8 407 résultats
15323803Parisiis Paris: apud Ludovicum Cyaneum sub duobus Gallis in via Jacobaea Louis Blauwbloem 1532. First edition. In near-contemporary black calf binding with double gilt fillet border on the covers each board gilt-stamped with the bachelor supralibros of Jacques-Auguste de Thou-an oval laurel wreath enclosing his family arms a chevron and three black horseflies used until 1587. Spine with raised bands and gilt fillets. Large-margined clean copy. Provenance marks: de Thou supralibros and shelfmark inked on the inner front panel; bookplate of G.-E. Stroehlin on the inner front panel; additional armorial bookplate "C. V." on the front flyleaf; and a mounted clipping from the 1912 Stroehlin sale catalogue noting that the binding was "restored." Spine compartments worn with losses to the leather; joints rubbed with small losses along the bands. Corners rubbed; rear cover with an area of surface loss; front cover with a diagonal abrasion. Otherwise well preserved. First edition. In near-contemporary black calf binding with double gilt fillet border on the covers each board gilt-stamped with the bachelor supralibros of Jacques-Auguste de Thou-an oval laurel wreath enclosing his family arms a chevron and three black horseflies used until 1587. Spine with raised bands and gilt fillets. Large-margined clean copy. In-4°: A4 a4-v4. 8 157 3 pp. <p><br /> First edition of Calvin's first published work here in a binding from the library of Jacques-Auguste de Thou.<br /> <p><p><br /> First edition of Calvin's first published work his only classical commentary written on the eve of his "conversion" and printed in Paris in 1532 as a humanist calling-card rather than a theological treatise. He composed it while a young law student licencié ès loix between Bourges and Paris at the height of his immersion in the humanist culture of the Collège Royal and the philological circles around Budé and Erasmus. His choice of Seneca's De Clementia reflects these environments and his interest in ethics sovereignty and political authority. It also provided a classical framework through which a Picard jurist under Francis I could explore questions of justice clemency and political conduct Battles-Hugo 1969.<br /> <p><p><br /> The origins of the edition are well documented. According to Bibliotheca Calviniana Calvin composed the commentary mainly at Bourges before March 1531 and it was printed between February and April 1532. Two letters-one to the Orléans bookseller Philippe Loré and another to François Daniel-show that the book was produced at Calvin's own expense and involved considerable cost; to recover part of this outlay he encouraged professors in Paris Bourges and Orléans to lecture on De Clementia and offered to supply Loré with one hundred copies Peter-Gilmont 1991; Battles-Hugo 1969. In 1533-34 Calvin himself lectured on the treatise at the Collège de Fortet in Paris complementing his efforts to have it adopted in university teaching Gilmont 2005.<br /> <p><p><br /> The dedicatory framework reflects the central role of the Hangest family in his youth. Raised and educated alongside the Hangest sons and effectively integrated into their household Calvin benefited throughout his early career from their patronage most notably through the benefice of Pont-l'Évêque which financed his studies and gave him clerical standing Gordon 2009. In the dedicatory epistle to Claude de Hangest abbot of Saint-Éloi in Noyon he acknowledges that he owes to the family "all I am and all I have" presenting the commentary as the "first-fruits of our harvest" Battles-Hugo 1969.<br /> <p><p><br /> The edition survives in two forms: one with the imprint of Ludovicus Cyaneus Louis Blauwbloem as here and another with a replacement title-page for Loré at Orléans the latter a small sub-issue likely limited to c. 20-25 copies Peter 1971. Battles and Hugo further note two slightly variant impressions of the Cyaneus issue differing in certain pages of gatherings a b d e and g across the four copies they examined at Leiden Wolfenbüttel the Bibliothèque nationale and the British Museum Battles-Hugo 1969.<br /> <p><p><br /> Provenance connects the volume with two significant owners. The binding is one of the de Thou family decorated with the bachelor supralibros of Jacques-Auguste de Thou 1553-1617 président à mortier of the Parlement of Paris and founder of one of the great private libraries of early modern France. De Thou moved in the same magistrate-humanist milieu as the Hangest family-Calvin's early patrons-and the link between the two houses was later reinforced when a niece of de Thou married into the Hangest line. His library noted for its scale and systematic organisation became one of the best-documented collections of the period; the present copy is recorded in the seventeenth-century printed catalogue Catalogus bibliothecae Thuanae where it appears on p. 258. <br /> <p><p><br /> A later owner Gaspard-Ernest Stroehlin 1844-1907 was a Geneva historian of Protestantism doctor of theology and professor of the history of religion at the University of Geneva. His library focused on Reformation history and early Protestant literature was well known and later auctioned in Paris from which this copy derives. His bookplate-showing Calvin teaching in St Pierre Cathedral with the motto Mente libera "think freely" and the word "Champel" a reference to the site of Servetus's execution-remains in this copy. A clipping from the 1912 Stroehlin sale catalogue giving the entry for the present book is mounted on the front pastedown.<br /> <p><p><br /> Calvin's commentary offers a sustained engagement with De Clementia as a work of political ethics. The volume is organised in three parts: his dedicatory epistle to Claude de Hangest his biographical sketch of Seneca and the text of De Clementia printed with Calvin's continuous scholia which regularly exceed Seneca's own text and supply the philological historical legal and rhetorical apparatus expected of a humanist classroom edition. Addressed to Nero Seneca's treatise contrasts principled rule with tyranny through exempla drawn from Roman history law and philosophy. Calvin treats it as a historical and ethical document shaping his annotations around philological historical rhetorical and literary observations.<br /> <p><p><br /> His use of Seneca is informed by close reading of Erasmus's Basel editions of 1515 and 1529 and he responds to Erasmus-whose revised preface of 1529 sharply qualified his earlier praise-by contesting his diminished appraisal of Seneca's philosophical and stylistic worth. Using the 1529 text as his base Calvin revises punctuation and orthography restores earlier readings where they better represent Senecan usage expands the historical framework modifies the explanatory apparatus and draws on additional authorities including Beroaldus Beatus Rhenanus Cicero Plutarch Tacitus and the Roman jurists Battles-Hugo 1969; Bibliotheca Calviniana. The commentary reflects broader early sixteenth-century interest in classical political ethics-especially the contrast between king and tyrant-as a means of analysing authority justice and the operation of law in contemporary France.