605 résultats
xxxii + 87pp., 1st edition, 22cm., publisher's hardcover in red cloth with gilt lettering at spine (some wear at edges and corners), a single marking/annotation in ink on page 37 and 56 and 74, else good, F105180
1929F105180Oxford, Clarendon Press 1929 xxxii + 87pp., 1st edition, 22cm., publisher's hardcover in red cloth with gilt lettering at spine (some wear at edges and corners), a single marking/annotation in ink on page 37 and 56 and 74, else good, F105180
In-16 gr., tela editoriale, pp. XXVIII + (60 ca.). Prefazione in latino. Testo in greco. Volume della collana “Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis”. Ben conservato.
148316243Treviso: Bartholomaeus Confalonerius 2 Feb 1483. First edition in Latin later issued in Greek with the Aldine Aristotle editions of 1497 and 1498. Folio 153 leaves lacks the front blank and 2 leaves of text supplied in clean facsimile. 28.4'x9.2 cm. Bound in later cloth backed boards some marginal waterstaining contemporary Italian marginalia some trimmed close throughout with a full page of contemporary notes on the verso of the final leaf. HC 15491; BMC VI 894; BM-Ital 668; Klebs 958.1; Garrison 1929 12; Castiglioni 1947 181-182; Stillwell T132; Goff T-155; Pritzel 9184;Osler 263; Stillwell The Awakening . 72; Procter 648; Dibner Heralds of Science 18; Norman 266. Rare this had not been to auction since December of 1967 when it sold for $75000 until it sold for $55200 at the Haskell Norman sale 3/18/1998. Stillwell notes that this is the earliest scientific botany. A study of about 5 plants described according to a rather primitive classification which held however until the mid-sixteenth century. Its ninth section on the medicinal properties of plants"the earliest extant herbal except for fragments of a Greek herbal c. 35 B.C."is believed to have been added somewhat after Theophrastus's time. Known as the founder of scientific botany Theophrastus was born in Lesbos and was Aristotle's most highly regarded student and succeeded Aristotle as head of the Lyceum in Athens. He was a prolific writer yet only these two works survive as major works. His De Historia Plantarum described and classifies several hundred plants while the De Causis Plantarum is a work of etiology: exploring a number of topics including generation seeds and the effects of cultivation on wild species. The Historia divides plants into four main divisions: trees shrubs undershrubs and herbs. The translation is by Theodoros Gaza a Greek who became a leading figure in the Italian Renaissance. This translation was commissioned by Pope Nicholas V 1448-1455 a patron of scholars who wished to set up a library that included Greek texts in Latin. Bartholomaeus Confalonerius 2 Feb unknown books
197069731Kent:: Kent State University Press. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1970. Hardcover. 0873380428 . Translated from the Greek with notes and introductory essays. First edition. From the personal library of the late sociologist Daniel Bell with his name on the front free endpaper and a few instances of his brief marginalia. Very good in a very good age darkened along the spine dust jacket. . Kent State University Press, hardcover books
189pp., in the series "Philosophia Antiqua. A series of monographs on ancient philosophy" volume 11, 25cm., softcover (few small stains), most pages still uncut, good condition, F104818
1964F104818Leiden, E.J. Brill 1964 189pp., in the series "Philosophia Antiqua. A series of monographs on ancient philosophy" volume 11, 25cm., softcover (few small stains), most pages still uncut, good condition, F104818
115306Lnd., N.Y., Routledge, Dutton, n.d. (ca. 1910)
87027Paris, Les Belles Lettres, 1952.
154517Paris, Les Belles Lettres, 1952.
92223München, Heimeran, 1974.
108280Deventer, Van Loghum Slaterus, 1977.
87669Deventer, Van Loghum Slaterus, 1977.
1976BL3133London:: William Heinemann 1976. 1976. Series: Loeb Classical Library No. 471. Volume I of III. 17 cm. lxvii 361 7 pp. Greek & English text. Gilt-stamped green cloth dust-jacket; jacket a bit frayed. Burndy bookplate. Very good. ISBN: 0434994715/ 0674995198 William Heinemann, 1976. hardcover books
87429Amst., Paris, 1936.
115744Hildesheim, N.Y., Olms, 1979.
44916Nijmegen, Janssen, 1953.
84827Nijmegen, Janssen, 1953.
154217Leiden (Lugduni Batavorum), Ex officina Elseviriana, 1640.
Gutes Exemplar. - Aus der Bibliothek von Prof Wolfgang Haase, langjährigem Herausgeber der ANRW und des International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT) - Englisch; Griechisch. - Theophrastos von Eresos (griechisch Theóphrastos; * um 371 v. Chr. zu Eresos auf der Insel Lesbos; † um 287 v. Chr. in Athen), deutsch auch Theophrast, war ein griechischer Philosoph und Naturforscher. Er war ein bedeutender Schüler des Aristoteles und als dessen Nachfolger Leiter der peripatetischen Schule. ... (wiki) // The present work owes its origin to the editors' belief that, in attempting to establish the text of a work so difficult as the Metaphysica, careful regard should be paid to the oldest known MS., the Vindobonensis. This MS. was for some reason neglected even in the valuable edition of the late Hermann Usener. The editors had hoped that a recollation of Usener's MSS., together with a collation of the Vindobonensis and of all the late MSS., might result in a clear understanding of their interrelations and might thus give a firm basis for reconstituting the text on other than eclectic principles. In this hope they have been to some extent disappointed, though it does indeed appear that Usener's MSS. are not fairly representative of the tradition. The text as here given, the English translation, the greater part of the Introduction, and all the Commentary are the work of Mr. Ross; for that part of the Introduction which deals with the MSS., for the apparatus criticus, and for the Indexes Mr. Fobes is responsible. ... (Vorwort) // INHALT : INTRODUCTION. ----- TEXT AND TRANSLATION. COMMENTARY. ----- INDEXES ----- Index verborum. ----- Index to the Introduction and Commentary.
Foxing to prelims. Light water damage has caused rippling to DJ. Edgewear to DJ. ; Theophrastus' The Characters consists of brief, vigorous and trenchant delineations of moral types, which contain a most valuable picture of the life of his time. They form the first recorded attempt at systematic character writing. The book has been regarded by some as an independent work; others incline to the view that the sketches were written from time to time by Theophrastus, and collected and edited after his death; others, again, regard the Characters as part of a larger systematic work, but the style of the book is against this. Theophrastus has found many imitators in this kind of writing, notably Hall (1608) , Sir Thomas Overbury (1614–16) , Bishop Earle (1628) and Jean de La Bruyère (1688) , who also translated the Characters. ; 153 pages
1967S10624Chicago:: Argonaut 1967. 1967. First thus. 8vo. 227 pp. Index. Gilt-stamped green cloth. Publisher information tipped-in at title page verso and recto. Includes Theophrastus' De Sensibus in ancient Greek opposite English translation. Ownership signature. Fine. Argonaut, 1967. hardcover books
Endpapers browned. Scholar's name to ffep (R. E. Fantham née Crosthwaite). Minor shelfwear and rubbing to boards. ; Latin Text with Latin Apparatus. ; Oxford Classical Texts Oct (Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis)
Endpapers browned. Former owner's name on ffep. Minor fraying to top of spine. ; Latin Text with Latin Apparatus. ; Oxford Classical Texts Oct (Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis)