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65p. + Plus full page drawings. Inked presentation from Lottie Ruth to Chas. E. Horkman, Dec. 25, 1893. Endpapers very brown. Title browned from endpapers. 8vo. Original cloth backed brown paper boards. Front cover decorated with large drawing of a mother and her boys examining a torn trouser. Binding slightly worn. Fine books from earlier Christmas seasons make great gifts today. CHRISTMAS/W67
20pp., orig. printed wrappers. Rural Studies Series, No. 5.
RARE 16th-century edition of the "Thesaurus Linguae Sanctae", a Hebrew-Latin dictionary for Catholic ministers, originally composed during the early 16th century by the Dominican Bible scholar St.Pagnini. The dictionary appended a list of nominalization patterns and a list of irregular nouns. This edition was printed by the famous Dutch publisher Christopher Plantin at 1570, during the first years of the religious strife that came to be known as the Eighty Years' War. The book features the publisher's elaborate emblem on the title page, a decorative first capital letter on the first text page, and floral title bars in several places throughout the book. The book ends with a royal privilege from Emperor Maximilian II. 115x165mm. Unpaginated preface and appendix. 380 pages (irregular pagination: [188] + [193-380], but the text is COMPLETE. Rebound in black cloth Hardcover. Gilt lettering on spine. Ex libris and binder's stickers on endpaper. Pen inscriptions (dated 1752) on title page, and outside the text on few other pages. Last text page upper edge slightly torn - NO damage to text. Pages yellowing. [SUMMARY]: This 16th-century old Plantin dictionary is surprisingly preserved in very good condition.
np. Title page printed in red and black. Printed by Peter Beilenson. Uncut. Tall thin 8vo. Original cloth backed paper boards. Original spine paper label with slight loss. Top of boards slightly sun faded. Limited Edition of only 500 copies. 475 are for sale by Random House. Nice copy. First edition. PRESS/W32
8vo. (64) pp. With woodcut printer's device on verso of final leaf. Bound with numerous blank leaves. Contemporary vellum. First edition. "Decalogue with the commentary of Aben Esra [...]. Leaves d7-d8 contain the Aramaic text of the Ten Commandments [...]. Re-issued in 1559 by Sebastian Lepusculus" (cf. Burmeister, pp. 11; 111). The "synoptic word-for-word translations" of Biblical texts which Münster published during his Heidelberg years is a characteristic of his scheme of a "Propagatio linguae sanctae", to spread the knowledge of Hebrew at German universities (cf. Burmeister, p. 11). - Occasional insignificant waterstaining. Old ms. ownership of the Vienna Jesuits to title page; stamps of Vienna University Library and of Kubasta & Voigt, Vienna (c. 1900). VD 16, B 3018. Burmeister 145. Hanztsch 244.I.1. Prijs 29. Panzer VI, 260, 662. Fürst I, 252. Steinschneider (Bodl.) 681.8. Vinograd, Basle 28. Graesse I, 4. Yudlov, Ginzei Yisrael 1859. OCLC 311420175. Not in BM-STC.
2 exceedingly rare early Spanish prints by Miguel de Eguía of writings by Saint Bonaventure. – Author, Content: Present volume contains early Spanish translations of (1) the »Stimulus Amoris« (13th ct., The String of Love) and (2) the »Soliloquium de quatuor mentalibus exercitiis« (1259/60, Soliloquy [i.e. monologue] About the Four Spiritual Exercises), two devotional works written by or in case of (1) attributed to Saint Bonaventure, [i.e. Giovanni Fidanza, 1221-74], a Cardinal and head of the Minor friars, who became one of the most influential theologians and philosophers of the medieval ages. – Printer: Both volumes of present Sammelband were printed in the print shops of Miguel de Eguía (1495-1546) in Logroño and Alcalá, one of the foremost and progressive Spanish printers of his time, a publisher of Eramus. Eguía's prints are known for their distinctive type setting in puristic gothic and round typefaces, their illustrative and ornamental wood-cut initials of an artistic nature (of which 4 and 8 resp. are set here), the use of red and black inks and the good quality of the paper. Moreover Eguía was famous for renewing Spanish printing by using Renaissance-style architectural borders. Present wood-cut title-pages are a good examples: »Estimulo de Amor« consists of a central typographic title printing with a from of emblematic illustrations combined with floral ornaments, »Soliloquio« additionally incorporates a portrait of the reading