46 résultats
1569746Paris: Morel 1569. Hardcover. Fair. The last Italian novel that Boccaccio prepared Il Corbaccio The Crow; around this time 1354-55 a.d. and after Boccaccio primarily focused on Latin works. This copy is a 1569 edition in the original Italian but printed in France by Morel but Morel Italianized his name to appeal to Italians on the title page. This novel finds some disfavor with modern readers. In this work a man is being rebutted by a widow but upon falling asleep her dead husband visits him and confides in him all the ways she's best left alone. In concert the sleeping man and the dead man decide to write this work warning young men of the deceits of some women. The work has since been dubbed ""misogynistic"" despite at almost the same time Boccaccio preparing his Latin work recording a selection of noble women De Claris Mulieribus. Other's claim that surely Boccaccio must have been jilted by a widow to write such a scathing work. About Boccaccio - Giovanni Boccaccio 1313 1375 was an Italian writer poet correspondent of Petrarch and an important Renaissance humanist. Born in the town of Certaldo he became so well known as a writer that he was sometimes simply known as ""the Certaldese"" and one of the most important figures in the European literary panorama of the fourteenth century. Some scholars including Vittore Branca define him as the greatest European prose writer of his time a versatile writer who amalgamated different literary trends and genres making them converge in original works thanks to a creative activity exercised under the banner of experimentalism. His most notable work is The Decameron. About the Printer from the website Printing in France - ""In 1549 Morel decided like many before him to get involved in the book trade. He became a proof-reader for Charlotte Guillard d. 1557 one of the famous woman printers of sixteenth-century Paris. In 1557 Morel decided to become a printer himself following the death of Charlotte Guillard in the same year. By 1570 Fédéric I Morel was one of the most prestigious printers in Paris. It is thus not surprising to see him being appointed royal printer on 4 March 1571 following the move by his wifes cousin Robert II Estienne to Geneva."" Provenance - Ex-libris plate of George Benson Weston a Harvard and Columbia graduate who edited a work on Italian literature. Also his inscription stating that he bought the book in Naples in 1904. Also the ticket of the Naples bookseller F. Casella established 1852. Bibliographic Details - Universal Short Title Catalogue USTC number 130039 found in many of the world's best libraries. Pettegree Walsby and Wilkinson - 58272 Physical Attributes - Measures approx. 11 x 17 x 1.75 cm. Signed in 8 octavo. Hardcover. Marbled paper covering pasteboards and a leather spine. Spine broken into six compartments by five gilt fillet lines title in gilt in one compartment five compartments with a blind tool roll of circles and palm fronds making the top and bottom border. Edges sprinkled brown. Pages - xvi 174 all numbered pages present but missing one blank leaf. Collation - A-G8 H7 I-L8 missing H8 a blank leaf that went between two sections and was not included in the numbering which is perhaps why it was removed Condition - This copy missing one blank leaf which would be the 8th leaf in the H gathering between two sections. Binding with some wear at edges corners and spine. Bookseller ticket and ex libris of George Beson Weston on pastedown. Blank unnumbered endpapers stating Gamba 205 and that Weston purchased the book Naples July 5 1904. Some toning and foxing throughout. Occasional thumb. Title page with an old manuscript provenance inscription under the title. A manuscript note in the fore-edge margin of page 111. Morel
