works on the topic ever written. The title was that used by
Gregory when sending a copy to his friend
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117:(Book II, letter 54 in Gregory's collected correspondence) praises the book, but expresses a reserve that it might prove beyond ordinary capacities.
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Start of the text in the Troyes manuscript of ca. 600 (see below); the first three lines are also in coloured ink, which has run or faded.
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ser. 2, vol XII (Christian
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In the West, the book also retained its significance and broad dissemination.
270:", United Kingdom National Commission for UNESCO, 2011. Accessed 4 June 2011.
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A page from a contemporary copy of Alfred the Great's translation of
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by
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Alfred the Great's Old
English translation of Gregory the Great's
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Bodleian items added to UNESCO's UK Memory of the World
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The influence of the book, however, was vast. After reading the
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King Alfred's West-Saxon version of
Gregory's Pastoral care
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Extracts from Online
Reference Book for Medieval Studies
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Public domain audiobook of the Barmby translation from
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Among the numerous manuscripts of these widely read
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321:St. Gregory the Great: Book of Pastoral Rule
135:That the book had been taken to England by
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292:Troyes MS 504. See Christopher De Hamel,
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213:Troyes, Bibliothèque Municipale, MS 504
92:around the year 590, shortly after his
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294:A History of Illuminated Manuscripts
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84:on the responsibilities of the
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139:— who was sent to the
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420:6th-century books in Latin
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385:Cambridge Digital Library
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108:Description
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304:References
316:: preface
264:Archived
122:Regulae,
82:treatise
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202:Hincmar
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