Bonaventure. – Condition: (1) Fragments of partly erased former owner's remarks as well as of erased owner's stamp on l. ai; (2) Leave g4 (printer's blank) missing; pp. aiiir, a(6)v, br, biiiv, c(7)r, e(5)r, f(3)r and f(5) with very few underlinings and marginal notes. Some leaves with slight foxing and little water stains at margins. – Rarity, Holdings: Although incunables and early prints of Bonaventure's works in the original Latin and in translation, as well as prints by the Spanish master Eguía are frequently traded at auction, no auction results at all are available for present editions, according to RBH and JBP/JAP/APO. – As of August 6th 2022 USTC, OCLC/WorldCat, KVK and viaLibri Library Search locate only 6 holdings in institutional holdings worldwide for (1), at Barcelona (Bibl. de Catalunya, missing title leave, Prov: Bibl. Marès), Evora (Bibl. Publica), Lisboa (BNP), Madrid (BNE), Oviedo (UL), València (UL) and London (BL), i.e. the only copy outside the Iberian peninsula. Only 5 copies are known for (2), at Barcelona (CRAI), Madrid (BNE [2 copies], Bibl. Islámica) and Sevilla (Bibl. Capitular Y Colombina), with no copy outside spain. – Reference: (1) USTC, no. 335139; CCPB 119730-4; BCMarès I 161; BLC 37, 64; Heredia 3928; Salva 3863; Palau 290249; Porbase 224252; Wilkinson (Iberian Books) 2110. – (2) USTC, no. 335148; CCBE S. XVI, B, 2722; García 74; Martín Abad 147; Palau 290228; Wilkinson (Iberian Books) 2106. – De la Fuente Arranz, Fernando: "Miguel de Eguía." Diccionario Biográfico Español, on-line. URL: https://dbe.rah.es/biografias/49363/miguel-de-eguia. 7th August 2022.
RARE FIRST EDITION of "Sefer Or Ha-Hayyim", a comprehensive bibliography of Hebrew books, ordered by author name with short biographies of each author. The book was compiled by Heimann Joseph Michael, a 19th-century Jewish-German scholar and bibliophile. 142x215mm. VIII+617 pages. Quarter-cloth marbled board Hardcover. Cover scratched and worn. Cover corners and edges bumped and peeling. Spine missing. Most pages slightly age stained. Whitepages and pages 607-617 detached from binding. Hebrew title page missing. Pages yellowing/browning. This rare book has suffered some damage (mostly external), but is in good reading condition.
135 p., ill. n/b et coul. (Esprit et Culture de la Corée III). Inv. 31994
[Goettingen, 1960]. 49pp.; pr. wrps. * Collection of speeches, not issued for sale. paper
191p. Portrait photograph on title page by Opie, Redruth. Title page ruled in brown. Uncut and unopened. Pen sketch drawing. Brick Row Book Shop label. Extra spine label tipped in on rear paste down. Tall 8vo. Original full cloth binding, stained. Original paper spine label. Hardbound. Limited Edition. Number 937 of only 1000 copies. Nice example. William Henry Hudson (1841-1922) was an author, naturalist, and ornithologist. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! PRESS/W43
262p. Numerous illustrations in red and black. Tall 8vo. Original red cloth binding. Original dust jacket. 2nd Printing. First published the year before. A classic study that traces the complete and f ascinating history of the alphabet. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! REF2
27 issues, small 4to, illustrs., orig. wrappers. Full of scholarly articles relating to books and manuscripts.
PARIS, Gestetner - Sans date - In-4 - Couverture cartonnée illustrée - 6 pages + 64 pages de dessins + 3 pages d'index - Très propre
Very Good English Original bdg. HC. Large 4to. (34 x 25 cm). In English, German, French, Italian, Turkish. 1000 p., 1244 color and b/w ills. 50 years from Bedri Baykam's press book, 1963-2013. Edited by Eren Teoman. 1000 copies were printed. First Edition. Signed and inscribed by Baykam. A very heavy and big volume.
105 pages. One of 2,500 copies from the first printing. Author is managing editor of Publishers Weekly. "...exhibits the ferocity of his range: polemics worthy of Pope; quick delights that ignite in wit; ad dazzling, luminous poems that mix the language and geography of upstate New York with history, faith, autobiography, and poetic inheritance." - Susan Wheeler. Light rubbing to glossy covers. Two inch crease to upper corner of front cover. Unmarked. Book
First edition, 8vo (205 x 130 mm), [4], vi, 158pp., portrait frontispiece, some light water-staining to a few margins, recent marbled boards, morocco title label to spine. "A sketch of the life of Gutenberg, with a eulogium of his invention."?Bigmore & Wyman. Bigmore & Wyman II, p. 70.
