There are at least 31 manuscripts of the Latin version of the
Libellus. The oldest, now
El Escorial, Real Biblioteca de San Lorenzo, R. I. 2, was copied in France in the mid-14th century. Most of the manuscripts, however, are of Italian origin. Besides the Escorial, they are found in libraries in
Cambridge,
Florence,
Glasgow,
Leiden,
London,
Lucca,
Milan,
Modena,
Naples,
Paris,
Pavia,
Pesaro,
Prague,
Stockholm,
Târgu Mureș,
Turin,
Vaduz and the
Vatican City. The late and decidedly Italian manuscript tradition may relate to the
Libellus emphasis on Vegetius' neglected second book, which was seeing renewed attention in 14th-century Italy. There is an Italian translation, ''Delle ordinanze de' Romani
, known from a single manuscript copy from the 17th or 18th century, now London, British Library, Add. 24216. The translation contains only the first 21 chapters, but does have the interpolation from Policraticus''. It is attributed to a certain Landino, which the library catalogue identifies with
Cristoforo Landino (1424–1498). Six printed editions of the
Libellus appeared before 1500. Under the title
De disciplina militari and ascribed to Cicero, it was printed with his other philosophical works by
Wendelin of Speyer at
Venice in 1471. It was printed again at Venice in 1474 under the title
De re militari, dedicated to Theodosius and ascribed to Modestus. Under the same title and author, it was printed at
Rome around the same time and again in 1494. In 1487, a new edition prepared by
Giovanni Sulpizio da Veroli and printed by appeared at Rome under the title
Libellus de vocabulis rei militaris, dedicated to Tacitus but still ascribed to Modestus. In 1495–1496, an edition with the same title was printed at
Bologna. This became the preferred title to distinguish the work from that of Vegetius, which was often called
De re militari. In the 15th century, the
Libellus was frequently copied alongside other military works. It appears together with the works of Vegetius and
Frontinus in Turin,
Biblioteca Reale, Saluzzo 3; Leiden,
Bibliotheek der Rijksuniversiteit, Voss. lat. F. 59; and Paris,
Bibliothèque Mazarine, 3732, where it is also accompanied by the work of
Aelian. Beginning with the 1487 edition and continuing throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, the
Libellus, under the name Modestus, was one of the canonical "
scriptores veteres rei militaris" (old writers on military matters), alongside Vegetius, Frontinus and Aelian. ==Notes==