15263293Gregorio Di Gregori 10,5 x 16 In Vinegia 1526 Volume petit in-8°, reliure plein vélin rigide d'époque, tranches bleu sombre, titre au dos manuscrit à l'encre noir, page de titre gravée sur bois encadrée de quatre blocs de frises composées d'oiseaux et de guirlandes florales, imprimeur et date d'impression au colophon "stampata in Vinegia per Gregorio de Gregori nel M.D.XXVI. del mese de Maggio".(ALB5) PHOTOS NUMERIQUES DISPONIBLES PAR EMAIL SUR SIMPLE DEMANDE-DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPS MAY BE AVAILABLE ON REQUESt. Livre
15263293Gregorio Di Gregori 10,5 x 16 In Vinegia 1526 Volume petit in-8°, reliure plein vélin rigide d'époque, tranches bleu sombre, titre au dos manuscrit à l'encre noir, page de titre gravée sur bois encadrée de quatre blocs de frises composées d'oiseaux et de guirlandes florales, imprimeur et date d'impression au colophon "stampata in Vinegia per Gregorio de Gregori nel M.D.XXVI. del mese de Maggio".(ALB5) PHOTOS NUMERIQUES DISPONIBLES PAR EMAIL SUR SIMPLE DEMANDE-DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPS MAY BE AVAILABLE ON REQUESt. Livre
157417322AB1574. Fiorenza Giunti 1574. 20 : 145 cm. 20 leaves 142 pages 8 leaves with 2 woddcut portraits and two woodcut initials. Contemporary vellum First edition rare. - From the library of M. Landau with his Exlibris. - The first pages at the edges a bit rubbed occasionally some foxing the last pages with some waterstains at the edges not affecting the text; binding a bit wrinkled edgas a bit damaged. hardcover
152011557J. Gourmont & J. Petit Paris 1520 1520. Opb 4° 109s. Fraktur. fachmännisch restauriert am Ende des Buches restaurierte Fehlstellen mit geringem Textverlust. sonst in gutem Zustand AZA8 SL2. HC J. Gourmont & J. Petit, Paris 1520 (?), unknown
153965731Bern, Matthias Apiarius, 1539. Fol. Mit 2 versch. Holzschn.-Druckermarken (am Titel u. dem letzten Blatt, eine von Hans Holbein) u. 15 (dav. 2 wiederh.) fast halbseitigen Textholzschnitten (davon 9 monogrammiert J[akob] K[allenberg]). 6 nn., LXXXI num., 1 nn. Bll., Blauer Kleisterpapier-Bd. d. 18. Jhds. m. Farbschnitt in mod. blauer Maroquin-Kassette m. goldgepr. Rückentitel.
1551ABAA25-4<p>Lyon Guillaume Rouille 1551.</p><p>12mo 158 x 101 mm of 384 pp. 4 ll the last one doubled numerous ornamented initials two tiny holes in title small stain in lower margin of pp. 17-20. A fine copy.</p><p>Red morocco triple gold fillet around the covers spine ribbed richly decorated with the special crowned dolphin lace at the foot decorated edges inner gilt roulette gilt edges on marbling. <em>Bound in the 17th century.</em></p><p><strong>One of Boccaccio's most famous works the 'De claris mulieribus' written in Latin around 1360 is a book both erudite and amusing intended for a wide audience</strong>. Following the model of Petrarch's <em>Hommes illustres</em> Boccaccio recounts the lives of 104 famous women queens and courtesans virtuous and promiscuous from Eve to Pope Jeanne.</p><p><strong>First edition of this translation by Denis Sauvage. </strong>This is the first French translation after the Italian version due to Denis Sauvage; it replaced that which L.A. Ridolfi had given according to the Latin original.</p><p>Written in 1361-1362 Boccaccio's <em>De mulieribus claris</em> <em>The Illustrious Women</em> is the first collection of women's biographs in western history.</p><p>Inspired by Boccaccio's own admission by his friend Petrarch's <em>De viris illustribus </em><em>The Illustrious Men</em> this work offers a reasoned compilation of "stories" both pagan and Christian of remarkable women whose excellence in good or evil Boccaccio highlights even if it means drawing from this "evil" the appropriate moral lesson. We thus find the great figures traced by Titus Livius Pliny the Elder or Suetonius but also from Saint Jerome or the Bible the book begins with a "biography" of Eve. There is certainly no lack of the traditional depreciatory remarks inherited from the two antiquities on the weakness of women's character but in the praise of figures such as Nicostrata or Epicharis a certain evolution of mentalities is already apparent provoked by the prodromal stages of humanist reflection on female virtues.