Very Good Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928) Contemporary quarter dark burgundy leather bdg. Grey cloth boards. Four compartments at spine. Cr. 8vo. (20 x 14 cm). In Ottoman script (Old Turkish with Arabic letters). 96 p. [48 leaves]. 19 lines on each page. Printed on paper with European watermarks. A small tear up to the last page with no loss of text. Overall a fine copy. The 9th incunable of the Islamic world, written by Ibrahim Müteferrika and printed in his legendary Basmahane. Known as the most significant work by Müteferrika, this incunable is a political and state-theoretical treatise composed in order to improve the Ottoman government. In his book, Ibrahim Müteferrika used the sources written in Latin in the Europe of his period, and he presented it to Sultan Mahmud I right after the Patrona Halil Revolt (1730). Müteferrika divided the state forms of government in Europe into three groups with the titles "monarkiya" [i.e. monarchy], "aristokrasiya" [i.e. aristocracy], and "demokrasiya] [i.e. democracy]. In the work, the importance of the sciences (physics, astronomy, and geography) in the state administration was emphasized, and it was stated that a solid-state order could not be established in a country where these sciences were not developed. In addition to this, he used the term "Nizâm-i Cedîd" [i.e. The New Order] for the first time and stated that the Ottoman Empire should definitely adopt and implement the new military orders of the 18th century Europe. In addition, this work is one of the earliest in which the "democracy" term is used in the Islamic world. The book was published in French in Vienna and Paris in 1769 (Traite de la tactique ou méthode artificielle pour l'ordonnance des troupes, Vienne, 1769. Translated by Karl Emerich Alexander von Reviczky von Revisnye [Baron Reviczki]), and was translated from French into Russian in 1777. One of only 500 copies. The volume appeared in 1732, about one and a half years after the uprising of Patrona Halil Revolt which had overthrown the system of Sultan Ahmed III and Grand Vizier Damad Ibrahim. The writing, recalling the characteristics of Ottoman siyâsetnâme [i.e. the book of politics], calls the attention of the Ottoman leaders to the results of the state and military development and to the reasons for the strategic superiority of the rival European powers, while strongly condemning the several centuries long disinterest of the Ottomans to the external world. An important feature of the work is to break with the hitherto prevailing nostalgic attitude to bygone golden ages. Although observes the stylistic conventions in as much he speaks contemptuously about the Christian nations, in the content, already turns away from the indifference referring to the superiority of Islam. It announces in a list organized by items the reasons for the state's weakness and the conditions of rising. In harmony with the main aspects of contemporary Ottoman reforms, the work mainly focuses on the necessity of the reorganization of the army. It also offers a broader historical background by describing after the Greek philosophers the various types of states (6v-7v), or by treating the origins and reasons for the success of the foundations of European culture, the Roman Empire (19v-20v). The concept "Nizâm-I Cedîd" (i.e. the New Order), which would be used for the newly organized military formations of Sultan Selîm III (1789-1807), appears here for the first time referring to the modernized European army (17v-18r). "The utopistic optimism of Risâle-i Islâmîye may have had some rational basis, if one takes into account the Karlovci Treaty (1699) which was a rather positive correction in contrast to the previous series of Turkish failures in the Balkans, the European 'internal wars' of the first decade of the 18th century, and the experiences of the reform and peace years of the Tulip Period. However, the Usûl ül-hikem. was already inspired by the atmosphere after the Pozarevac Treaty (1718) which was a further stro
4to. (8), 434, (2) pp. With woodcut title border by Hans Holbein. - (Bound with) II: The same. [Dikduk de-lishan arami. In hakhasda'ah] Chaldaica grammatica [...]. Ibid., 1527. (8), 212, (4) pp. Both works have woodcut printer's devices at the end. Contemporary blindstamped browns calf with 2 clasps. Sammelband containing two rare works by Münster: the first grammar of Aramaic written in Germany, a principal work, and the first German-produced Aramaic dictionary. "His dictionary [was] adapted from Pagninus's excerpt of Nathan Ben Yehiel's Arukh [...] Münster's most important work [...] was his Aramaic grammar, the first of its kind. The 'Chaldean' element in the Bible has of course long since been recognised, and people like Aurogallus and Fagius had treated the subject earlier in connection with their Hebrew studies. But just as Sanctes Pagninus was the first to exclude deliberately the Aramaic vocabulary from his Hebrew dictionary (1529), so Münster was the first to publish both a grammar and a dictionary devoted solely to Aramaic [...] A special feature of this grammar is the lexicographical introduction to the rabbinical Bible commentaries, with various Latin-Hebrew wordlists of technical terms. Münster also gives examples of the Sephardi and Ashkenazi rabbinical script in woodcut [...] The author compares the Aramaic with Arabic (called by him Saracenica lingua) which he quotes in transcription" (Smitskamp). - Binding restored; endpapers replaced. Obliterated contemp. ownership to t. p.; a few contemp. marginalia near the beginning of the grammar. I: VD 16, M 6657. Burmeister 23. BM-STC German 633. Adams M 1920. Steinschneider 2014, 6. Hieronymus 236 (note). Smitskamp 8d (note). BNHCat M 841. OCLC 13588558. - II: VD 16, M 6648. Burmeister 3 (& p. 11). BM-STC German 632. Adams M 1903. Steinschneider 6591, 6. Smitskamp 8. Leslau 398. BNHCat M 827. OCLC 20468455.
