Furius Dionysius Filocalus was the leading scribe or calligrapher of the period, and possibly also executed the original miniatures. His name is on the dedication page. He was also a Christian, living in a moment that lay on the cusp between a pagan and a
Christian Roman Empire. The Chronography, like all Roman calendars, is as much an
almanac as a calendar; it includes various texts and lists, including elegant
allegorical depictions of the months. It also includes the important
Liberian Catalogue, a
list of popes, and the Calendar of Filocalus, from which copies of eleven miniatures survive. Among other information, it contains the earliest reference to Christmas (see Part 12 below) and the dates of Roman Games, with their number of
chariot-races. The contents are as follows (from the Barberini Ms. unless stated). All surviving miniatures are full-page, often combined with some text in various ways: • Part 1: title page and dedication - 1 miniature • Part 2: images of the personifications of the cities of Rome, Alexandria, Constantinople and Trier - 4 miniatures • Part 3: images of the emperors and the birthdays of the Caesars - 2 miniatures • Part 4: images of the seven planets with a calendar of the hours - 5 surviving miniatures. Copies of the emblematic drawings appear in a
Carolingian text that portrays Mercury and Venus in
heliocentric orbits. • Part 5: the signs of the Zodiac – no miniatures surviving in this manuscript; four in other copies • Part 6: the Philocalian calendar – seven miniatures of personifications of the Months in this MS; the full set appears in other copies On December 25: "·INVICTI··XXX" – "Birthday of the unconquered, games ordered, thirty races" – is the oldest literary reference to the pagan feast of
Sol Invictus • Part 7: consular portraits of the emperors – 2 miniatures (the last in the MS) • Part 8:
list (fasti) of the
Roman consuls to AD 354 At AD 1: "Hoc cons. dominus Iesus Christus natus est VIII kal. Ian. d. Ven. luna xv." – "When these
[Gaius Caesar and
Lucius Aemilius Paullus] were consuls, Lord Jesus Christ was born 8 days before the kalends of January [December 25] on the day of Venus Moon 15" – is a historical reference • Part 9: the dates of Easter from AD 312 to 411 • Part 10:
list of the
prefects of the city of Rome from 254 to 354 AD • Part 11: commemoration dates of past popes from AD 255 to 352 • Part 12: commemoration dates of the martyrs Line 1: "VIII kal. Ian. natus Christus in Betleem Iudeae" – "Eighth day before the kalends of January [December 25] Birth of Christ in Bethlehem of Judea" – is the oldest reference to Jesus' birth as an annual feast day • Part 13: bishops of Rome, the Liberian Catalogue • Part 14: The
14 regions of the City [of Rome] • Part 15: Chronicle of the Bible • Part 16: Chronicle of the City of Rome (a list of rulers with short comments) ==Chronology of Rome==