<br /> <p><p><br /> Rarity is significant. The total print run of the Cyaneus edition is plausibly estimated at around 700 copies Peter 1971. USTC lists eight surviving examples while Bibliotheca Calviniana records additional holdings not included there; taken together the two sources indicate 16 extant copies of the Cyaneus issue. The Loré sub-issue is far scarcer with only two examples listed in Bibliotheca Calviniana. We find no trace of another copy in the market in modern times either in auction records or in dealers' catalogues.<br /> <p><p><br /> Literature: Battles F. L. & Hugo A. M. 1969. Calvin's commentary on Seneca's De Clementia. Brill.; Boulliau I. Quesnel J. & Levesque D. Eds. 1679. Catalogus bibliothecae Thouanae . Paris: Dominique Levesque.; Dreyer W. A. 2018. John Calvin as "public theologian" in view of his Commentary on Seneca's De Clementia. HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies 744 Article a4928; Gilmont J.-F. 2005. John Calvin and the printed book. Truman State University Press.; Gordon B. 2009. Calvin. Yale University Press.; Gordon B. & Trueman C. R. Eds. 2021. The Oxford handbook of Calvin and Calvinism. Oxford University Press.; Peter R. 1971. Calvin's commentary on Seneca's De clementia with introduction translation and notes by Ford Lewis Battles and André Malan Hugo Renaissance Text Series 3; The Renaissance Society of America 1969 Review. Revue d'histoire et de philosophie religieuses 511 79-81.; Peter R. & Gilmont J.-F. 1991. Bibliotheca calviniana: Les œuvres de Jean Calvin publiées au XVIe siècle. I Écrits théologiques littéraires et juridiques 1532-1554. Droz.<br /> <p><p><br /> References: USTC 138123; Bibiotheca Calviniana 32/1 Cat. Stroehlin n° 599.<br /> <p>. apud Ludovicum Cyaneum sub duobus Gallis in via Jacobaea [Louis Blauwbloem] unknown
15601560GEN<p>PRESENTING FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION EXQUISITE GENUINE 465 YEAR OLD FIRST EDITION OF THE HISTORIC GENEVA BIBLE PRINTED BY ROULAND HALL AT GENEVA SWITZERLAND IN 1560. Quarto 9 3/4" x 7" x 2 1/2" HERBERT #107 D & M #77 STC # 2093. Known as the Breeches Bible for its rendering of Genesis 3:7 </p><p><em><strong>" Then the eyes of them both were opened and they knewe that they were naked and they sewed figge tree leaues together and made them selues breeches. "</strong></em></p><p><strong>SHORT DESCRIPTION</strong></p><p>The General title supplied in fine facsimile lacks all three leaves of the preliminaries has all 26 engravings within the text and <strong>all 5 maps</strong> Old Testament and Apocrypha are complete without facsimiles. New Testament Title page dated 1560 is original and the New Testament is complete without facsimiles both tables at the end are incomplete and defective.</p><p><strong>COLLATION AND CONDITION</strong> </p><p><strong><em>GENERAL TITLE PAGE</em></strong> 1 page supplied in fine facsimile on sympathetically aged cotton linen paper. Imprinted at Geneva by Rouland Hall MDLX. Features a wonderful engraving of the scene at the Red Sea surrounded with the passages Exodus 14:14 Psalm 34:19 and Exodus 14:13. Verso is blank.</p><p>lacking the following three leaves of the preliminaries</p><p><strong><em>THE OLD TESTAMENT</em></strong> foliated 1- 385b 63 lines of Roman type to the full page in double columns. Beautiful floriated and historiated initials begin each book along with the arguments. Within the text features the full complement of 26 engravings such as: The situation of the Garden of Eden The flood The crossing of the Red Sea the Tabernacle and the Temple with their furniture Solomon's throne and Ezekiel's vision. Also found here are <strong>3 maps as called for at: Numbers 23 Joshua 15 and the end of Ezekiel. </strong> the remaining 2 maps are listed below where they are found in the n.t. Leaves 1 & 2 with repaired blank outer margins resulting in the loss of a few letters of the printed notes only. Leaves 196-202 with quarter sized stains to the blank footer margins. Leaf 217 stained to the upper half most likely from an ancient floral pressing. Top and bottom of the verso of leaf 238 is smudged. Leaf 263 has a stain in the center approx. 1" x 2" Leaf 286 has a stain in the lower left column approx. 1" x 2". The paper is clean crisp and bright with only very minor staining and soiling. There are no loose missing or torn pages. The edges are straight the gutters are clean the corners are strong. The footer and fore edge margins are excellent while the occasional header margins are trimmed touching and also into the running headlines but without obscuring the words. A Very Good example <strong><em>.</em></strong><strong><em>COMPLETE.</em></strong></p><p><strong><em>THE APOCRYPHA</em></strong> foliated 386-474 63 lines of Roman type to the full page in double columns.Beautiful floriated and historiated initials begin each book. The paper is clean crisp and bright with only very minor staining and soiling. There are no loose missing or torn pages. The edges are straight the gutters are clean the corners are strong. The margins are very good all around. A Very Good example <strong><em>.</em></strong><strong><em>COMPLETE.</em></strong></p><p><strong><em>THE NEW TESTAMENT TITLE PAGE</em></strong> 1 page folio #1. Imprinted at Geneva by Rouland Hall MDLX. Features a wonderful engraving of the scene at the Red Sea surrounded with the passages Exodus 14:14 Psalm 34:19 and Exodus 14:13. Verso is blank. Lightly stained Good. <strong><em>COMPLETE.</em></strong></p><p><strong><em>THE DESCRIPTION OF THE HOLIE LAND </em></strong>3 pages The double page map of the places found in the four evangelists. <strong>Map #4 </strong>of five found in this edition. Clean and crisp verso is blank. Very Good <strong><em>COMPLETE.</em></strong></p><p><strong><em>THE NEW TESTAMENT</em></strong> foliated 2- 122 63 lines of Roman type to the full page in double columns.Beautiful floriated and historiated initials begin each book along with the arguments. Leaf 7 has a somewhat crudely repaired tear without loss of the text Leaves 50-63 have minor chipping to the upper blank corner tips. <strong>Map # 5 </strong>the description of the countries and places mentioned in Acts bound at the end of the text. Leaf 74 has the lower blank corner repaired with loss to a few letters of the notes. Leaf 91 printed slightly skewed. Leaf 94 misnumbered as 84 without a break in the collation. Leaves 120-122 faintly stained. The paper is clean crisp and bright with only very minor staining and soiling. There are no loose missing or torn pages. The edges are straight the gutters are clean the corners are strong. The footer and fore edge margins are excellent while the occasional header margins are trimmed touching the running headlines. A Very Good example <strong><em>COMPLETE.</em></strong></p><p>The following two tables concordances are incomplete. The first table lacks the last page. The second table lacks the first page the next two leaves the final four leaves and all thereafter. Their condition is fair to poor with various faults including tear outs with loss cropped outer margins chipped corners and edges etc.