Small 8vo. (16), 644, (4) pp. With woodcut printer's device to verso of final leaf. Modern full mottled calf with giltstamped title label to gilt spine. All edges red. A fine pocket-sized humanist edition from Basel: the Greek text, with Latin translation, printed in two columns, of this collection of works by Hippocrates of Kos, the founder of medicine as a science. Includes Galen's "Ars medicinalis" (the translation is by Nicolò Leoniceno, whose version of the Aphorisms is also the one here printed). - Occasional attractive humanist ink annotations in Greek and Latin in the margins, more extensive on front pastedown (recovered from the contemporary binding), both flyleaves, and final page. 17th century ownership of the lawyer Vincent Monsigot to front flyleaf and last page; additional early ownership of Claude Fournel at the top of the title-page. 20th century drystamped library stamp of Nitza and Robert Rousseau to flyleaf. Adams H 578. Bruni Celli 4102. Hoffmann II, 273. Not in Schweiger, Wellcome or Durling. NLM 233.
Einblattdruck. 1 S. Qu.-Folio (404:307 mm). Mit papiergedecktem Siegel über rotem Wachs. Gefaltet. Aufruf an alle Untertanen, "sonderlich aber allen an der Thonaw, so wol andern nechst geseßnen Flecken", für die Verproviantierung der "anzall Italianisch Kriegßvolck" zu sorgen, welche "die Babstlich Heiligkeit [...] herauß verordnet" habe: "Also haben wir hierinn nachfolgende maaß, ordnung und Tax, Euch [...] setzen unnd benennen wöllen, Alß neblich, daß man gedachtem herab ziehenden Kriegßvolck in ihren nachtleger die notturfft, Profiant, von Brot, Wein, Bier, alt und jungem Fleisch, Käß, Ayr, Schmaltz, Habern und dergleichen, umb bezalung und volgende Tax zufüern [...], und volgender gestalt, alß drey Brott weissen gebäch, deren jedes neün Lot wigt, per ein Kreutzer, ein Maß Wein per vier Kreutzer, ein Pfunt Behaimbischen Käß, per drey Kreutzer, den besseren Käß, so man in Osterreich macht, werden unsere Commissarien nach der güet Taxiern [...]". Mit der Schlacht bei Sissek am 22. Juni 1593 war der Lange Türkenkrieg ausgebrochen, der bis 1606 währen sollte. - Dorsalvermerke des 17. Jhs. zum Inhalt sowie zeitgenöss. Vermerk "Asentirt den 30. Juni Ao. 97". Unter dem Urkundentext rechts: "Commissio domini electi imperatoris in consilio". Links mit eigenh. Zeichnung des niederösterreichischen Statthalters Wolfgang v. Hofkirchen und des Kanzlers Christoph Pirckheimer, rechts des Hans Wilhelm Frhr. von Schönkirchen ("Hanns Wilhelmb Herr von Schennkhirchen d. Ä.") und des Dr. Paul Kraus. Nicht bei Starzer.
4to. (4) ff. With the woodcut Papal arms on the title-page. Modern half vellum over marbled boards. Papal bull with an invitation to the Council of Trent, superseding an earlier one issued in 1542. One of several Latin editions, followed by numerous German ones. "Printer identified by Mr Ulrich Kopp of Wolfenbüttel" (cf. VD16). - Old handwritten shelfmark to to upper edge of the title-page (trimmed); a largish waterstain near the lower edge, otherwise a clean copy. VD 16, ZV 26760. Not in Adams or BM-STC German.
