@article{Andrzej Borkowski_2014, title={Wpływy bizantyjsko-bałkańskie na ziemiach polskich na przykładzie Kodeksu Supraskiego}, url={https://elpis.uwb.edu.pl/index.php/Elpis/article/view/103}, DOI={10.15290/elpis.2013.15.08}, abstractNote={The Codex Suprasliensis (called also the Retkov Sbornik), a Cyrillic manuscript copied in the late 10th century, is<br />the largest extant Bulgarian manuscript from the Preslav literary school. Codex Suprasliensis contains 24 vitae of Christian<br />saints for March and 23 homilies for the movable cycle of the church year. The Codex Suprasliensis is written on<br />parchment and shows careful writing and craftsmanship. It was discovered in 1823 in the Monastery of Supraśl by Canon<br />Michał Bobrowski. He sent it to the Slovenian scholar Bartholomaeus (Jernej) Kopitar for study. After Kopitar’s death<br />the first 118 folios were preserved in the University Library in Ljubljana, where they are still kept. The following 16 leaves<br />were purchased by A. F. Byčkov in 1856 and are now located in the Russian National Library in St. Petersburg. The<br />remaining 151 leaves found themselves in the collection of the Counts Zamoyski; this so-called Warsaw part disappeared<br />during World War II and was long considered lost until it reemerged in the USA and was returned to Poland in 1968. It is<br />now located in the National Library in Warsaw. The Codex Suprasliensis has been listed in the UNESCO’s Memory of the<br />World Register since 2007. The Codex Suprasliensis is very importand by all who are interested in the history of Bulgaria,<br />the Byzantine Commonwealth, the Balkans and Slavia Orthodoxa.}, number={15}, journal={Elpis}, author={Andrzej Borkowski, Ks. Archimandryta}, year={2014}, month={grudz.}, pages={63–68} }