389 résultats
1870280121870 Une PAGE DE MISSEL , écrite et superbement enluminée à la main en couleurs sur velin blanc, sans date (1870), (TEXTE EN LATIN)
1870280131870 Une PAGE DE MISSEL , écrite et superbement enluminée à la main en couleurs sur velin blanc, sans date (1870), (TEXTE EN LATIN)
473730S.N. S.L. S.D. (XVIe) IMPORTANT ET EXCEPTIONNEL ANTIPHONAIRE in folio ( 635 X 445 mm ) de 244 pages, pleine basane fauve, dos à nerfs janséniste, plats sur ais de bois avec renforts de cuivre cloutés sur les coupes, fermeture par par serrure carrée à clef fixée au premier plat avec un moraillon ( poignée à charnière ) dont l'auberon ( extrémité inférieure de la poignée ) vient s'engager dans le pène de la serrure, clef forgée. 172 feuillets de parchemin ( 595 X 400 mm ) manuscrits recto-verso, lettrage en rouge, notation musicale carrée en noir sur des portées à 5 lignes rouges. Quelques feuillets ont été restaurés en marge, 3 ont été découpés, la reliure a été habilement restaurée par le Centre de Conservation du Livre d'Arles, la couvrure est donc récente, la serrure et les feuillets sont bien d'époque XVIe siècle. Poids: 18 kg.
1901022259Dijon ROUX-MARCHET & Cie 1901 un volume in-12° (100 x 140mm), 510 pp. Reliure éditeur à la Bradel en plein maroquin marron, dos lisse titré or, premier plat orné d'un décor floral d'encadrement or, filet doré sur les coupes, riche décor d'encadrement doré sur les chasses, gardes de soie moirée, tranches rouge sous or, signet en trois couleurs, dans sa boîte. (discrète salissure sombre en sommet de dos, fentes à la boîte). Livre de piété orné de dessins de M.L. CHAPUIS, gravures de Johannet, imprimé chez FIRMIN-DIDOT. Très bel exemplaire sans rousseurs.
1891022277BRAINE-LE-COMTE, PARIS, LYON, ZECH ET FILS 1891 Un volume in-8° (111 x 150mm), 552 pp. Reliure éditeur en plein maroquin vert bronze, premier plat orné d'une plaque en argent, en forme de "L", finement ciselé, dos à nerfs orné du titre doré, double filet sur les coupes, roulette sur les chasses, gardes parées d'un beau papier à décor floral, toutes tranches dorées, signet. (reliure un peu brunie en plusieurs endroits, frottis aux coiffes et aux coins, très faibles ressauts de cahier). Missel accompagné de nombreuses gravures en noir et blanc dans et hors-texte. Intérieur frais.
116362Campoduni (Kempten), Ex Typographia olim Ducali, num J. Koeseliana 1846, 380x245mm, CLV - 994 + 303pages, Titre gravé, lettrines, 3 gravures hors texte.Cuir noir, titre et filets au dos dorés, tranches dorées, plats en reliefs avec ornementations dorés, fermoirs et coins en laiton (manque un coin), taches d’eau sur le haut du volume.
117475Parisiis (Paris), Apud Rolinum Thierry & Eustachium Foucault 1615, 365x230mm, reliure plein veau marbré de l’époque avec ornementations et fleur de Lys dorés (dorrure passée) au dos à six nerfs. Plat encadrements et ornementations dorés avec au centre un écu avec au sommet une chapeau de cardinal et une devise latine inscrite sur un ruban : Non secundun factum (non selon l’apparence). Livre provenant de D. Nicolai Goubile, Decani Cameracén. Plat frotté. Charnière craquelées. Intérieur propre. Bel exemplaire.
024009TURNHOUT ÉTABLISSEMENTS BREPOLS, sans date 0 Un volume in-16°, 400 pp. Reliure éditeur en pleine peau, plats ornés de motifs floraux, dos à nerfs orné du titre en doré, tranches dorées, guirlande sur les chasses, gardes moirées, étui. (mors ouverts, présence de rare rousseurs sur les gardes). Texte encadré de nombreux dessins variés en noir. Quelques illustrations en hors-texte. Bel exemplaire.