Small 8vo (155 x 100 mm). (4), "134" (= 136), (2) ff. With Aldus's woodcut anchor and dolphin device on the title-page, repeated on the verso of the otherwise blank final leaf, and spaces with guide letters left for 2 5-line and about 60 3-line manuscript initials (not filled in). Set in an Aldine italic (with upright capitals) with occasional words (mostly names) in roman and frequent passages in Greek. Gold-tooled mottled calf (ca. 1700?), sewn on 5 supports (vellum tapes?), each board with a frame made with a 2 mm roll, the spine with a gold-tooled red morocco label in the 2nd of 6 compartments but otherwise decorated as a single field filled with a 7 mm roll of diagonal lines (the bands on the spine are nearly flat), gold-tooled board edges, headbands in brown and beige, dark brown ribbon marker, marbled endpapers (Dutch pattern, curled, close to Wolfe 12), red edges. First edition to include Muret's important and influential commentaries, of the poems of the passionate (if self-centred) Roman poet Catullus (84-ca. 54 BCE), often given the collective title Carmina. Both the poems and the commentaries appear here in the original Latin. Although the poems are not numbered and there is no table of contents, Muret's present edition established the order for the numbering from 1 to 116 that remains in use, even though poems 18-20 are now usually omitted as false attributions and a few are sometimes divided into two poems distinguished with "a" and "b". Poems 18 and 19 are addressed to the fertility god Pirapus, best known for his enormous perpetual erection, and poem 20 is also a Priapeia. Among the 113 poems universally accepted as authentic, many are addressed to "Lesbia", whom Catullus passionately loved. He gave her this pseudonym in allusion to the Greek love poems of Sappho from the Island of Lesbos, which influenced him strongly. She is generally identified as Clodia, the wife of a Roman nobleman. Catullus was one of her several lovers and he names and rails against some of the others. While Catullus's greatest passions were heterosexual, poems 48, 50 and 99 express romantic and sexual interests in men. In his poems he is quick to attack others, both politically and personally, and after he fell out with two male friends he wrote poem 16, threatening to sexually abuse them. - Catullus' poems, with the exception of poem 62, survive only in corrupt manuscripts from the 1360s or later, so establishing their texts remains a difficult task today. De Spira at Venice published the first edition in 1472 and Muret generally follows the order established in by the 1490s, though with some additions. The scholarly editions by Statius (1566) and Scaliger (1577) follow his order and at least the latter includes many of his notes. Skinner notes that they were "better text critics than Muret and less interesting commentators". Paulus Manutius produced a second edition with Muret's commentaries in 1558. - The French humanist Marc-Antoine Muret (1526-1585), recognised as a brilliant scholar in his teens, taught at Paris from 1551, when he published his first book there. Accused of being a Huguenot and a homosexual, he had to flee Paris in late 1553 but Adus Manutius's son Paulus, who had taken charge of the family's Venice printing office, offered him shelter. The present book was Muret's first publication in Venice, with his preliminary note date 15 October 1554. He was well-versed in Greek and first pointed out that Catullus modelled poem 51 (to Lesbia) on a poem by Sappho, inserting the original Greek in his commentary. He also sometimes inserts poems he wrote himself. - With minor damage to the lower outside corner of the first few leaves, not approaching the text, but still in very good condition. The hinges are slightly worn and the spine label has a small chip, but the binding is otherwise also very good. A seminal edition of Catullus's passionate and often erotic poems, especially important as the first edition of his extensive and important commentaries. Adams C 1145. Edit 16, 10364. Gay/Lemonnyer I, 498. Renouard 162. Marilyn Skinner, Companion to Catullus, passim. USTC 821188.
4to., with a folding frontispiece and numerous illustrations and type samples in the text; original printed wrappers, sewed as issued, a very good, clean copy. Scarce. The advisory panel includes Francis Meynell, Stanley Morison and Mortimer Wheeler.
