Original title | Missale secundum ritum insignis ecclesie cathedralis Cracouiensis |
---|---|
Language | Latin |
Genre | missal |
Publisher | Peter Liechtenstein |
Publication date | 1532 |
Pages | 388 |
Bishop Tomicki′s Missal is a printed missal from 1532. [1] [2]
The missal was published in 1532 in Venice by Peter Liechtenstein for the diocese of Cracow in Poland and was compiled at the request of Bishop Piotr Tomicki. [1] [2] The most important elements of the Roman Catholic liturgy were the same everywhere, but some local differences existed such as additional prayers or a different calendar of saints, so this gave rise to the need to develop diocesan missals. [1] One of the copies was in the Tarnowski collection in Dzików Castle in Tarnobrzeg in Poland. [1] The National Library of Poland purchased the Dzików library in 2009. [1] From May 2024, a copy of the missal is presented at a permanent exhibition in the Palace of the Commonwealth. [3] [1]
The book contains 388 leaves in folio format and musical notation. [2] It is printed in red and black. [2] On the title page there is a woodcut depicting St Stanislaus and St Florian. [2]
Original title | Missale secundum ritum insignis ecclesie cathedralis Cracouiensis |
---|---|
Language | Latin |
Genre | missal |
Publisher | Peter Liechtenstein |
Publication date | 1532 |
Pages | 388 |
Bishop Tomicki′s Missal is a printed missal from 1532. [1] [2]
The missal was published in 1532 in Venice by Peter Liechtenstein for the diocese of Cracow in Poland and was compiled at the request of Bishop Piotr Tomicki. [1] [2] The most important elements of the Roman Catholic liturgy were the same everywhere, but some local differences existed such as additional prayers or a different calendar of saints, so this gave rise to the need to develop diocesan missals. [1] One of the copies was in the Tarnowski collection in Dzików Castle in Tarnobrzeg in Poland. [1] The National Library of Poland purchased the Dzików library in 2009. [1] From May 2024, a copy of the missal is presented at a permanent exhibition in the Palace of the Commonwealth. [3] [1]
The book contains 388 leaves in folio format and musical notation. [2] It is printed in red and black. [2] On the title page there is a woodcut depicting St Stanislaus and St Florian. [2]