027945Paris L. CURMER, sans date 0 un volume (155 x 115mm), [3] ff. (feuillet blanc, frontispice, titre illustré) CCVIII pp. Reliure en maroquin bleu, dos à nerfs orné du titre estampé, tranches dorées, roulette, filets et dents-de-rat dorés sur les chasses, gardes doublées de soie avec initiales frappées ( mention " L. CURMER " en petits caractères sur le coin supérieur du premier plat). (frottis sur les nerfs, sur les coiffes et sur les coins, frottement de 1cm sur une coupe au premier plat, présence d'auréole sur les gardes, rousseurs sur le haut du frontispice, sur le haut du titre, sur un hors-texte et sur plusieurs feuillets). Ouvrage entièrement monté sur onglet. Frontispice, titre et 7 hors-textes en chromolithographie ( PRALON ). Toutes les pages comportent des lettrines et des frises d'encadrement richement décorées en couleurs. Ex-libris manuscrit. Initiales frappées sur les gardes. Rare.
028762Paris, Gruel et Engelmann, sans date (1860) 0 un volume (155 x 115mm), [2]ff., 176 pp., [2]ff. (souvenirs de famille), (1) pp. (marque de l'imprimeur). Reliure en plein maroquin gris anthracite à la Bradel, dos lisse orné du titre et de filets d'encadrement estampés à froid, double filet estampé à froid sur les plats, chiffre métallique en coin au premier plat, double filet doré sur les coupes, tranches dorées, roulettes et filets dorés sur les chasses, gardes moirées, signet ( TAFFIN-LEFORT ), accompagné d'un coffret ancien en cuir orné sur le couvercle d'initiales frappées encadrées d'une dentelle dorée et doublé ( " VIGUIER TOULOUSE " ). (chiffre manquant sur le premier plat, coiffes et coins légèrement frottés, légères usures sur les plats, auréoles et piqûres sur les gardes, coffret légèrement frotté). Édition originale de ces heures entièrement réalisées en chromolithographie et inspirées des manuscrits enluminés médiévaux. 176 chromolithographies montées sur onglet, dont le titre, 4 hors-texte en sépia et or, le reste en compositions décoratives (animaux, hommes, fleurs, rinceaux...) autour du texte, chaque page étant différente. 4 pages de souvenirs de famille, la marque de l'éditeur-imprimeur in fine. Intérieur frais. Bon exemplaire et superbe réalisation de Gruel et Engelmann pour ce livre d'heures néo-gothique. Étiquette de librairie en coin de page de garde : " VIGUIER TOULOUSE ".
1769dk450A Paris, Chez de Hansy, libraire, sur le pont au Change, à Saint-Nicolas Relié 1769 In-12, (9x14.5 cm), relié plein chagrin de la fin du XIXe siècle, dos à 5 nerfs avec titre doré, doubles filets dors sur les coupes et roulettes sur les contre-plats, tranches dorées, 552 pages, frontispice gravé, vignette de titre ; quelques rousseurs, dos et coins légèrement frottés, assez bon état. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
16981243911698 Lutetiæ Parisiorum, Apud Johannem Baptistam Coignard, Regis Typographum (Chez Jean-Baptiste Coignard, Imprimeur du Roi, Paris) - M. DC. XCVIII. (1698) - Un volume In-folio (27x40cm), reliure plein maroquin rouge, dos à 6 nerfs avec titre et caissons ornés de fleurons en dorée, encadrement en dorée sur les plats, roulette dorée sur les tranches et les contreplats, coussinet de lecture et signet, onglets en tissus, toutes tranches dorées, reliure armoriée aux armes de Jacques-Nicolas Colbert (archevêque de Rouen) - A-M + 668 + civ pages - Très beaux ornements (vignettes, lettrines, culs-de-lampe, fleurons) et gravures hors-texte en N&B dans l'ouvrage - Texte en N&B et rouge en latin sur deux colonnes
1928gu1216Brepols Relié avec emboîtage 1928 In-12 (8x15 cm), jolie reliure plein veau sous emboîtage (coffret), plats ornés de dorures, roulettes dorées, tranches dorées, 380 pages, une gravure en frontispice, vignettes, texte encadré d'illustrations, traduction de l'Abbé J.-B. Glaire ; état remarquable. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
25359Zech et Fils, Braine-le-Comte 1902,éditeurs des archevechés de SMYRNE et de QUEBEC, In 12 Reliure en cuir à 5 nerfs , maroquin bordeaux avec découpes et filets soulignant la découpe , motifs floraux dorés . Gardes en papier doré vert avec motifs entrelacés . Trois tranches dorées . Gravures sur toutes les pages imprimées sur papier bible et gravures signées de Ludovic Mouchot hors texte protégées de leur soie . Texte en français et latin . Bien conservé - 582 p.; coffret d'origine vert, bon état, 850 gr.,
18421215901842 Librairie Catholique de Perisse Frères, Lyon, Paris - 1842 - In-12, plein veau blond, dos lisse avec titre en doré - 354 pages
