[3]. There must have been important collections of manuscripts at Nidaros (Trondhjem), where there was a cathedral and several monastic institutions. The King’s Mirror was probably composed in Namdalen, about one hundred miles northeast of Nidaros. See below, pp. [59]–[60].
[4]. See below, p. 237.
[5]. Storm, “Om Tidsforholdet mellem Kongespeilet og Stjórn samt Barlaams Saga”: Arkiv for nordisk Filologi, III, 83-88.
[6]. See Disciplina Clericalis, fabula xxiv: Migne, Patrologia Latina, CLVII, 698-700.
[7]. A fragment of the Elucidarium, comprising, however, the greater part of the work, is published in Annaler for nordisk Oldkyndighed, 1852 and 1853; in the former volume a Danish translation is given; the latter contains the Icelandic text.
[8]. See below, pp. [22]–[25].
[9]. See below, p. 101 (c. viii).
[10]. C. iv. See also Larson, “Scientific Knowledge in the North in the Thirteenth Century”: Publications of the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study, I, 139-146.
[11]. De Natura Rerum, c. xlvi: Migne, Patrologia Latina, XC, 264-265.
[12]. De Naturis Rerum, 441.