Homilies d'Organyà

The Homilies d'Organyà were discovered in the vicarage of Organyà in 1904 by Dr. Joaquim Miret i Sans, a historian and lawyer.

It is dated to the end of the 12th century[2] and is composed of six sermons that include commentaries on various gospels and epistles.

The homilies discovered in Organyà are related to others that were found in Tortosa at the end of the 19th century by Antoine Thomas.

Both have a common homily—that of Ash Wednesday—which has linked them to collections of homilies of Provençal origin, which were in frequent use in that era.

Interference from Provençal is seen in orthographic, phonetic and morphological archaisms, owing to the close political, economic and cultural relations between the Occitan territories and the Catalan counties.