15664Alfred Mame, Tours(1911), IN12 reliure souple,312 pages,dos rond lisse, tranches et gouttières dorées, chasses illustrées de fleurs dorées, texte encadré d"illustrations n&b, illustrations pleine page n&b sous serpentes légendées, intérieur trés frais papier légèrement glacé
1986306857Sherwood Park: St John's Lutheran Church 1986. First edition. hardcover. very good/no dustjacket. 4to. pp.232 St John's Lutheran Church hardcover
48347Léon Ribaut.1801.In-4 relié.Avec le texte latin.Fac-similé,ills.3 signets. Bel exemplaire.Couv.et dos conservés.Ex-libris.Réédité pour Monsieur Pierre Delmas en 1901.Dos passé,plats soulignés de filet doré avec fleur de lys aux angles.
ST19350-013Germany early 13th century. 273 x 193 mm. 10 3/4 x 7 1/2". Single column 31 lines text in two sizes in a gothic hand. <br/> Rubrics in red several one- and two-line initials in red and two larger initials in red. A few lines with neumes later notations in the margins now quite faded. ◆Vellum a bit soiled and creased as expected fading to four or five lines where the spine was placed several notches along one edge other imperfections due to its reuse as binding scrap but still an excellent specimen that is almost entirely legible.<br/> <br/> Written in a neat and attractive hand this sizable leaf from a Missal remains mostly quite legible with all its rubrication intact despite having been used as part of a binding. A few lines also show musical notation from the earliest generation of neumes. They are described as "in campo aperto" which means literally "in an open field" because they and they alone occupy the space or "field" above the text. They are also described as adiastematic because they appear in a straight line whereas later diastematic neumes reflect changes in pitch by being placed in a higher or lower vertical position above the text. At the time the present leaf was written out the neumes here simply served as an "aide memoire" to the singer who had already learned the melody orally. unknown
1966317165New York: Benziger Brothers 1966. New edition. Hardcover. Very Good in boards. 6 silk ribbon page markers. Spine cocked. Foxing on text block edges. Benziger Brothers hardcover
ST20214Northern France perhaps Beauvais or Amiens late 13th or early 14th century. 286 x 199 mm. 11 1/4 x 7 3/4". Double column containing a mixture of staves and text approximately 21 lines in an excellent formal gothic book hand. <br/> Attractively matted. Rubrics in red chant text containing black penwork initials with red and yellow geometric elaboration BEAUTIFULLY ILLUMINATED with five two-line initials painted blue or pink with white tracery on a ground in the contrasting color two of the initials filled with grotesques and swirling vines and two with the filler design traced out but never completed each initial with blue and pink extensions terminating in orange leaves or spiky shapes; the verso featuring AN IMPRESSIVE SIX-LINE "N" 58 x 50 mm. in the same style filled with an intricate knotwork design and orange leaves with long extensions including a horizontal extension across the upper margin. Margins with light offsetting of the designs from the facing leaf; remnants of mounting tape on recto corners and bottom edge; verso apparently with a barely visible Medieval "14" in lower margin. An area measuring 5 mm. at edges just faintly yellowed from mat burn but IN FINE CONDITION the vellum otherwise quite bright the paint rich and the gold brightly glittering.<br/> <br/> This sumptuously decorated leaf--which is beautifully preserved and contains a particularly large and handsome initial--comes from the last volume of a three-volume Missal presented to Beauvais Cathedral by Canon Robert de Hangest d. 1356. The Missal remained at the cathedral at least through the 17th century when it is noted in an inventory but was removed from the church at some point likely in the aftermath of the French Revolution. The parent volume eventually entered the collection of Henri-Auguste Brölemann 1775-1854 of Lyon who passed it to his grand-daughter Etienne Mallet who then sold it at Sotheby's in 1926. It was then acquired for the collection of William Hearst where it remained for the next 25 years. In 1941 it was again sold at auction and subsequently dismembered. Though long thought to have been the work of famed biblioclast Otto Ege recent scholarship suggests that it was actually Phillip Duschnes who was responsible for breaking up the book keeping some leaves for himself and selling others on to his colleague Ege for inclusion in his portfolios of "Fifty Original Leaves from Medieval Manuscripts." The Beauvais