</p><p><strong>ABOUT THE BINDING</strong></p><p>This Bible is bound in a full brown leather Victorian binding that has been neatly rebacked featuring a new burgundy morocco label. All joints are unsplit uncracked and holding firmly. The plain end papers appear to be 18th century and features the inscription of Jacob Elton who was possibly a British Naval Captain. The text block is firm square and unshaken with its fore edges dyed red as was the practice of Victorian binders. The custom fitted brown half leather clamshell case was recently made and features a maroon morocco label and is titled directly to the foot "1560 GENEVA".</p><p><strong>ABOUT THE GENEVA BIBLE</strong></p><p>The Geneva Bible is one of the most historically significant translations of the Bible into English preceding the King James Version by 51 years. It was the primary Bible of 16th-century English Protestantism and was the Bible used by William Shakespeare Oliver Cromwell John Knox John Donne and John Bunyan author of Pilgrim's Progress 1678. It was one of the Bibles taken to America on the Mayflower Pilgrim Hall Museum and Dr. Jiang have collected several bibles of Mayflower passengers. The Geneva Bible was used by many English Dissenters and it was still respected by Oliver Cromwell's soldiers at the time of the English Civil War in the booklet "Cromwell's Soldiers' Pocket Bible".</p><p>This version of the Bible is significant because for the very first time a mechanically printed mass-produced Bible was made available directly to the general public which came with a variety of scriptural study guides and aids collectively called an apparatus which included verse citations that allow the reader to cross-reference one verse with numerous relevant verses in the rest of the Bible introductions to each book of the Bible that acted to summarize all of the material that each book would cover maps tables woodcut illustrations and indices.</p><p>Because the language of the Geneva Bible was more forceful and vigorous most readers strongly preferred this version to the Great Bible. In the words of Cleland Boyd McAfee "it drove the Great Bible off the field by sheer power of excellence".</p><p>During the reign of Queen Mary I of England 1553–58 a number of Protestant scholars fled from England to Geneva Switzerland which was then ruled as a republic in which John Calvin and later Theodore Beza provided the primary spiritual and theological leadership. Among these scholars was William Whittingham who supervised the translation now known as the Geneva Bible in collaboration with Myles Coverdale Christopher Goodman Anthony Gilby Thomas Sampson and William Cole; several of this group later became prominent figures in the Vestments controversy. Whittingham was directly responsible for the New Testament which was complete and published in 1557 while Gilby oversaw the Old Testament.</p><p><em><strong>The first full edition of this Bible with a further revised New Testament appeared in 1560</strong> </em>but it was not printed in England until 1575 New Testament and 1576 complete Bible. Over 150 editions were issued; the last probably in 1644. The very first Bible printed in Scotland was a Geneva Bible which was first issued in 1579. In fact the involvement of Knox and Calvin in the creation of the Geneva Bible made it especially appealing in Scotland where a law was passed in 1579 requiring every household of sufficient means to buy a copy.</p><p>Some editions from 1576 onwards included Laurence Tomson's revisions of the New Testament. Some editions from 1599 onwards used a new "Junius" version of the Book of Revelation in which the notes were translated from a new Latin commentary by Franciscus Junius.</p><p>The annotations which are an important part of the Geneva Bible were Calvinist and Puritan in character and as such they were disliked by the ruling pro-government Anglicans of the Church of England as well as King James I who commissioned the "Authorized Version" or King James Bible in order to replace it. The Geneva Bible had also motivated the earlier production of the Bishops' Bible under Elizabeth I for the same reason and the later Rheims-Douai edition by the Catholic community. The Geneva Bible remained popular among Puritans and remained in widespread use until after the English Civil War. The Geneva notes were surprisingly included in a few editions of the King James version even as late as 1715</p> Rouland Hall
155612421Basle: J. Derbilley at the press of J. Kündig 1556. 18th-century half-sheep and speckled pastepaper over thin wooden boards rear board wormed initials P.S. gilt-lettered on the front panel. <p>      ONLY EDITION EARLY ISSUE OF THE FIRST CALVINIST CATECHISM IN GERMAN AND THE ONLY LITERAL GERMAN TRANSLATION OF CALVIN’S TEXT. No American library holds a copy.<br />       First published in 1537 Calvin’s first attempt at rudimentary religious instruction was a complex reduction of his Institutes. Five years later he simplified his approach couched his ideas in catechistic format and created the standard Calvinist manual — the so-called Second Geneva Catechism. Its first printing in French is lost. In 1545 Calvin published his own Latin translation the basis of our anonymous word-for-word German rendering.<br />       This is Derbilley’s first book. Vagaries and errors in the opening quire suggest he had yet to perfect his new trade many of these idiosyncrasies are reset in digitized copies I examined. In good condition outer margins trimmed with some loss to the shoulder notes repair to the final leaf’s outer blank margin from a removed thumb tab. Inexplicably absent from Peter and Gilmont Bibliotheca Calviniana.<br /> ¶Neuser “Die Übersetzung des Genfer Katechismus 1542/1545 ins Deutsche durch Zacharias Ursinus im Jahr 1563†in Koers 74 2009 683-700; Erichson Bibliographia Calviniana 16; Bietenholz Basle and France in the Sixteenth Century 226; Brüggemann & Brunken Handbuch zur Kinder- und Jugendliteratur 69 & illus. Sp. 268; VD 16 C 311.</p> J. Derbilley at the press of J. Kündig unknown