</p><p><strong>This book quickly translated into French</strong> Laurent de Premierfait or into German Heinrich Steinhöwel strongly marked its time since Chaucer drew on it for The Canterbury Tales and Christine de Pisan in 1405 for her Livre de la cité des dames.</p><p><strong>In this newly inspiring work Boccace therefore gives the modern reader an overview vast and often picturious of medieval attitudes to women</strong> at a time when the renascent elites were going to change their view of women's potential Jean-Yves Boriaud <em>Les Femmes illustres</em> / <em>De Mulieribus claris</em>.</p><p>"<em>The work written between 1360 and 1362 amplified and recast in later years contains the biography of 104 famous ladies of all times from Eve to Queen Joan of Naples; it is dedicated to the beautiful Andrée Acciaiuoli sister of the great seneschal Nicolas Acciaiuoli second wife of a Count of Altavilla.</em></p><p><em>The example of Petrarch and his treatise on illustrious men had a significant influence on Boccaccio as he himself acknowledged. The narrative vein expands with some freedom as in the pages devoted to the life of the papess Joan the voluptuous length on the love affairs of Thisbe and the story of the naive Paulina a Roman beloved of the God Anubis which is rather reminiscent of the tale of Lisette and the angel Gabriel in the Decameron. . Taken as a whole the volume is a compromise between historical scholarship and storytelling a pleasant book of scholarship intended not only for men but also for women - who says Boccaccio for his excuse being accustomed to hear stories have a greater need of them and are entertained by a copious exposition</em>." T. F. G. Rouville.</p><p>Beautiful italic printing by Philibert Rollet with nice initials and some ornaments. The title is set in a remarkable wood frame reproduced by Baudrier.</p><p><strong>Fine copy of exceptional elegance covered with a fine seventeenth century binding the spine of which bears the crowned dolphin lace.</strong></p><p>Label of the <em>Pierre Berès</em> bookshop on the first flyleaf it appeared under n°32 of its 1951 catalogue <em>Livres Français des quinzième & seizième siècles</em> at a price of 45 000 fr.</p><p>FR</p><p>Lyon Guillaume Rouille 1551.</p><p>In-12 de 384 pp. 4 ff. le dernier doublé nombreuses initiales ornées deux infimes trous ds. le titre pte. tache ds. la marge inf. des pp. 17 à 20. Exemplaire réglé.</p><p>Maroquin rouge triple filet or autour des plats dos à nerfs richement orné avec la dentelle spéciale au dauphin couronné en pied coupes décorées roulette intérieure dorée tranches dorées sur marbrures. <em>Reliure du XVIIe siècle</em>.</p><p>158 x 101 mm.</p><p><strong>Une des œuvres célèbres de Boccace le 'De claris mulieribus' composé en latin vers 1360 est un livre à la fois érudit et amusant destiné à un large public</strong>. Suivant le modèle des <em>Hommes illustres</em> de Pétrarque Boccace y raconte les vies de 104 femmes célèbres reines ou courtisanes vertueuses ou libertines d'Eve à la papesse Jeanne.</p><p><strong>Edition originale de cette traduction due à Denis Sauvage.</strong> Il s'agit de la première traduction française d'après la version italienne due à Denis Sauvage ; elle remplaçait celle que L.A. Ridolfi avait donnée d'après l'original latin.</p><p>Rédigé en 1361-1362 le <em>De mulieribus claris</em> <em>Les Femmes illustres</em> de Boccace constitue <strong>la première collection dans l'histoire occidentale de biographies féminines. </strong></p><p>Inspiré de l'aveu même de Boccace par la lecture du <em>De viris illustribus</em> <em>Les Hommes Illustres</em> de son ami Pétrarque cet ouvrage propose une compilation raisonnée des " histoires " païennes et chrétiennes de femmes remarquables dont Boccace met en exergue l'excellence dans le bien ou le mal quitte à tirer de ce " mal " la leçon de morale appropriée. On y retrouve donc de grandes silhouettes tracées par Tite-Live Pline lʼAncien ou Suétone mais venues aussi de saint Jérôme ou de la Bible le livre commence par une " biographie " d'Eve. Les propos dépréciatifs traditionnels hérités des deux antiquités sur la faiblesse de caractère des femmes nʼy manquent certes pas mais transparaît déjà dans la louange de figures comme celles de Nicostrata ou Epicharis une évolution certaine des mentalités provoquée par les prodromes de la réflexion humaniste sur les vertus féminines.