Missal has been a subject of interest for many notable scholars chief among them being Christopher de Hamel--see: "Otto Ege and the Beauvais Missal" in "Gilding the Lilly: A Hundred Medieval and Illuminated Manuscripts in the Lilly Library" and it is currently the focus of a major effort to "reconstruct" the manuscript digitally--a project spearheaded by Lisa Fagin Davis. Other leaves from the parent volume are in the collections of the Morgan Library the Metropolitan Museum of Art the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Houghton Library at Harvard among many others. Although there is some dispute among art historians the illumination has been tentatively attributed to the artist of the Hours of Yolande of Soissons produced in Amiens ca. 1280 and now held by the Morgan Library MS M.729. It is worth noting that the town of Hangest home to the original owner is only 10 miles from Amiens and is a likely place of origin for the Missal. The present leaf contains a text for a major feast day and thus contains a large and extravagantly decorated initial for its opening "'Nunc scio vere." It is not too much to say that the decoration here is masterful but curiously--and of special interest to us from a modern perspective--the illuminators seem to have forgotten to put the finishing touches on the two smaller initials above which still contain sketches of the preliminary design. unknown
0266297188.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1506ABC_47741Paris: Thielman Kerver 1506. Gold- and blind-tooled black goatskin morocco 1st half of the 18th century sewn on 4 supports each board with a frame of blind triple fillets the front board also with the date ANNODOMINI1506 in gold in a gold-tooled frame with a saw-tooth edge and a flower in each corner: to make lining numerals the finisher used a J for 1 and an O for 0 and the spine-title MISSALEROMANUM in gold in the 2nd of 5 compartments gilt edges 2 brass hook fastenings with pin catch-plates marbled endpapers so-called Dutch combed pattern - teeth about 6.5 mm apart in red blue orange white and green more subtly curled than Wolfe 34 & 35 and the remains of a tab on the fore-edge of n2 marking the beginning of the Canon. 8vo. Printed in red and black throughout in 2 columns except for the preliminaries and Canon in 1 column with on the title page the first 1497 version of Kervers finely executed armorial device Renouard 499: a shield with T K above a mark with a cross supported by unicorns the shield hanging on a tree surrounded by many flowers 103 x 73 mm with a criblée background and with THIELMAN KERVER in a scroll in the foot; a crucifixion woodcut 120 x 82 mm; hundreds of impressions of at least 28 finely executed lombardic initials 4 series with decorations on a criblée background a 39 mm T with a crucifixion scene; two 28 mm: an R with a heron standing on one leg with an eel or snake in its mouth and an S with floral decorations; three 21 mm with floral and vine decoration; and at least twenty-two 13 mm with floral and vine decoration forming a complete 23-letter alphabet except for K X Y and Z plus alternate blocks for at least C O and S and a couple simple woodcut lombardic initials; as well as dozens of at least mostly 4-line spaces left for manuscript initials about half with printed guide letters filled in with manuscript lombardic initials in blue some with white or white and red decoration except for 3 lombardic initials in red; 3 sizes of cast lombardic initials 11 6 and 3 mm printed in red; a two-impression plainchant music type 10 mm 4-line staff in red with square-head notes and c-clef in black and two small typographic ornaments apparently designed for printing in red and black. The maltese crosses pilcros paragraph marks and Vx and Rx signs are printed in red and the capitals are rubricated throughout. The main text is set in a rotunda gothic type 66 mm/20 lines and the Canon n5r-o2v and the first line of the title in a textura gothic 112 mm/20 lines. The woodcut crucifixion on n4v facing the opening of the Canon Kervers device and the criblée initials are all coloured by a contemporary hand. The rare first missal for the Roman rite to be printed or published by the great Paris printing and publishing family Kerver best known for their luxurious liturgical and devotional printing especially their books of hours. There appears to be no copy in any French library. Kervers first missal in 1501 was made for the Paris rite. Kervers early missals including the present one are extremely rare the USTC recording no more