15251403641Geneva; Genevae; Argentoriati i.e. Strassburg; Hagenau; Coloniae: Robertus Stephanus; Roberto Stephano; Johann Knobloch d. Ä.; Setzer; Apud Ioan. Gymnicum Johann Gymnich 1554; 1551; 1526; 1525; 1531. Octavo 5 parts. In Very Good condition. Bound in contemporary worn vellum. Ties at front hinge separated. Edges of text block dyed blue/black. Part three with rubrication and red ink marginalia.<br /> <br> <br /> <br> <br /> A sammelband in 5 parts of Calvinistic theology.<br /> <br> <br /> <br> <br /> 1 Calvin John Jean; Tremellius Immanuel translator; SEFER HINUKH BEHIRE YAH; Geneva : Nidpas be-bet Robertus Stephanus 1554. 8 152 8 pages.<br /> Translation by Immanuel Tremellius of Jean Calvin's Catéchisme de l'Eglise de Genève. Hebrew title romanized. Primarily in Hebrew; afterword a letter from Tremellius to Duke Christoph of Württemberg dated April 3 1554 in Strasbourg in Latin. First Edition. Tremellius was the first professor of Hebrew at Cambridge University. He converted to Christianity and died in 1580.<br /> USTC: 450063. GLN-306. Index Aureliensis; 129.892. Vinograd Geneva 1.<br /> <br> <br /> <br> <br /> 2 Calvin John Jean; STOICHEIOSIS TES CHRISTIANON PISTEOS = RUDIMENTA FIDEI CHRISTIANAE : LIBELLUS APPRIME UTILIS NUNC PRIMUM IN LUCEM AEDITUS; Genevae : Para RÅvertÅ tÅ StephanÅ etei Roberto Stephano Robert Estienne 1551. 126 2 pages.<br /> First book printed at Geneva by Robert Estienne. Greek translation by Henri Estienne of Calvin's Catéchisme de l'église de Genève. Greek colophon dated 14 Dec. 1551.<br /> USTC: 450041. Renouard: I 80. GLN-222. <br /> <br> <br /> <br> <br /> 3 Bader Johann; Meyer Tobias; AD ILLUSTREM PRINCIPEM D. LUDOVICUM COMITEM PALATINUM RHENI DUCEM BAUARIAE COMITEM VELDENSEM ETC. DE ANSERE QUI SACRAMENTUM EDISSE DICITUR; Argentoriati i.e. Strassburg: Johann Knobloch d. Ä. 1526;<br /> 20 leaves.<br /> USTC: 608905. VD16 B 106. VD16 B 114<br /> Index Aureliensis; 111.457<br /> <br> <br /> <br> <br /> 4 Bugenhagen Johannes; Georg Spalatin; POSTILLATIO IOAN. BVGENHAGII POMERANI IN EVANGELIA USUI TEMPORUM&SANCTORUM TOTIUS ANNI SERUIENTIA; Hagenau: Setzer ca. 1525; <br /> 32 leaves.<br /> USTC: 685333. VD16 B 9351.<br /> <br> <br /> <br> <br /> 5 Augustine of Hippo Saint; D. AURELI AUGUSTINI HIPPONENSIS EPISCOPI DE BONO CONJUGALI LIBER UNUS. EIUSDEM DE SANCTA VIRGINITATE LIBER UNUS.; Coloniae : Apud Ioan. Gymnicum Johann Gymnich 1531<br /> 56 unnumbered leaves. Title within woodcut border with date 1530.<br /> USTC: 625891. VD16 ZV 27243.<br /> <br> <br /> <br> <br /> RW consignment. Shelved case 3. The present sammelband presents a cross-section of sixteenth-century theological writing encapsulating both the intellectual and polemical ferment of the Reformation as well as the enduring theological authority of the patristic tradition. At its heart are two translations of Jean Calvin's Catechism of the Church of Geneva one in Hebrew by Immanuel Tremellius and the other in Greek by Henri Estienne each printed by Robert Estienne at Geneva. The existence of these translations are illustrative of Reformation theologian's claim to return ad fontes back to the languages of Scripture itself. By representing a catechetical summary of Christian doctrine in both Hebrew and Greek the reformers in Geneva sought to demonstrate that their theology was rooted in the sources of revelation and the 'pure' teachings of the early Church in a manner capable of addressing both learned audiences and hoped-for Jewish or Eastern interlocutors. <br /> <br /> <br> <br> Alongside Calvin's catechisms are two early Lutheran texts: Johann Bader and Tobias Meyer's sacramental tract printed in Strasbourg in 1526 and Johannes Bugenhagen's postils printed at Hagenau ca.1525. These works reflect both the polemical and pastoral concerns of the early Lutheran movement on the one hand grappling with the meaning of the Eucharist and on the other providing sermons for the liturgical year. A close ally of Luther Bugenhagen sought to stabilize the reformation communities through pragmatic instruction. Bader's text by contrast exemplifies the more combative dimension of then current theological controversies. Taken together these two texts are illustrative of how Reformation figures not only produced works of doctrinal innovation but also sought new forms of preaching and pastoral practice.<br /> <br /> <br> <br> Also present is a Cologne edition of two treatises by St. Augustine of Hippo De bono coniugali and De sancta virginitate. Augustine's authority among the reformers Lutheran and Calvinist with John Calvin and his followers in particular invoking him as a guarantor of continuity with the early church. In this sammelband which includes works by both Lutherans and Reform theologians the presence of these texts demonstrate how Augustine's writings on marriage and virginity provided a moral theology that could be appropriated across these still-porous confessional divisions. By binding Augustine with Calvin Bugenhagen and other reformers the volume exemplifies how early Protestants claimed authority from the Church Fathers attempting to demonstrate that their reforms did not represent a novelty within the Christian but rather a recovery of the authentic early Christian church. <br /> <br /> <br> <br> The assemblage of these particular and diverse works in this volume suggests that they were likely bound together in the mid-16th century. The presence of Calvinist catechisms Lutheran sermons and polemics and works by Augustine indicates that these texts were brought together during a time in which the boundaries between "Lutheran" and "Reformed" identities were still porous likely before the Lutheran Formula of Concord in 1577 and the Reformed Synod of Dordt in 1618. After these key moments confessional lines between the two traditions became far sharper. In the period between 1540 and 1570 the Reformation was still a popular evangelical movement with significant overlapping sympathies and theological tendencies sharing both a robust humanist disposition and a common appeal to the authority of Scripture and the patristic tradition. A collector of these works during this period would likely have seen these as complementary expressions of the same reforming enterprise. The translations of Calvin's catechism into Greek and Hebrew in particular suggest a distinct cosmopolitanism: a theology that could be directed outward to Jews Eastern Orthodox Christians and the broader "republic of letters".<br /> <br /> <br> <br> Taken together the works gathered in this sammelband are representative of the emergence of a distinctly Protestant culture one that sought to articulate a developing form of Christianity across languages confessions and centuries. The significance of the present volume lies not only in the rarity and importance of its individual components but in their relation to one another - their diversity and unity consonance and dissonance - and is a fine example of the breadth of Reformation theological and cultural engagement across confessional lines and with both the humanist and patristic traditions. 1403641. Shelved Dupont Bookstore. Robertus Stephanus; [Roberto Stephano]; [Johann Knobloch d. Ä.]; [Setzer]; Apud Ioan. Gymnicum [Johann Gymnich] unknown
