Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2013
The present text of Livy's Fourth Decade rests upon two main lines of tradition: first, the eleventh-century Bambergensis with fourteenth–fifteenth century recentiores and Gelenius' notes (1535) of the lost Spirensis; secondly, Carbachius' recording (1519) of the lost Moguntinus. This paper is concerned with the effect which more recent knowledge of the archetype of the first tradition may have upon emendation of the text. In the light of uncial fragments discovered at Bamberg in 1904 Traube showed that Bambergensis is a direct copy of the fifth-century MS. which they represent. At one step we are back in the world of late Roman scholarship, and one may correct Bambergensis in terms of the copying of continuous uncial script.
page 43 note 1 Traube, L., ‘Bamberger Fragmente der vierten Dekade des Livius’, Palaeogr. Forsch. IV (Abh. K. Bayer. Akad. Wiss., III Kl., XXIV Bd., 1 Abt., 1904), 4Google Scholar; Johnson, S. K., ‘Livy's Fourth Decade: A Preliminary Enquiry into MSS’, C.Q. XXI (1927), 67Google Scholar; Billanovich, G., ‘Petrarch and the Textual Tradition of Livy’, J. Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, XIV (1951), 137CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
page 46 note 1 Fraser, P. M. and Bean, G. E., The Rhodian Peraea and Islands, 72 ff., 98Google Scholar.