Neither manuscript indicates its place of origin.
The earliest Greek manuscripts of the Alexander romance, as they have survived, indicate that it was composed at Alexandria in the 3rd century.
There he died on 17 January 646, which day several manuscripts of the Hieronymian Martyrology indicate as his feast.
The manuscript of this work indicates that the two parts (prose and verse) were regarded as independent works and studied or commented upon separately.
Although there may well be gradations within this class, the manuscripts indicate none.
The manuscript does not indicate when and by whom it was copied, and there are no ownership seals.
Bach's manuscript indicates that it was written for the 15th Sunday after Trinity "et in ogni tempo" ("and at any time").
Schubert's original manuscript indicates that he wished to score the piece with horns, rather than trombones.
(3) The manuscript indicates that there were several peace factions during the course of the war.
The manuscript to this work indicates that the strings should play offstage, as was done here, but this setup never works in practice.