189126210Washington: Government Printing Office 1891-1895. In the original 36 parts. FIRST EDITION. With 175 numbered double-page lithographed color maps and plates on 178 sheets by Bien. Large elephant folio presented in the original 36 large folio fascicles with their original printed paper wrappers now housed together in a blue cloth portfolio case with string ties the spine of the case is lettered in gilt. A handsome and impressive set in fully original condition overall very excellent and especially well preserved. The original wrappers show some occasional minor wear along the edges and spines occasional small tears at folds or minor creasing or separation. Sets in the original fascicles with wrappers intact are very rare and very elusive in the open market. This is a very fine example of the most rare state of the first edition. SCARCE IN ORIGINAL FOLIO PARTS AND AN EXTREMELY IMPRESSIVE ATLAS PRODUCED BY THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE TO ILLUSTRATE THE OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR. The first of the 36 fascicles contains the index and preface and also included is the 1902 additions and corrections insert each of the following 35 fascicles contain five of the large double page plates.<br> A beautiful and fascinating accompaniment to the official records of the Civil War. Each massive plate is either an impressively detailed and informative map or contains multiple images providing detailed plans of cities towns and fortresses views panoramas uniforms battlefields bridges engagements lookouts etc. etc.<br> The maps and plans were primarily reproduced from those that had been drawn during the war by engineers draftsmen and sometimes even generals themselves for actual military use. Only a few maps drawn later by cartographers were added for historical purposes. Tactical and strategic maps indicate troop disposition; defense lines redoubts and fortifications of key sites are clearly shown. Terrain maps often contain picket positions signal stations and lines of march. Some were taken from what had been only rough sketches some from cartographic masterpieces. All are informative and reveal the knowledge or lack of knowledge that both sides possessed about the terrain and the strength and the position of opposing troops. The index to the maps refers to campaigns and battles rivers creeks lakes bays islands bridges fords ferries landings roads railroads mountains towns churches forts and much more. <br> An indispensable source of information and imagery from the American Civil War. The atlas was not reprinted until 1958. Government Printing Office hardcover
157633142-158Lausanne François Le Preux 1576. 16 380 72 leaves. With coat of armes of the city of Berne in woodcut on title. 8vo. Old calf blind-stamped back with title red edges. Lausanne François Le Preux 1576. First systematical statement of the Reformed Church PMM here present in a re-edition of the authorative Latin text. Taking its final form in 1559 and subsequently much revised enlarged and later re-oublished again from this present edition. The "Institutio Christianae" is certainly one of the most influential books of all time. It was composed in its first form when Jean Calvin 1509-1564 was twenty-six and dedicated his book to Francis I. Highly influential in the Western world and still widely read by theological students today. The book was written as an introductory textbook on the Protestant faith for those with some previous knowledge of theology and covered a broad range of theological topics from the doctrines of church and sacraments to justification by faith alone and Christian liberty. This edition was prepered by: 1 Nicolas Colladon c. 1530 - 1586 a French Calvinist pastor and son of French parents who in 1536 took shelter in Switzerland for religious reasons. He studied theology at Lausanne and Geneva and was a friend of John Calvin and pastor at Vandoevres and Geneva. In 1564 he became chancellor of the Academy where he taught theology until the death of Calvin. With Theodore Beza he worked on a famous monography on the French Reformed Church in France 1560. 2 Augustinus Marlorat du Pasquier 1506 - 1562 a French later a Protestant Reformer after he became indoctrinated with the principles of Protestantism. He left France in 1535 and took refuge in Geneva where he worked as a proof-reader for Greek and Hebrew. The dismissal of Viret in the controversy on excommunication however led Pasquier who approved the rigidly Calvinistic procedure to resign. After a short time in Geneva he went in July to Paris as pastor of the Evangelical congregation there. A nice copy with some contemp. marginalia. _ _ _ - Erichson 34; Adams C 364; Peter/Gilmont 76/3; Index aurel. no. 130.146; Senebier Histoire littéraire de Genevè I. 398; vlg. PMM 65. Lausanne, François Le Preux unknown
1545314899Argentorati Strasbourg: Vuendelinus Rihelius Wendelin Rihel 1545. Fourth edition of the Calvin; second Froben folio edition of the Erasmus. Collation alpha-gamma6 delta4 A-Z6 a-s6 t-v4 v4 blank present. Pp. 431 505 3 blank. Errata at foot of index p. 43. 1 vols. Folio 11-3/4 x 8 inches. Contemporary blindstamped pigskin over wooden boards with metal clasps. With 8 pages of contemporary Latin notes loosely inserted; contemporary marginalia throughout second work. L2 in Calvin with old ink stains not affecting legibility; some wear along one bottom edge of binding. Manuscript prayer in Latin on lower pastedown. Small later paper label on upper cover "Bibliothèque de Spietz". A handsome copy. Fourth edition of the Calvin; second Froben folio edition of the Erasmus. Collation alpha-gamma6 delta4 A-Z6 a-s6 t-v4 v4 blank present. Pp. 431 505 3 blank. Errata at foot of index p. 43. 1 vols. Folio 11-3/4 x 8 inches. Calvin's 'Instutitio': Cornerstone of Liberty. "Calvin's 'Institution of the Christian Religion' was the first systematic statement of a Reformed Church. It is the most important doctrinal work of the Reformation as a whole and provided a comprehensive theological system rivaling those of the Middle Ages . Calvinism's most important role despite Calvin's authoritarian influences was to support the movement for liberty and independence in many parts of the world" Printing and the Mind of Man 65. First published in Basel in 1536 the "Institutio was much revised taking its final form in 1559" PMM. Calvin understood the importance of vernacular translations in the transmission of ideas made possible by the printing press and prepared a French edition in 1541. This fourth edition follows closely and corrects the third edition printed in 1543. All early editions are uncommon.<br/><br/>Calvin 1509-64 drew upon St. Augustine and Luther as well as upon classical sources including Plato and Seneca; his work addressed theological issues and also notably the relations between ecclesiastical and civil government. The contemporary annotations often callouts of classical authors and shoulder notes with a few pointing hands are most extensive in the first six chapters again in chapter sixteen on the Lord's Prayer where Melanchthon is cited but appear throughout. <br/><br/>The first work in this well preserved contemporary binding is the second Froben folio edition of Erasmus Ecclesiastes Basel: Froben 1539. OCLC 632887280 BSB Augsburg Univ. Basel. Collation a-z6A-M6N4O-Q6. Pp. 439 1 blank 18 index imprint date 1540 1 blank 1 Froben's device. This was first published in Basel in 1535. The manuscript notes refer to in the early passages of this work. The Bibliotheque de Spietz was dispersed at auction in 1874. The von Erlach family had been established at Bern since the early sixteenth century. Calvin: PMM 65; Adams C357; VD16 C 291; Peter & Gilmont Bib. Calviniana 45/5; En français dans le texte 59 for 1560 ed. Erasmus: Bezzel 823 Adams E632; VD16 E 2723 Vuendelinus Rihelius [Wendelin Rihel] unknown books