than five copies of any edition printed before 1520. Caerr p. 73 notes that Kervers present first publishers device is universally recognised as a master-piece. It has been suggested that Kervers criblée blocks were metal cuts rather than woodcuts. The crucifixion scene facing the opening of the Canon is a more traditional woodcut. Caerr p. 51 suggests Kerver reached the pinnacle of his success in his stylistic evolution in or around 1506 fully incorporating Renaissance tastes in the period 1505-1514 and perfecting the criblée technique used for his present publishers device and initials. The present edition is also a very early example of the use of abstract typographic ornaments. The preliminaries include a calendar of feast days and most of its less common Saints days printed in red suggest a Franciscan connection.Thielman Kerver Koblenz ca. 1460/70-Paris 1522 appears in Paris imprints as a bookseller and publisher working with various printers and co-publishers from 1497 beginning with books of hours which always remained his greatest speciality. He added his own printing office in 1498 though he continued to work with others and expanded into a wide variety of genres. He also added other kinds of liturgical books including breviaries from 1499 a psalter in 1500/01 and missals from 1501 apparently publishing about 16 missals to his death in 1522 first using the present form of the title in the present edition. He was sworn in as official bookseller to the University in Paris in 1501 and soon after also printer hence the In alma Parisiorum Academia in the present title and colophon. Kervers widow continued the firm from 1522 to her death in 1557 their son Jacques continued it to his death in 1583 and its materials were sold in 1586.The fact that both the wording of the title and the exact date differ between the title page and the colophon the latter is 40 days later has led nearly every reference work from Weale in 1886 to the present USTC to turn one 1506 edition into two most describing a folio edition by Kerver a ghost and an anonymous 8vo edition supposedly with no copy known. David Shaw provided an accurate description on-line based on the British Library copy.With an inscription in the head margin of the title page partly shaved and difficult to read; the engraved publishers device of the Antwerp printer and publisher Jean Baptiste III Verdussen 1698-1773 on the front and back pastedown serving as his bookplate see above. Also with an 1831 owners inscription of S. De Ram on a free endleaf facing the title page. The rubricator or an early owner has added several notes in red in the calendar. Further with an occasional early marginal manuscript note some shaved. Four words in the Canon have been deliberately erased as an editorial revision. With an 8 cm tear into one leaf the running heads of a few others shaved the title-page slightly soiled a 3 mm hole in leaf 232 E4 affecting 2 or 3 words some tiny marginal wormholes in a few leaves and some water stains in the endpapers otherwise in very good condition. The binding shows a few small defects one slightly affecting the gold lettering on the front board but is also generally very good. A rare and beautifully produced missal and the second major display of Kervers stunning criblée initials all coloured by a contemporary hand as are the woodcut and Kerver's device.l Thierry Caerr Imprimerie et réussite sociale à Paris .: Thielman Kerver . 2000 2 vols. www.enssib.fr/bibliotheque-numerique 117 4 copies erroneously described as a folio; Catalogue . bibliothèque de feu . Jean de Meyer Ghent 2-5 November 1869 lot 33 8vo 23 March 1506 not mentioning Kerver but with alma Parisiorum Academia; Pettegree French books 68270 not noting Kervers name & 68271 erroneously described as a folio 1 of the same 4 copies; Frank Isaac reworked by David Shaw frenchpostincunables.djshaw.co.uk IS000343; USTC 68270 not noting Kervers name & 180236 erroneously described as a folio same copy as Pettegree; Catalogue . de la bibliothèque de M. Jean François van de Velde Ghent 1831 lot 1360 with an extra woodcut inserted facing leaf 58; Catalogus librorum Joannis Baptistae Verdussen Antwerp widow of Hieronymous Verdussen 15 July 1776 liturgy lot 45 the present copy; Weale & Bohatta Bibliographia liturgica 1928 982 23 March 1506 2 copies & 985 11 February 1506 not noting Kervers name no copy located both on p. 147 in the 1886 ed.; WorldCat 152428895 315474570 843131050 843131052 906577964 1063178422 5 copies plus 2 ghosts; not in Adams no Kerver missal before 1515; Davis Fairfax Murray French no Kerver missal; Mortimer Harvard French no Kerver missal before 1574; SUDOC; catalogue.bnf.fr. Thielman Kerver, unknown