</p><p><strong>Ce livre vite traduit en français</strong> Laurent de Premierfait ou en allemand Heinrich Steinhöwel <strong>marqua fortement son époque </strong>puisquʼy puisèrent aussi bien Chaucer pour <em>The Canterbury Tales</em> que Christine de Pisan en 1405 pour son <em>Livre de la cité des dames</em>.</p><p><strong>Dans cet ouvrage d'inspiration nouvelle Boccace donne donc au lecteur moderne un aperçu vaste et souvent piquant des attitudes médiévales à l'égard des femmes</strong><strong></strong> à un moment où les élites renaissantes vont changer leur regard sur les potentialités féminines. Jean-Yves Boriaud <em>Les Femmes illustres / De Mulieribus claris</em>.</p><p><em>" L'œuvre écrite entre 1360 et 1362 amplifiée et refondue dans les années postérieures contient la biographie de 104 dames de renom de tous les temps d'Ève à la reine Jeanne de Naples ; elle est dédiée à la très belle Andrée Acciaiuoli sœur du grand sénéchal Nicolas Acciaiuoli épouse en secondes noces d'un comte d'Altavilla.</em></p><p><em>L'exemple de Pétrarque et de son traité des </em>Hommes illustres<em> influença notablement Boccace ainsi qu'il l'a reconnu lui-même. La veine narrative s'y élargit avec quelque liberté comme dans les pages consacrées à la vie de la papesse Jeanne aux voluptueuses longueurs sur les amours de Thisbé à l'histoire de la naïve Paulina Romaine aimée du Dieu Anubis qui rappelle d'assez près le conte de Lisette et de l'ange Gabriel du Décaméron. … Dans son ensemble le volume est un compromis entre l'érudition historique et le conte un plaisant livre d'érudition destiné non seulement aux hommes mais aussi aux femmes - lesquelles déclare Boccace pour son excuse étant habituées à entendre des histoires en ont un besoin plus grand et se divertissent d'un copieux exposé. "</em> T. F. G. Rouville.</p><p>Jolie impression en italique de Philibert Rollet avec de jolies initiales et quelques ornements. Le titre est placé dans un remarquable encadrement sur bois reproduit par Baudrier.</p><p><strong>Exemplaire réglé d'une élégance exceptionnelle revêtu d'une fine reliure du dix-septième siècle dont le dos porte en pied la dentelle au dauphin couronné.</strong></p><p>Etiquette de la librairie <em>Pierre Berès</em> au premier contreplat il a figuré sous le n°32 de son catalogue <em>Livres Français des quinzième & seizième siècles</em> de 1951 au prix de 45 000 fr.</p> hardcover
15511110911551 In Vinegia al segno del Pozzo, 1551, per Pietro & Giovan Maria fratelli dei Nicolini da Sabbio, Nell'Anno del Signore MDLI. à tredici d'Agosto, 1 volume in-16 de 150x100 mm environ, 1f.blanc, titre avec large vignette à la devise et la marque de l'imprimeur (page de titre restaurée sur la marge supérieure), 264 ff. (un numéro pour 2 pages), 4ff. (all'illlustre S. Conte), 8ff. (table), 1f., demi-reliure en veau cognac à coins et cartonnage marbré, dos lisse portant titres et fers dorés. Cuir restauré et contregardes seules remplacées, marges un peu courtes par endroits, quelques rousseurs et petites mouillures dans les marges, fréquentes erreurs de numérotation et feuillets reliés dans le désordre p. 150à 154 (cahier T) et 222 à 235 (cahier FF) mais les signatures restent cohérentes, restauration sur un feuillet de la table. Le" Registro" se trouve avant la table et le colophon se trouve à la fin de la table. Version italienne "Des Cas vivants illustres", texte rédigé en latin par Boccace ("De casibus virorum illustrium").
