目錄
PART I TEXT AND CONTEXT
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION: HISTORIOGRAPHICAL BACKGROUND..
1.1 Carolingian Renaissance and Reform
1.2 Carolingian Biblical Studies and Biblical Culture
1.3 Chapter Plan
CHAPTER 2 THE LYON ANNOTATIONS: A PRIMARY SURVEY
2.1 Paris, BnF, NAL
2.2 The Marginal and Intercolumnar Annotations in Paris, BnF, NAL
2.3 The Annotations in Paris, BnF, NAL 1740 as Marginalia
2.4 Provenance and Date
CHAPTER 3 HISTORICAL SETTING: LEIDRAD AND THE CAROLINGIAN REFORM IN LYON (798-816)
3.1 Leidrad: the Life of a Carolingian Reformer
3.2 The Making of a Carolingian Plebs Ecclesiastica: Leidrad's Church Reform
3.3 The Lyon Annotations in the Context of Church Reform and Clerical Instruction
PART II TRADITION AND INNOVATION
CHAPTER 4 THE EXEGESIS OF DEUTERONOMY BEFORE 800 (I): THE RISE OF CHRISTIAN INTERPRETATION
4.1 From the Beginning to the Second Century
4.2 Origen and the Foundation of Latin Exegetical Tradition
4.3 Jerome and the Establishment of the "Deuteronomy-Gospel" Motif.
4.4 Ambrose: Deuteronomy as Legis Praecepta
CHAPTER 5 THE EXEGESIS OF DEUTERONOMY BEFORE 800 (II): THE LATIN PATRISTIC COMMENTARIES FROM AUGUSTINE TO GREGORY THE GREAT
5.1 Augustine of Hippo, Quaestiones in Heptateuchum
5.2 Eucherius of Lyon, Instructiones and Formulae
5.3 John the Deacon, Expositio in Heptateuchum
5.4 Verecundus of Junca, Commentarii super cantica ecclesiastica
5.5 Gregory-Paterius, Liber testimoniorum
5.6 Conclusion: Diversity and Triumph
CHAPTER 6 THE EXEGESIS OF DEUTERONOMY BEFORE 800 (IH): THE ISIDORIAN MOMENT AND ITS AFTERMATH
6.1 Isidore of Seville, Expositio in uetus testamentum
6.2 Wigbod, Quaestiones in Octateuchum and Recapitulatio de paradiso, fonte ac fluminibus et ligno uitae (Lectiones on the Hexateuch )
6.3 The a and y Recensions of the Pseudo-Bedan Pentateuch Commentary (Milan, Biblioteca Ambrosiana, G.82 inf.)
6.4 The fl Recension of the Pseudo-Bedan Pentateuch Commentary (PL 91, cols. 189-394)
6.5 The Irish Reference Bible (Pauca problemata de enigmatibus ex tomis canonicis)
6.6 The Isidorian Tradition and the Lyon Annotations
6.7 Conclusion of Part II: The Patristic Tradition and Innovation of the Lyon Annotations
PART III OLD AND NEW
CHAPTER 7 DEUTERONOMY INTERPRETED AS CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY
7.1 Spiritalis Israel: The Chosen People as a Christian Ecclesia
7.2 In Figura and inter Litteram et Spiritum Discernere: Deuteronomy Transformed into Christian Teachings
7.3 A Plebs Fidelis Imagined
CHAPTER 8 THE JEWISH QUESTION
8.1 Expounding Deuteronomy Contra ludaeos
8.2 The Accursed Jew