1849WRCAM54260New York: Sherman & Smith 1849. Folding map approximately 22 x 19 3/4 inches partially handcolored. 24mo. Original publisher's cloth stamped in blind and gold lettered. Very light wear to cloth. 20th-century bookplate on front pastedown. A near mint copy of this map in remarkable fine condition. In a half pebbled cloth and printed paper board clamshell box. A rare early version of Smith's MAP OF NORTH AMERICA with an inset of California with the gold regions highlighted. Another edition was published the same year by John Disturnell and it was reissued the following year to accompany the third edition of Disturnell's EMIGRANT'S GUIDE. The routes to California and Oregon from Independence Fort Smith and Port Lavaca are indicated in red and the gold regions of California are shaded yellow. OCLC records only two copies of this edition at Berkeley and UC Davis and Wheat notes one further at the California State Library. WHEAT GOLD REGION 124. WHEAT TRANSMISSISSIPPI 643. HOWES D351 ref. KURUTZ 196 ref. Sherman & Smith hardcover books
1634London: T. Dawson for G. Byshop 1584. Hardcover. Good. Quarto. 48 806 2; 8 464 22pp. 3 5 a8 B6 A8 3 dots2 A8-Z8 Aa8-Zz8 Aaa8-Ddd8 Eee4 dagger4 A8-Z8 Aa8-Gg8 Hh4 - Hh4. Modern half green calf over marbled boards. Yellow stain at top of title-page; couple of marginal wormholes not affecting any text. Stamp of Trinity College Library on verso of title-page. Outer margin of the "A Table of the harmonies" closely shaved affecting some letters but very legible. <br/> <br/> London: T. Dawson for G. Byshop 1584. hardcover
1944TUNISIA-0073-06-11-2026Countway-White Publications 1944. hardcover. Good. 0x0x0. 1944 1st edition used hardcover copy with sunning/foxing to covers/pages. Signed by Ira calvin. No dust jacket. Countway-White Publications hardcover
16341301631634. CALVIN John. The Institution of Christian Religion Written in Latine by M. John Calvin Translated Into English according to the Authours last Edition By Thomas Norton. London: Anne Griffin for Joyce Norton and R. Whitaker 1634. Folio 7-1/2 by 11 inches 19th-century full olive calf raised bands black morocco spine label elaborately gilt-decorated spine and boards marbled endpapers and edges. $7500.1634 edition of Calvin's magnum opus""a comprehensive theological system rivaling those of the Middle Ages particularly Thomas Aquinas""of paramount importance in ultimately supporting a global ""movement for liberty and independence"" PMM.This seminal work ""is considered by many to be one of the finest systematic theologies ever written John T. McNeill argued that Calvin's Institutes is 'one of the few books that have profoundly affected the course of history'"" Haykin To the Ends of the Earth 29. His first theological publication it initially appeared in Latin in a draft of six chapters in 1536. Calvin constantly revised and expanded it until 1559 with publication of the final revised edition of 80 chapters. Institutes ""provided a comprehensive theological system rivaling those of the Middle Ages particularly Thomas Aquinas' Calvinism is the `Reformed' as distinct from the `Lutheran' Church Its cardinal point was the absolute rule of God in the natural and spiritual world by whose grace only is man relieved of the consequence of sin Its most important role despite Calvin's authoritarian influence was to support the movement for liberty and independence in many parts of the world. Outside Switzerland its most potent influence was exercised in Holland and Britain. Puritanism and the ruling theology of the late 16th and early 17th century in England was Calvinistic; the Scottish Reformation was Calvinistic throughout. Through these countries Calvinism exerted considerable influence on the recognition of the liberal rights of the individual as eventually expressed in the Constitution of the United States of America"" PMM 65; emphasis added. ""Norton's gifts were such that Calvin was fortunate in his English translator"" McNeill ed. Calvin xliii. ""Latin editions prior to that of 1559 had been circulated in England and Scotland but only the chapters on the Christian life Book III chapters vi-x in the final order of the work had been put into English."" First published in English in 1561 after the 1559 Geneva edition. With extensive series of Tables at rear. Woodcut-engraved title page; with ornamental initials head- and tail-pieces throughout. Occasional mispagination as issued without loss of text. ESTC S107163. STC 4425. Bookplate.Text with occasional marginal wormholing not affecting text marginal faint dampstain to last few leaves of Tables one small burn mark affecting a few letters on FF2. Beautifully bound. hardcover
1852WRCAM54266Cassel: Theodor Fischer 1852. Sixteen color lithographed mapsheets each 15 1/2 x 19 3/4 inches plus 2pp. explanatory text. Large oblong folio. Original printed paper- covered boards cloth backstrip. Minor rubbing and edge wear light staining. Internally clean. Very good plus. A rare and unusual atlas for the eastern half of the United States printed in German by noted American mapmaker J. Calvin Smith. Fifteen of the sixteen mapsheets comprise a sectional map intended to be pieced together to create a very large map of the eastern United States extending westward to parts of Texas the Indian Territory later Oklahoma and Nebraska. The sixteenth mapsheet is a general map of the United States including a good portion of lower Canada and the Caribbean extending southward to Venezuela. The sheet of explanatory text pictures the sectional map if assembled correctly from the fifteen sheets. <br> <br> This atlas was issued during a period of great German emigration to the United States and it was clearly intended for the use of emigrants and emigration offices - it would have been of great use to them. <br> <br> Most of the time Smith's maps are encountered as American productions. Considering the flood of German emigration to the United States in the mid-19th century it is logical that this map was printed to encourage the practice and therefore commissioned by German investors in the United States. This German edition of Smith's map is rarer than his American productions with Colton. KARROW I:1626. KARPINSKI 177 dating it 1850. RUMSEY 3471 ref. Theodor Fischer hardcover books
