All text columns on these leaves are decorated with a golden arch, the sun, or the moon as a man's face, and a large size figure of an astronomer. The text opens with prognostications on what will happen in the year depending on which day of the week the first day of January falls (if a Monday, the weather will be extreme and "there will be little honey …"; if a Thursday, the weather will be fine, but "there will be little wine"; if a Friday, "many will have sore eyes"). Entries for January advise against bleeding but suggest drinking strong wine with ginger. For February is advised to bleed only through the thumb and to "eat hot food …". For March, "eat roast meat and often bathe, this is healthy". Further months suggest to consume certain medicinal herbs, to eat no meat from the feet of animals, to "not go often to women", with predictions about thunder, weather changes, or meteorites bringing war and death in their wake. In all, a fascinating manuscript.
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This work is now in the collection of the Bibliothèque nationale et universitaire in Strasbourg, Ms. 7. 141. It has been fully digitised here.