His best-known work is the Codex Fuldensis, one of the most ancient manuscripts of the Vulgate, prepared under his direction, and which he himself revised and corrected.
Codex Sinaiticus | codex | Codex Vaticanus | Lorsch codex | Codex Bezae | Codex | Roda Codex | Leningrad Codex | Hypatian Codex | Codex Washingtonianus | Codex Vercellensis | Codex Tchacos | Codex Sangallensis 878 | Codex Calixtinus | Codex Borgia | Codex Beratinus | Codex Aureus of Lorsch | Codex Atlanticus | Codex Argenteus | Codex Amiatinus | Paris Codex | Nowell Codex | Montpellier Codex | List of food additives,'' Codex Alimentarius | List of food additives, Codex Alimentarius | Dresden Codex | Codex (Warhammer 40,000) | Codex Vyssegradensis | Codex Vaticanus Ottobonianus Latinus 1829 | Codex Theodosianus |
After the Codex Fuldensis, it would appear that members of the Western family lead an underground existence, popping into view over the centuries in an Old High German translation (c. 830), a Dutch (c. 1280), a Venetian manuscript of the 13th century, and a Middle English manuscript from 1400 that was once owned by Samuel Pepys.