1737ABC_50448Antwerp: ex architypographia Plantiniana = Joannes Jacobus Moretus 1737. Contemporary elaborately gold-tooled red morocco with remnants of brass catch and anchorplates along the fore edge gilt and gauffered edges with intricately made tabs along the fore edge gold-tooled board edges marbled endpapers. Folio. With 20 full-page engraved plates by Cornelius Galle 10 engraved frames surrounding the text and vocal music printed on pp. 153-155 196-197 199-207 220-233 235-237 240-272 286-288 290-292 and xvii. The text is printed in red and black with historiated initials hand-coloured in red an engraved vignette on the title page of each work and several woodcut tailpieces throughout of which 3 printed in red. 2 works in 1 volume. With: 2 SPANISH MISSAL. Missae propriae sanctorum Hispanorum qui generaliter in Hispania celebrantur. ex apostolica concessione & auctoritate S. Pii V. Gregorii XIII. Sixti. V. Clementis VIII. & Urbani. VIII. aliorumque summorum pontificum. Antwerp ex architypographia Plantiniana = Joannes Jacobus Moretus 1737. Plantin edition of the revised Roman Missal produced in line with the Council of Trents directives. This imposing folio exemplifies the Tridentine tradition established after the council 1545-1563 when the Roman Church responding to the Reformation sought to standardise the liturgy. In 1570 Pope Pius V 1504-1572 promulgated the reformed Missale Romanum establishing the text and ceremonial form of the Mass that would govern the Latin Church for centuries. Subsequent revisions under Clemens VIII 1536-1605 and Urban VIII 1568-1644 refined but did not alter its essential structure.From 1571 until the mid-18th century the press founded by Christophe Plantin 1520-1589 held a significant monopoly on the production and sale of authorised liturgical work for the Spanish Netherlands and effectively much of the Spanish Empire. The present Missale Romanum has been bound together with the Missae propriae sanctorum Hispanorum 1737 a collection of masses for Spanish saints. It contains the specific texts and music intended for the celebration of these saints reflecting its use in Iberian or Spanish-influenced territories. The beautiful red morocco binding richly gilt in the rococo manner was also most likely bound in Spain or Portugal.The front joint is slightly weakened but the structural integrity of the work is still intact a hole at the head and foot of the spine the edges and corners of the boards are slightly scuffed the boards are somewhat stained lacking the clasps. The leaves are somewhat browned with occasional foxing a few pages retaining traces of yellow wax. Otherwise in good condition.l Imhof Plantins 1574 Missale Romanum in octavo in: De Gulden Passer 73 1995 pp. 67-82; STCV 12923535; Ad 2; WorldCat 804759478 0 copies; not in STCV. ex architypographia Plantiniana [= Joannes Jacobus Moretus], unknown
1896AQ28784Mechliniae i.s. Mechelen: H. Dessain 1896. xli 502 60 24pp 2. With a half tile. Printed in red and black. Elaborately bound in contemporary richly gilt-tooled red morocco device of seated christ proffering book with Greek letters alpha and omega within ornate border to both boards A.E.G. with eight divisional red moire cloth tabs one partially perished gilt dentelles decorated endpapers. Slightest of rubbing to extremities. Internally immaculate. An exquisitely bound late nineteenth-century Continental edition of the Roman Missal. The Roman Missal with origins in the high middle ages is the liturgical book from which the text and rubrics for the celebration of Catholic Mass with both prayers and music. One of the major advances of the Council of Trent the Catholic counter to the Protestant Reformation was to standardise the Missal. Pope Pius V acting on the concilliar deciion formalised this in his Quo Primum on 14 July 1570 - insisting that the standard form of the Missal was used throughout the Church except where a local missal could be proved to be of two centuries antiquity. Perhaps one of the most controversial Counter-Reformation decisions made at Trent the use of a standard Missal prevented the celebration of the Mass in vernacular languages and signified a further strengthening of Papal authority: particularly as all printed editions were prefaced by the Pope's order of standardisation. The Missal of Pius V was further edited by Clement VIII in 1604 and later by Urban VIII in 1634. . Large 8vo. H. Dessain hardcover