BSB cod. icon. 326

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Arms of Friedrich Wilhelm I, Duke of Saxe-Weimar.
Arms of John George, Elector of Brandenburg

Codex iconographicus monacensis 236 (BSB cod. icon. 326) is an armorial of the coats of arms of the attendants of the imperial diet of 1594 at Regensburg (formerly Regensburg city library, Rat. civ. 252)[1] Rudolf II in 1594 declared Regensburg would be the sole location where imperial diets were to be held in the future.

The codex consists of paper folia measuring 22.5⨯16 cm with 48 non-empty pages. It contains a total of 84 coats of arms, mostly the personal or family arms of princes, with some clerical arms and ten city arms. The coats of arms are arranged by the accommodation of the bearers in Regensburg's eight city districts (Wachten).[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Johann Andreas Schmeller, Repertorium Codicum iconographicorum. Handschriftliches Verzeichnis 1835 (Cbm Cat. 79 f), p. 111; c.f. Historische Kataloge der Bayerischen Staatsbibliothek München. Münchner Hofbibliothek und andere Provenienzen eds. Stephan Kellner, Annemarie Spethmann. Wiesbaden 1996 (Catalogus codicum manu scriptorum Bibliothecae Monacensis Tomus XI), pp. 396-398, 404; Regensburger Reichsstädtische Bibliothek Online (RRBO) http://www.bayerische-landesbibliothek-online.de/rrbo.
  2. ^ Bauer 1997, p. 16
  • Peter Fleischmann, Kurtze und eigentliche Beschreibung des zu Regensburg in diesem 94. Jar gehaltenen Reichstag, Wurster, Regensburg, 1594.
  • C. Joist, M. Kamp, 'Der Einzug Rudolfs II. 1594', in: Feste in Regensburg ed. K. Möseneder, Regensburg 1986, pp. 145-152.
  • A. Schmid, Regensburg. Historischer Atlas von Bayern, Teil Altbayern 60. München 1995.
  • W. Schulze, 'Augsburg und die Reichstage im späten 16. Jahrhundert', in: Welt im Umbruch
  • Karl Bauer, Regensburg, 5th ed. Regensburg, 1997.

External links[edit]