990 résultats
2 tomes (complet): 212 + 216pp., 6e édition, brochures originales, 19cm., dans la série "Bibliothèque de la famille", rousseurs (texte toujours bien lisible), cachet, R44085
419pp. + 2pp. de thèses, 24cm., texte en français, Thèse de doctorat (Universiteit Leiden), br.orig. illustrée, cachet au verso de la p.d.t., texte frais, bon état, T113368
iii + 505pp., 25cm., brochure originale, dans la série "De Pétrarque à Descartes" volume XXXIV, pages toujours non coupées, bon état, G100811
Madrid, Editorial de la Universidad Complutense, 1980. 4to. menor; 120 pp., con varios facsímiles entre le texto y una lámina en color con la reproducción del retrato de Moro por Rubens. Cubiertas originales.
Madrid, Arco Libros, 1986. 4to.; 64 pp. 92 pp. para el facsímil, 1 h. Cubiertas originales.
467pp., 24cm., qqs.rousseurs, br.muette moderne, texte en bel état, F54828
467pp., reliure cart.rouge (plats marbrés, dos en toile, titre doré au dos), 24cm., qqs.rousseurs
Madrid, Editorial Castalia, 1969. 4to. mayor; 89 pp., treinta de ellas para la reproducción del facsímil, 1 h. Tirada limitada y numerada de 300 ejemplares, impresos en papel de hilo. Cubiertas originales.
Valencia, Prometeo, s.a. (hacia 1915). 4to.; 210 pp., 1 h. Cubiertas originales, con alguna pérdida de papel.
Madrid, Castalia, 1981. 4to.; 293 pp., 1 h. Cubiertas originales.
Lisboa, Livraria Portugal, 1965. 4to.; CXIX pp., 143 pp., dieciseis de ellas pra el facsímil fotográfico, y 11 láminas para documentos manuscritos. Alguna anotación en tinta del anterior poseedor. Cubiertas originales.
142pp.geïll., 21cm., enkele roestvlekjes op bladsneden, tekst en binnenwerk in mooie staat, ISBN 90-334-2663-3, B71032
107pp.+ plates out-of-text, in the series "Studi e Testi" vol.230, 25cm., VG
Zaragoza, 2005. Dos volúmenes en 4to. mayor; 619 pp., 1 h. + 572 pp., 1 h. Numerosas ilustraciones. Encuadernación original en tela. Sobrecubiertas.
Zaragoza, 2011. 4to.; 228 pp. Cubiertas originales.
Ex-library copy with usual stamps, call numbers and pocket. 1 small tear to DJ. Gift inscription from author to Sister Marie Therese. ; The last decade has seen a renewal of interest in the works of Erasmus. Much has been written on the educational and editorial writings of that great humanist of the northern Renaissance, but relatively little on his fictional work. This book deals with the fiction of Erasmus and what it contains of instruction and delight. The attention of the study is focused primarily on the four satiric works: The Praise of Folly, the Colloquies, Julius Secundus, exclusus, and Ciceronianus, although the author, in the process of analyzing and appraising, looked for analogues and explanations in the educational exegetical works. Three aspects of Erasmus' thought are considered. The first is his insistence on man's capacity for betterment through good teaching -- the formal teaching of a preceptor, or the incidental teaching of a good satirist or storyteller. The second is his notion of what man is and to what end he is to be educated. (Man is, of course, bent to knowledge and virtue, but one cannot afford to be too simple in one's appraisal of Erasmus' moral emphases -- the moral life involves both doer and spectator and is strongly dependent on the thinking process, although not divorced from the act of willing, and, activated by faith and the grace of God, is never far removed from creed and devotion. ) The third aspect is Erasmus' special use of irony -- an irony both dramatic and satiric --subtle and various, and doubly pronged so that it punctures what it praises but also questions the too obvious alternative, and leaves the reader pondering the whereabouts of the right and the perimeters of truth. To quote the author: 'It seems to me that the fictional works are the exempla that give life and specificity to the great theories of a great man, and a study of them should not be without interest.' ; Erasmus studies; 198 pages; Signed by Author
xvi + 350pp., dans la collection "Humanistica Lovaniensia" vol.5, non coupé, état de neuf, [Petrus Nannius, alias Nanninck, °1500 Alkmaar, +1557 Louvain, philologue professeur], T30783
64pp.avec ills.hors-texte, sur papier "Original mill", tirage limité à 250 exemplaires: no.21, cart., bon état
x + 362pp.with ills., 24cm., in the series "Supplementa humanistica Lovaniensia" vol.12, softcover, fine condition, [contributions in English, German and Italian], T74578
In-4°; cc. (6), al frontespizio stemma xilografico di papa Leone X. Unica edizione assai rara e poco studiata dell’umanista laziale Blosio Palladio. L’opera è in lode di Leone X, alla cui corte l’autore consolida la sua carriera nei principali circoli letterari della Roma del tempo, e come segretario presso i pontefici a venire. Il pontefice lo assolda come scrittore in occasione delle sontuose feste del settembre 1513 per la cittadinanza romana conferita ai suoi familiari, dove recitò anche come attore nella rappresentazione della commedia di Plauto. L’Ut Numa Romuleum è una collezione di componimenti poetici, come era abitudine dei membri dell’Accademia Romana: di Andrea Montopolitano “Italiae querella”, il De domo medica, Epitaphium di Maurizio Amerini, il De natalitio domini e degli endecasillabi di Hieronymus Pharensis, Biagio Pallai (Collevecchio in Sabina- Roma 1550) si distinse nella Roma rinascimentale come poeta e oratore, assumendo nel 1516 la cittadinanza romana in quanto riformatore della Sapienza. Fu segretario di Clemente VII e di Paolo III che nel 1540 lo nominò vescovo di Foligno. Il suo vero nome Biagio Pallai, secondo l'uso dell'Accademia Romana di cui faceva parte, fu mutato in Blosio Palladio. Autore ricordato anche per il componimento in versi Suburbanum Augustini Chisii, pubblicato nel 1512 per la residenza del banchiere Agostino Chigi, villa Farnesina. Baldassare Peruzzi gli costruì una villa alle pendici di Monte Mario. In ICCU un solo esemplare alla Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Roma. Due copie registrate in OCLC (una sotto l’autore Andreas Montopolitanus), a Yale e in Germania; ancora una copia alla British Library (Roma, 1520). Domenico Gnoli, La Roma di Leon X; Milano, 1938. STC p. 486. Only and rare edition of the humanist Blosio Palladio, this work is in honor of Leone X, in whose court the author consolidated his career in the most important litterary circles of time, and as a secretary for the popes to come. Leone hired him as a writer for the september 1513 feasts organized to give Roman citizenship to the relatives of Pope. The “Ut Numa Romuleum” is a collection of poetry compositions, as usual between members of the Accademia Romana. Biagio Pallai, the author, is also rememebered for the poem Suburbanum Augustini Chisii, published in 1512.
345pp., linnen band
in-12, 175 pages, photos hors-texte n/b, broche, couv. illustree à rabats.. Qq annotations, couv. frottee. [PH-5]
157pp.met frontispice, 21cm., in de reeks "Geschiedenis van de wijsbegeerte in Nederland" vol.10, 3 stempeltjes (waarvan een klein stempeltje op onderste bladsneden), zoniet in mooie staat, F69653
157pp. met frontispice, 21cm., in de reeks "Geschiedenis van de wijsbegeerte in Nederland" vol.10, goede staat, F101161
200pp.met buitentekstills., 24cm.