189128636Washington: Government Printing Office 1891-1895. 3 volumes. FIRST EDITION. With 175 numbered double-page lithographed color maps and plates on 178 sheets by Bien. Large folio original bright red cloth covered boards lettered in gilt on the upper covers the backs and corner pieces in red morocco the spines ruled in blind on tall bands with two black morocco lettering labels gilt ruled and boldly lettered endpapers renewed. 29 pp preface and contents plates 1-70; plates 71-135; plates 136-175. A beautiful set of this rare and impressive collection of maps of the Civil War. The maps are all well preserved fresh and bright some expected minor wear to the cloth otherwise the bindings are also fine. AN EXTREMELY IMPRESSIVE ATLAS PRODUCED BY THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE TO ILLUSTRATE THE OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR. A beautiful and fascinating accompaniment to the official records of the Civil War. Each massive plate is either an impressively detailed and informative map or contains multiple images providing detailed plans of cities towns and fortresses views panoramas uniforms battlefields bridges engagements lookouts etc. etc.<br> The maps and plans were primarily reproduced from those that had been drawn during the war by engineers draftsmen and sometimes even generals themselves for actual military use. Only a few maps drawn later by cartographers were added for historical purposes. Tactical and strategic maps indicate troop disposition; defense lines redoubts and fortifications of key sites are clearly shown. Terrain maps often contain picket positions signal stations and lines of march. Some were taken from what had been only rough sketches some from cartographic masterpieces. All are informative and reveal the knowledge or lack of knowledge that both sides possessed about the terrain and the strength and the position of opposing troops. The index to the maps refers to campaigns and battles rivers creeks lakes bays islands bridges fords ferries landings roads railroads mountains towns churches forts and much more. <br> An indispensable source of information and imagery from the American Civil War. The atlas was not reprinted till 1958. Government Printing Office hardcover
156582337Genevae Genève Geneva: Ex officina Francisci Perrini 1565. Fine. Ex officina Francisci Perrini Genevae Genève Geneva 1565 12 x 19.50 cm relié CALVIN Jean & BèZE Théodore de Ioannis Caluini in viginti prima Ezechielis Prophetae capita Praelectiones Ioannis Budaei & Caroli Ionuillaei labore & industria exceptae. Com Praefatione Theodori Bazae ad generosis. Gasparem Colignio Gallia Amiralium. Ex officina Francisci Perrini Genevae Geneva 1565 in-8 12 x 195 cm 10 f. 412 ff 20 f. Sig: 10 a-z8 A-Z8 Aa-Hh8 mid-19th-century half morocco The very rare posthumous first edition first printing known as type a with all the typographical characteristics capitals in the fifth line of the title in Roman letter ii instead of ij and identical initials on ii and p.1. This edition contains a preface by Théodore de Bèze Calvin's successor in the form of an exhortation to the head of the Protestants in France Admiral Gaspard de Coligny. Another edition by the same printer appeared a few months later in French translation. Thirty-four lines per page woodcut initials printer's device. Mid-19th century half navy blue morocco by Galette spine in six compartments with richly decorated frames marbled pastedowns and endpapers all edges red. Two corners slightly rubbed small repair to upper inside margin of title a few leaves repaired in margins occasional marginal dampstaining. Contemporary inscription to title. Calvin began his lessons on Ezekiel on the 20th January 1562. Very soon however his state of health compelled him to call upon Théodore de Bèze's help. In a letter to the Daniel family François Perrot notes this double teaching: Our good tutor and common father has got into the habit of commenting on Ezekiel still in hand which is to say on the first three days every second week this year while our Théodore in his turn is commenting on the Catechism in Greek the first three days of the week.Because of his illness Calvin can often hardly finish his bit. Calvin interrupted his unfinished lessons once and for all on the 2nd February 1564. These lessons on the first twenty chapters of the revelations of the Prophet Ezekiel are the last preached by Calvin before his death on the 27th May 1564. Like the previous lessons these too were collected in Latin by Jean Budé and Calvin's secretary Charles de Jonviller who on the 9th October 1564 asked the Council for permission to have printed the lessons of Monseigneur Calvin on the first 20 chapters of Ezekiel reviewed by the deceased. Agreed that he has permission for as many as Monseigneur de Bèze has witnessed. In his dedicatory epistle to Admiral de Coligny de Bèze who succeeded Calvin to the Chair of Theology at the Academy pays elegant homage to his friend and spiritual guide: In him we find the only person in our time who has left behind so many works which contain so whole and so pure a doctrine. But that it had pleased God to leave us the benefit of this shining light for another year or two; it seems to me in truth that one could not demand a more perfect knowledge of the Old and New Testaments.His death of which he was forewarned prevented his finishing Ezekiel which is all the greater a loss to the Church since he was the most obscure of the Prophets as we know.and who knows when we will find someone to complete this painting begun by our Apelles. Only 16 copies in various libraries of the first printing cf. Bibliotheca Calviniana. A handsome and very rare copy of the first printing with good margins. Ex officina Francisci Perrini unknown
111185London Excudebat Thomas Vautrollerius Typographus 1576. . First edition printed in England; 8vo 19.5 x 12.5 cm; text in Latin a few ink marks to title and rear endpapers woodcut device to title and last f. of text; contemporary English gilt calf quadruple blind ruled with single gilt fillet oval centrepiece of interlacing ribbons and tendrils to upper and lower panels spine with gilt fleurons in 5 raised compartments crude early repairs to head and foot of spine and edges old wormhole at foot of lower cover tightly bound otherwise internally clean; 28 742 134pp.<br /> The first edition printed in England of Calvin's seminal work of systematic theology arguably the most important doctrinal work of the sixteenth century. Bound in contemporary English gilt calf.<br /><br />Institutes of the Christian Religion established a framework for Reformed Christianity to rival the comprehensive belief-system of the Catholic Church exerting a powerful influence over the later stages of the Reformation in England and the emergence of Puritanism toward the end of the century. <br /><br />'It discusses ancient and medieval philosophy the Church Fathers the contemporary Roman Church and the Reformers. Calvin is much indebted to St Augustine four thousand quotations from him have been counted in Calvin's works Luther Zwingli and Martin Bucer but he was greatly influenced also by his classical training quoting Plato Seneca and other ancient writers' PMM.<br /> ESTC S104872; cf.PMM 65. London, Excudebat Thomas Vautrollerius Typographus, 1576. unknown
1891JMM8514<p>Washington: U.S. Gov't 1891. Published between 1891-1895; Published under the direction of the Hon. Daniel S. Lamont Secretary of War; The Board of Publication consisted of Maj. George R. Davis Leslie J. Perry & Joseph W. Kirkby; CLXXV Plates; 3/4 black leather & textured black cloth over boards gilt spine titles pale green heavier paper title page to each section & color to maps & uniform plate; Very good plates textblock in a good bindings freshly rebacked in the original manner. Size: 15"x18.5". Hardcover.</p> [U.S. Gov't] hardcover