1569146435Paris: Federigo Morello 1569. Rare sixteenth century edition of this literary work in the original Italian. Duodecimo original full vellum. In near fine condition with light splitting to the front interior hinge. Giovanni Boccaccio was an Italian writer poet correspondent of Petrarch and an important Renaissance humanist. Often referred to as one of the "Three Crowns" of Italian literature along with Dante Alighieri and Petrarch Boccaccio is responsible for the creation of classic works of imaginative literature such as 'The Decameron' and setting the stage of Renaissance Humanism in Italy. Federigo Morello hardcover
1594957P37Firenze: Filippo Giunti 1594. Leather. Very Good Indeed. 6.5" by 4". None. An uncommon early edition of one of the last works written in Italian by Boaccaccio. An uncommon early edition published in Florence at the end of the sixteenth century.In the original Italian.'Il Corbaccio' or 'The Crow' is a satirical novella in which a man has been rebutted by a widow and is subsequently visited by the widow's dead husband in his dream telling him why she is best left alone.By the fourteenth century Italian author Giovanni Boccaccio one of the most important authors of the country's history.Published by Filippo Giunti one of the leading printing firms in Florence in the sixteenth century.Register runs as: 4 A-G8 H-I4. Collated complete.Bookplate of Luigi Strano to the front paste down an author of poetry. In a full calf binding. Externally smart with light marks to the boards and spine. Bookplate to the front paste down. Prior owner's ink to the rear endpaper. Internally firmly bound. Pages are lightly age-toned and generally clean with scattered spots and a small tidemark to the tail of the first few pages. Small patch of worming to the first 2 leaves with no loss of text. Prior owner's ink inscription to the head of the title page. The occasional ink underlining to the text. Very Good Indeed Filippo Giunti hardcover
152770195senza luogo Londra senza note editoriali Tommaso Edlin 1527 ma 1725. In 4° piena pelle coeva con bei fregi nervi e titolo al dorso qualche minima traccia di consunzione d'uso ma comunque molto buona. Bella antiporta incisa B. Baron con leone unicorno e allegoria della Musa che accompagna il Poeta piccolo angelo indica il cielo frontespizio dell'originale del 1527 con piccola marca tipografica segue una carta con la dedicatoria di Paolo Rolli tavola con ritratto inciso del Boccaccio cc. 6 n.n. con la vita dell'A. scritta da Filippo Di Matteo Villani altra carta con la riproposta del frontespizio originale che al retro propone i dati editoriali effettivi cc. 284. In fine sono poste 7 cc. non numerate con i "Nomi dè Signori sottoscriventi" e "Tavola sopra il libro chiamato Decameron cognominato Principe Galeotto ." seguono ancora 49 cc. con le Osservazioni dell'editore che provocarono aspre censure del Buonamici. Esemplare in ottimo stato di conservazione ad ampi margini tagli rossi; curiosa etichetta coeva in carta posiziona questo volume fra quelli "Proibiti". Gamba 186. Bacchi della Lega pag 49 senza luogo (Londra), senza note editoriali (Tommaso Edlin) unknown
158272228Firenze Florence: Nellastamperia 1582. Seconda Editione. Hardcover. Good. 23 x 16 cm. Octavo. 585pp 78pp. Bound into worn flexible vellum paper spine label. Second edition with the censorship of Lionardo Salviati: Italian humanist philogist and writer. Salviati modified 52 of the short stories leaving 48 intact. Decorative initials. Previous owners stamps on title page Giusep: Talinu. There is staining effecting some of the last and first few dozen pages. The staining avoids the text on most but not all pages. Binding remains tight. Nellastamperia hardcover
158852227Venetia: Fabio & Agostino Zoppini Fratelli & Onofrio Fari Compagni. Good. 1588. Hardcover. Contemporary vellum with small loss to spine head. Title page with engraved vignette. With front and rear blanks. Some worming affects text on last pages marginal staining to early pages. Mild foxing some toning. Pp. 8 564 68. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall . Fabio & Agostino Zoppini Fratelli, & Onofrio Fari Compagni hardcover
1552184537Venetia: V. Valgrisio 1552. Leather bound. Fair heavy wear to leather boards with sections worn off. Expected age toning to pages but text is otherwise clear and binding is fairly tight. Bound in brown leather boards; five raised bands and gilt tooling on spine; all edge red tinted; red and blue marble illustrated end papers; bw illustrated title page; 10 487 10 pp. The rear of the book contains a separate section titled "Vocabolario Generale di Tutte le Voci Vsate dal Boccaccio." which is 67 pp. Text in Italian. "La vita di m. Giovan Boccaccio descritta da m. Francesco Sansovino": p. 1-6. V. Valgrisio hardcover
