1. A comparative example of broader coverage is offered by Ermolao Barbaro's teaching in Padua. A manuscript of the Ethics and Politics (now Columbia Univ. Lib., Plimpton 17) has Barbaro's following note after the Politics: “Libros politicorum octo praelegi in gymnasio patavino totumque opus perfeci X kalendas martias MCCCCLXXVI quodque magis mireris tribus mensibus et diebus XVIII completa est interpretatio a nobis duce deo quo etiam auctore superiore anno X libros ethicorum opus a nullo ante me perfectum fueram interpretatus”; the note is quoted in Kristeller , “Un codice padovano,” 346. Barbaro may also have tried to comment on the text more directly, since we have from him a compendium, which includes some questions only at the very end (see Kraye , “Renaissance Commentaries,” 102–3). On the other hand, he used Grosseteste's text. On Barbaro see the Appendix below, no. 6.
2. Florence, BLaur., Aed. 153 (XV), fol. 128: “Haec pauca super libris his Aristotelis, omissis aliis, quae Commento non congruunt, exaravimus; atque id maxime, ut illis morem gererem, qui humanis studiis dediti, non dubiorum multitudinem, non rerum varietatem, non difficultatum perplexitatem, sed philosophi sinceram et claram intelligentiam habere perquirunt, quam, ut arbitror, haec cum legerint, adsequentur. Florentiae, MCCCCLV [=1456], die IX Feb.” The date is misprinted as 1465 in Garin , La cultura filosofica, 71n.
3. See Hankins , “The New Language,” in The Humanism of Leonardo Bruni, 201–12. This does not of course mean, as some have suggested, that the humanists were per se uninterested in philosophy. On the relationship of good style and philosophy, see most recently Kraye Jill , “Philologists and Philosophers,” in The Cambridge Companion to Renaissance Humanism , ed. Kraye J. (Cambridge, 1996), 142–60.
4. The manuscripts are listed in Hankins , Repertorium Brunianum (n. 46 above). Bruni's work on the Economics has been especially studied by Josef Soudek, in "The Genesis and Tradition of Leonardo Bruni's Annotated Latin Version of the (Pseudo-) Aristotelian Economics Scriptorium 12 (1958): 260-68
5. idem, "Leonardo Bruni and His Public: A Statistical and Interpretative Study of His Annotated Latin Version of the ps.-Aristotelian Economics," Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History 5 (1968): 49-136