Individual texts from the
Corpus began to appear in printed editions from 1491. In 1554,
Adrianus Turnebus published a printed edition of the majority of the
Corpus, including the important Agrimensores, under the title
De Agrorum Conditionibus et Constitutionibus Limitum (On the Creation of Fields and Delimitation of their Borders).
Petrus Scriverius used the Codex Arcerianus as the basis of his edition in 1607. The German ancient historian,
Karl Lachmann edited significant portions of the collection, especially the writings of the Agrimensores Frontinues, Agennius Urbicus, Hyginus Gromaticus and Siculus Flaccus, as well as the
Libri Coloniarum in 1848. The 1913 edition of
Carl Olof Thulin contains only a few works. The 2000 edition of Brian Campbell is much broader and also contains an English translation. == References ==