1573047703Florence: Giunti 1573. Early Edition. Hardcover. Very Good Condition. Later quarter calf front cover and free endpaper detached rear board just about detached. Mild dampstain over first 100 pages scattered foxing and browning but generally quite bright otherwise. Two small worm holes in gutter of final colophon leaf. Two portraits Boccaccio and an unidentified woman and lovely historiated initials throughout - a finely printed Giunti edition of Boccaccio's masterpiece. 32 580 1pp. Admas B2156 Brunet I 1002 note Pettas Giunti of Florence 496.<br /> <br /> The first of the famed Council of Trent editions - having been unable to ban a book as widespread and beloved as The Decameron it was censured in 1564 the council of Trent instead removed all mention of priests clergy and the Church from the work while leaving all the erotic bits that would have been too easily missed. Marketed as a "correction" of earlier supposedly erroneous editions. Provenance: Kimbolton Castle copy with case/shelf ticket inside front cover.<br /> <br /> Size: Quarto 4to. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Poetry; Antiquarian & Rare. Inventory No: 047703. Giunti hardcover
159056659Venetia Fabio & Agostin Zoppini Fratelli & Onofrio Farri 1590. 4to. Contemp. full vellum. Marbled edges. Printers woodcut-device on title-page. 854490 pp. Many large initial in woodcut 10 large woodcut illustrations in the text 3/4-page woodcut portrait on verso of fol.4. A few faint brownspots. Clean and fine. <br/><br/><em>Brunet I1002. - Not in Adams. </em> hardcover
158233055-217Florence Filippo & Iacopo Giunti October 1582. Printer's woodcut device on title large historiated woodcut initials a different printer's device on last leaf. In Italics. 16 leaves 585 pp. 1 38 leaves. 4to c. 210 x 145 mm. 18th century half calf rep. Florence Filippo & Iacopo Giunti October 1582. An important edition of this classic of Italian literature by Giovanni Boccaccio 1331-1375. This literary ten-day odyssey became the emblem of creative expression in the Italian Renaissance about the human experience its nature and psyche. Boccaccio's epic is edited here by Leonardo Salviati 1540-1589 a Florentine nobleman who was a founder member of the Accademia della Crusca. Its avowed aim was to uphold the purity of the Tuscan language as it had been in the fourteenth century. The Accademia Florentina founded in 1540 was dedicated to the same purpose and Salviati was active in both bodies. In 1584 Salviati published his "Degli Avvertimenti della Lingua sopra il Decamerone" a detailed discussion about the language used by Boccaccio. In this edition of the Decameron Salviati returned to the old texts and dedicated the work to Jacopo Buoncompagni one of his patrons. The text includes many beautiful historiated initials. - A very well printed and rare edition. - Ind. Aur. 120.402; Adams B-2158; STC Italian 110; Brunet I 1002; Gamba Serie dei testi di lingua p. 59 no. 181. LITERATURE:ITALIAN ; EROTICA ; GRAPHIC ARTS:GIUNTA ; Florence, Filippo & Iacopo Giunti unknown
1590D6205Venice: appresso Fabio e Agostino Zoppini fratelli e Onofrio Farri compagni 1590. Hardcover. Very Good. 4to 210 x154mm. 8 544pp 92 index epithets glossary by Ruscelli. Collation: ast. 4; A-2M 8; 2N 2; 2O-2R 8; 2S 4. Woodcut printers device to title. Oval woodcut portrait of Luigi Groto Cieco dAdria 1541-1585 facing first text page 10 woodcut illustrations numerous woodcut initials most historiated with griffins putti other figures or foliage and decorative chapter head- and tailpieces. Text in italic type; headlines chapter headings and marginalia in Roman. Printed marginalia. Early vellum; title with upper margin stained cancelled inscription and small tear some wear mostly on preliminaries; joints starting. Collection inscription in abbreviated Italian on front pastedown dated 1841 possibly from a Jesuit Society. Early booksellers stamp C. Simms of Manchester. <br/><br/>Good large quarto copy of Giovanni Boccaccios Decameron redacted by Luigi Groto 1541-1582 from the edition edited by Girolamo Ruscelli 1500s-1556 and first published two years previously. Groto a minor Venetian writer reworked Boccaccios famous tale; retaining parts of the original parable but also creating his own tangents. Groto for instance created a predicament concerning a