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Few manuscripts can claim to hold as much interest for students of early German religious drama as Innsbruck Universitätsbibliothek Cod. 960, the so-called "Innsbrucker Spielhandschrift."[1] The manuscript, which consists of sixty undecorated paper leaves filled with narrowly spaced verse, is essentially the work of a single scribe known to us only as "Johannes," who according to his own testimony copied out the entire book during a period of about two weeks late in the summer of 1391.[2] Despite its rather unprepossessing appearance, the Innsbruck codex is a rare treasure in that it preserves a complete fourteenth-century playbook containing three highly innovative vernacular dramas: a unique tripartite play depicting the preaching of the Apostles, the Assumption of the Virgin, and the conquest of the Jews (fols. 1r-34v); a justly famous Easter play (fols. 35v-50r); and a spectacular processional play designed for the feast of Corpus Christi (fols. 51r-59r).
The manuscript is all the more remarkable for two other reasons. In the first place, each of the plays in the book is the earliest extant complete work of its kind.[3] Secondly, each play manifests such theatrical, musical, and literary
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