Small 8vo (145 x 100 mm). (4), "269" (= 367), (1) ff. With a title-page containing only the author's name, but with the title in the heading to liber I, Giunti's woodcut device (a decorated fleur-de-lis, in this case on a platform and supported by 2 figures with cornucopias) on the verso of the otherwise blank final leaf, a roman capital used as a 2-line initial for the dedication, another as a 3-line initial for the preamble to the main text and a space (with a guide letter) left for a manuscript initial (mostly 6-line) opening each of the 12 libri, not filled in. Set entirely in an Aldine-style italic (with upright capitals).Vellum (ca. 1850?), sewn on 4 cords, with a hollow back, blind-tooled double fillets, gold-tooled red morocco spine label, headbands in blue and white, Stormont marbled endpapers (grey spots with brown and white veins). The first and only Giunta edition (one of the first in small format), in the original Latin, of the standard classical textbook on oratory and rhetoric by Quintilian (ca. 35-ca. 95/100 AD), in many respects the greatest orator between Cicero and Quintilian's own student Pliny the younger. It is refreshing today for its emphasis on the importance of the speaker's integrity, arguing that to speak well for a good cause requires character and morality. The Cicero-Quintilian-Pliny school was critical of orators they saw as promoting causes using clever tricks or florid language, or by appealing to the listener's worst qualities. They criticised Hortensius, Seneca and Regulus. Quintilian's Institutiones oratoriae, his only surviving work, also serves as one of our most important sources of information about education and culture in Roman antiquity. It not only teaches the theory and practice of rhetoric in speaking and writing, but also discusses the education and life-long development that an orator needs. Quintilian also advises the reader on the best authors on the subject, providing a critical examination of the history of rhetoric. - Quintilian was born in Córdoba in Andalusia, but his father sent him to Rome to study rhetoric early in the reign of Nero. He returned to Spain for a few years around 60-68 AD but returned to Rome as part of the retinue of the Emperor Galba, Nero's short-lived successor. After Galba's death, during the chaotic Year of the Four Emperors that followed, Quintilian opened a public school of rhetoric. He gave up teaching and presenting pleas in 88 AD and devoted himself to writing his Oratoria. - Though contemporaries recognized Quintilian's quality and influence, the modern world knew his work only from fragments and by reputation until Poggio found a complete manuscript of the Oratoria in 1416. It was first published at Rome in 1470 and Nicolas Jenson produced a better edition in 1471. Although more than a dozen editions appeared before 1515, most were folios or large quartos that only a limited audience could afford. The first small format edition, an octavo, appeared at Lyon in 1510, one of only two smaller than quarto before the present. The Lyon edition clearly owned much to the Aldine approach, setting the text in an Aldine-style italic, but Aldus himself produced no edition until his small quarto of 1514, a few months before his death. Nicolò Angeli dal Bucine edited the present edition, but Giunta clearly took Aldus's 1514 small quarto, edited by Andrea Navagero, as model for the text and layout (both are set entirely in a single size of italic type, a style Aldus introduced in 1501). He printed it well: Dibdin singled out the present edition for its presswork, mentioning no other except Jenson's. As in all early italics the capitals are upright, so occasional lines or words set entirely in capitals (sometimes letterspaced, but not as consistently as in Aldus's edition) provide graphic distinction without a second size or style. The compositors accidentally followed page 199 with page "100", continuing from there but skipping 253-254 and making a few other errors. We transcribe the title as it appears in the heading to liber I. In most libri it appears as Oratoriarum institutionarum. - With some transparent stains in the upper outside corner, barely visible after the first 3 leaves, and occasional minor foxing or browning, also mostly in the first few leaves, but otherwise in very good condition and including the final leaf with only Giunta's woodcut device, often lacking. The binding is rubbed and slightly loose, with the front hinge split, but the bookblock remains structurally sound. One of the earliest small-format editions of a classic of rhetoric and of the history of education. Adams Q 53. BM-STC Italian 546. Dibdin, Bibliogr. Decameron, p. 275. Edit 16, 28736. USTC 851766. Cf. Ahmanson-Murphy 106 (1514 Aldus ed.); for Navagero: Lowry, The world of Aldus Manutius (1979), pp. 204, 233.
4to. (40) pp. With large heraldic woodcut (Elector Frederick of Saxony) on t. p. and woodcut printer's device on last f. recto. Modern boards. First separate edition; Froben was to publish his own Latin edition in the following year. The Greek text was already contained in the Venetian 1493 incunable and in the 1513 Aldus edition; it was not to be printed again until Froben's 1522 Libanius edition; the first separate edition of the original text was to be printed by Wechel in Paris in 1529. - Isocrates (436-338), the most highly esteemed and successful teacher of rhetorics of his time, continued to exert a great influence on artistic prose for centuries. - Rare; no copy in BSB. VD 16, I 563. Hoffmann 486. BM-STC German 433. Not in Adams or Schweiger.