young man who finds himself confronted by three different ladies he has been secretly courting. When his deceit is discovered he must answer as to which of them is his true love. The lengthy narration of the amoroso imbroglio is Grotos own literary stamp and he hoped with these revisions he would gain literary fame stating I will give life and light to Boccaccio and he will do likewise for me . I will rescue him from darkness and burial and he in turn will rescue me from obscurity Ironically Grotos retelling of the Decameron remains known for it deformations of the tale rather than its celebration. Each of the ten sections are preceded by an overview written by Ruscelli the well-known editor of Ptolemys Geographia of 1754 and a large woodcut illustration depicting narrative scenes of the Decameron tale. Brunet I 1002; STC Italy I: p.256. appresso Fabio e Agostino Zoppini fratelli e Onofrio Farri compagni hardcover
151829126<p>This 1815–1816 Italian-language edition of Giovanni Boccaccio's Il Decamerone printed in London comprises five volumes in two tomes. The set includes Filippo Villani's biographical sketch of Boccaccio. Each day a group of young Florentines fleeing the plague share stories building a collection of tales drawn from themes of wit misadventure romance and folk tradition. The format is sextodecimo 16mo compactly sized at approximately 5.5 x 3.5 inches and bound in marbled boards with leather spines and morocco title labels. Very Good condition with firm binding and clean internal pages; minor wear consistent with age. No illustrations noted. Edition: 1815–1816 London. Collation: each volume separately paged. #29126 PHOTOS AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST.</p> hardcover
157321702Florenz, Giunti, 1573. 16 Bll., 578 S., 2 Bll. mit einigen einigen großen, figürlichen Holzschnitt-Initialen und Holzschnitt-Vignetten. 8°. Pgmt. der Zeit (knitterfaltig, etw. fleckig und gebräunt sowie etw. bestoßen, oberes Kapitell mit kl. Einriss). [5 Warenabbildungen]
1590D6205Venice: appresso Fabio e Agostino Zoppini fratelli e Onofrio Farri compagni 1590. Hardcover. Very Good. 4to 210 x154mm. 8 544pp 92 index epithets glossary by Ruscelli. Collation: ast. 4; A-2M 8; 2N 2; 2O-2R 8; 2S 4. Woodcut printers device to title. Oval woodcut portrait of Luigi Groto Cieco dAdria 1541-1585 facing first text page 10 woodcut illustrations numerous woodcut initials most historiated with griffins putti other figures or foliage and decorative chapter head- and tailpieces. Text in italic type; headlines chapter headings and marginalia in Roman. Printed marginalia. Early vellum; title with upper margin stained cancelled inscription and small tear some wear mostly on preliminaries; joints starting. Collection inscription in abbreviated Italian on front pastedown dated 1841 possibly from a Jesuit Society. Early booksellers stamp C. Simms of Manchester. <br/><br/>Good large quarto copy of Giovanni Boccaccios Decameron redacted by Luigi Groto 1541-1582 from the edition edited by Girolamo Ruscelli 1500s-1556 and first published two years previously. Groto a minor Venetian writer reworked Boccaccios famous tale; retaining parts of the original parable but also creating his own tangents. Groto for instance created a predicament concerning a young man who finds himself confronted by three different ladies he has been secretly courting. When his deceit is discovered he must answer as to which of them is his true love. The lengthy narration of the amoroso imbroglio is Grotos own literary stamp and he hoped with these revisions he would gain literary fame stating I will give life and light to Boccaccio and he will do likewise for me . I will rescue him from darkness and burial and he in turn will rescue me from obscurity Ironically Grotos retelling of the Decameron remains known for it deformations of the tale rather than its celebration. Each of the ten sections are preceded by an overview written by Ruscelli the well-known editor of Ptolemys Geographia of 1754 and a large woodcut illustration depicting narrative scenes of the Decameron tale. Brunet I 1002; STC Italy I: p.256. appresso Fabio e Agostino Zoppini fratelli e Onofrio Farri compagni hardcover books
1550CLL-615Venise, Giolito de' Ferrari, 1550 In-4 de (6)ff., 502pp., 1 f. bl., (30)ff., 1 f. bl., sign.: *6, A-HH8, II4, a4, b-d8, e4, veau raciné havane, filet à froid d'encadrement sur les plats, dos à nerfs orné de caissons de fleurons dorés, pièce de titre de maroquin rouge, roulette dorée sur les coupes, tranches rouges (reliure du XVIIIesiècle).