1929013152Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office 1929. First Edition. Hardcover. Fine and exceptionally scarce item with a superb association. Small octavo 5-1/2" x 7-1/2" bound in flexible blue morocco leather lettered in gilt including Coolidge's name at the bottom right and decorated in gilt with stars in the corners and the Presidential coat-of-arms in the center. With a printed title page but the 19 text pages mimeographed rather than printed on paper with three holes in the gutter margin. Obviously a very limited production likely printed for Coolidge's personal use and quite possibly unique. OCLC does not record any printed copy of this speech though it lists about 70 others. Given the same day as the 1927 State of the Union address this speech was given to a much smaller more selective audience. In the audience was William Butler a Massachusetts Senator who was Coolidge's campaign manager and the Republican Party Chairman. This is his copy and is INSCRIBED and SIGNED to him by the President two days before Coolidge left office: "To Honorable William M. Butler/In appreciation of a long and/faithful friendship/ Calvin Coolidge /The White House/March 1 1929." In the third sentence of his speech Coolidge acknowledges Butler: "Both the primary and the election were under the immediate direction of the present Chairman William M. Butler." In his AUTOBIOGRAPHY Coolidge remarks: "The campaign was magnificently managed by William M. Butler." Two minor text corrections in ink likely by Coolidge. <br/><br/> U.S. Government Printing Office hardcover
157796188London: Imprinted by Thomas Dawson for John Harison and George Byshop 1577. First edition in English of John Calvin's commentaries on the Pauline Epistles. Octavo bound in full speckled calf with raised bands to the spine all edges red rebacked. Title within architectual woodcut border woodcut initials. In very good condition. First editions are rare. One of the earliest extant Christian documents the Pauline Epistles constitute thirteen books of the New Testament and are largely attributed to Paul the Apostle. As part of the canon of Christian theology and ethics the Epistles offer an unprecedented insight into the beliefs and controversies of early Christianity. The Pauline epistles are usually placed between the Acts of the Apostles and the general epistles in modern editions of the New Testament. Most Greek manuscripts however place the General epistles first and a few minuscules place the Pauline epistles at the end of the New Testament. French theologian and reformer John Calvin produced commentaries on most of the books of the Bible. He devoted four years in compiling his commentaries on the Pauline epistles before turning his attention to the general epistles which he dedicated to Edward of England. Imprinted by Thomas Dawson for John Harison and George Byshop hardcover books
189119852Washington D. C.: Gpo. Fine. 1891-1895. First Edition. Hardcover. Slightest handling at a few spots. In their original three-quarter leather bindings. Brown leather and green cloth. Included are a number of "addition and correction" brochures. ; Folio 13" - 23" tall . Gpo hardcover
156582337Ex officina Francisci Perrini | Genevae [Genève] 1565 | 12 x 19.50 cm | relié
1562000029No place: No publisher 1562. Hardcover. Good/not applicable. No publisher no place. - Large 4to. 34.5x21 cm. - 11683 24 pages. - In contemporary hard vellum quite worn and soiled. At the end a separately titled unpaginated section:"Table ov brief Sommarie des Principales matieres concontenues enseste Institution de la religion Chretienne dresse selon l'ordre de l'Alphabet" printed in double columns. - Printed marginalia. - Many pages soiled and partially browned. - On verso of front cover a small book label with decorated borders: "Robert Stokes"; an engraved book-plate: "Stokes"; as well as another label as follows: "This Book formed part of the Library of George Stokes Esq the founder A.D. 1840 while living in Colchester of the Parker Society ." - Calvin's seminal work on Protestant theology which serves the basis for the system of doctrines by the Reformed Churches i.e. Calvinism. - First published in Latin in 1536 and then in Calvin's native French in 1541. This volume is a somewhat later printing of the definitive French edition of 1560. - Exremely rare: not in WorldCat which lists a volume as "s.l. s.n. 1562" with a single location at the Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Roma - but that is with a different pagination of 16 62250 p.; 4to and with a note of "Luogo di pubblicazione presunto: Ginevra. <br/> <br/> No publisher hardcover
1953mon0000028063Herald Press 1953. Unknown Binding. Acceptable. in x in x in. Hardcover. Herald Press unknown
1929184437New York: Cosmopolitan Book Corporation 1929. Presentation copy of the limited edition Signed limited edition presentation copy inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper: "To Frederick W. Skiff with regards Calvin Coolidge". This is number 177 of 1000 copies signed by the 30th President. Skiff 1867-1947 was a prominent collector and author of Adventures in Americana 1935 and Landmarks and Literature 1937. Coolidge's memoirs chart his rise from a lawyer to Massachusetts governor vice-president and finally president. Coolidge's emphasis on low taxes and laissez-faire economics fuelled the Roaring Twenties. While some blame these policies as leading to the 1929 Crash he remains an icon for the American conservative movement; Ronald Reagan placed his portrait in the White House Cabinet Room. Octavo. Original blue quarter cloth grey marbled boards spine lettered in gilt top edge gilt others untrimmed. Housed in the original card slipcase. Very minor wear at slipcase extremities: a fine copy in near-fine slipcase. hardcover
81133COWES Calvin D. comp. Atlas to Accompany the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Washington DC: Government Printing Office 1891-1895. 2 Vols. Large folios. 1st eds. 175 color plates. A very good set in later cloth. HOWES C-816"aa." Nevins II p.31. Dornbusch IV: 12634. Stephenson Civil War Maps 99. A portion of "the most detailed atlas yet published on the Civil War." Stephenson. unknown
1611132719London: John Norton 1611. Rare 1611 edition of Calvin's seminal work on systematic theology regarded as one of the most influential works of Protestant theology. Quarto bound in three quarter calf with five raised bands to the spine elaborate architectural borders to the title page woodcut headpieces and tailpieces. In good condition. Upper portion of title page removed. Written as an introductory textbook on the Protestant creed for those with some previous knowledge of theology John Calvin's Institutes of the Christian Religion was first published in Latin in 1536. The text covers theological topics from the doctrines of church and sacraments to justification by faith alone and Christian liberty. It vigorously attacked the teachings of those Calvin considered unorthodox particularly Roman Catholicism. The Institution Of Christian Religion overshadowed earlier Protestant theologies and is regarded as a classic in theology on the level of Augustine's The City of God and Aquinas's Summa Theologica. John Norton hardcover