159056659Venetia, Fabio & Agostin Zoppini Fratelli & Onofrio Farri, (1590). 4to. Contemp. full vellum. Marbled edges. Printers woodcut-device on title-page. (8),544,(90) pp., Many large initial in woodcut, 10 large woodcut illustrations in the text (3/4-page), woodcut portrait on verso of fol.4. A few faint brownspots. Clean and fine.
1552184537Venetia: V. Valgrisio 1552. Leather bound. Fair heavy wear to leather boards with sections worn off. Expected age toning to pages but text is otherwise clear and binding is fairly tight. Bound in brown leather boards; five raised bands and gilt tooling on spine; all edge red tinted; red and blue marble illustrated end papers; bw illustrated title page; 10 487 10 pp. The rear of the book contains a separate section titled "Vocabolario Generale di Tutte le Voci Vsate dal Boccaccio." which is 67 pp. Text in Italian. "La vita di m. Giovan Boccaccio descritta da m. Francesco Sansovino": p. 1-6. V. Valgrisio unknown books
1554L1NFVE7U6EX8Venice: device of Domenico Giglio colophon: Francesco Rampazetto 1554. Contemporary limp vellum sewn on 3 alum-tawed supports laced through the joints with manuscript title down the spine in rotunda gothic lettering 6 mm x-height with decorated capitals: Filocopo del Boccaccio. Small 8vo 15 x 11 cm. With Giglios woodcut device a bird with a scorpion in its beak above a pot with DG above 2 winged sea-goats with motto non sine quare sic facio and N.S.C.C.F. on the title-page 6 woodcut decorated initials 3 series plus 2 repeats. Set in Aldine-style italic types with upright capitals with incidental roman. Second Sansovino edition of Boccaccio's first important work Il Filocolo here Filocopo a prose romance written ca. 1334-1336 about twenty years before the Decameron. Boccaccio reworked the 12th-century French love story of Floire Florio muslim Prince of Andalusia and Blancheflor Biancifiore the orphaned daughter of his mother's Roman Christian lady-in-waiting. They grow up together in the royal household but when they fall in love his parents try to break up the romance by selling her to merchants who will take her to Alexandria to join a harem. Florio under the pseudonym Filocopo rescues and marries her. He converts to Christianity and they return home where he ascends the throne and his people embrace Christianity. Boccaccio introduced many new elements into the story and told it with his usual flare for often risqué humour. It served as inspiration for writers around the world from Chaucer to Keats and Boccaccio himself further developed several episodes for stories in his Decameron.Francesco Sansovino 1521-1583 had produced the first variorum edition of the Decameron in 1546 and then turned his editorial scholarship to Il Filocolo beginning with Gaetano's text editions in 1527 and 1538. With 2 early owners' inscriptions on the title-page both struck through and part of one abraded. With a small hole in the title-page and the corners of a few leaves dog-eared but otherwise internally in very good condition. The binding is worn but the lovely manuscript title on the spine remains clear. Second edition of the best Renaissance redaction of Boccaccio's important influential and entertaining first major work.l EDIT 16 6334; Gay & Lemonnyer col. 726; USTC 814845; cf. Gamba Italiana letteratura 198 cr. other eds.; for the text: Kirkham et al. eds. Boccaccio: a critical guide pp. 87-93; Marrone Encyclopedia of Italian literary studies pp. 252-253. [device of Domenico Giglio] (colophon: Francesco Rampazetto, hardcover