34 résultats
158848057Paris: Michel Sonnius 1588. Early edition. Softcover. fair to good- condition. Duodecimo 6 1/2 x 4 1/2". 8 528 32 leaves. Original soft calf with title stamped onto spine. Engraved title page. Decorative headpieces and initials. Engraving on verso of table of contents. Marginalia. Printed by Charles Roger.<br /> <br /> Originally published in 1575 this first French language edition of the works of Philo a first-century Alexandrian philosopher known for his mostly allegorical interpretations of the Torah known in the Hellenic world as the Pentateuch. His works also include histories and comments on philosophy. <br /> <br /> Many of the titles by which texts and text groups are known as modern conventions and not inventions of Philo.<br /> <br /> This book contains no less than 24 titles including the following:<br /> <br /> - De la Création du Monde On The Creation of the World<br /> - Allégories des Saintes Lois Allegorical Expositions of the Holy Laws<br /> - Du Plantement On Planting<br /> - De la Vie de Moïse On the Life of Moses<br /> - De la Charité et de l'Amour de son Prochain On Charity and Love for Others<br /> - De l'État et Devoir du Juge On a Judge's Duty<br /> - De l'Érection et Création du Prince <br /> - De la Force et Grandeur de Courage On the Power and Grandeur of Courage<br /> - Les Dix Commandements The Ten Commandments<br /> - Des Lois Particulières On the Specific Laws<br /> - De la Circoncision On Circumcision<br /> - De la Monarchie On Monarchy<br /> - Quels doiuent estre les loyers & honneurs des Sacrificateurs Rents & Honors of Priests<br /> - Des animaux qui sont propres aux Sacroifices: & quelles sont les elpeces des Sacrifices Elements of Animal Sacrifices<br /> - De ceux qui offrent les hosties au Sacrifice Hosts of Sacrifices<br /> - Qu'il ne faut point receuoir au temple le loyer & gain de la paillarde Rent and Profit of the Merchants<br /> - Que tout homme de bien est libre Every Good Man is Free<br /> - De la vie contemplariue ou des vertus des personnes deuotes Contemplative Life and Virtues<br /> - De la Noblesse On Nobility<br /> - Des loyers & peines Rents and Penalties<br /> - Des maledictions Curses<br /> - Que le monde n'est perissable That the World isnot Perishable<br /> - Contre Flaccus: ou de la prouidence Against Flaccus: or the Providence<br /> - Des vertus & ambassade fait à Caius Virtues & Embassy to Caius<br /> <br /> Text in old French. Front cover curling with spots and scratches. Endpapers age-toned and with creasing. Small tear to title page engraving and chips along bottom edge. Some light staining and starting lightly at pages 177 265 and 425. Block age-toned. Binding in overall fair interior in good- condition. Michel Sonnius unknown
155131289Lugduni Lyon Lyons: Apud Seb. Gryphium Sebastien Gryphe 1551. Hardcover. Very Good. 3 X 5 inches high. 1092 pages complete. Contemporary vellum binding with 4 raised bands on spine handwritten title on spine. Condition of the book is Very Good; Vellum is cracked on spine and is peeling see photo small ownership inscription on title page " Ex Libris Robwitch 1713" the name is hard to make out - probably English Gryphe 'Griffin' colophon on title page ink stains on pages 129 & 609 some pages have very light waterstains in the corners otherwise pages are very clean binding is tight. Military Rare RGR Apud Seb. Gryphium [Sebastien Gryphe] hardcover
158843973Paris: Michel Sonnius 1588. Early edition. Hardcover. f to vg. 12mo 7 x 4 3/4". 8 528 32 leaves. Contemporary full vellum with handwritten title to spine. Publisher's title vignette. Decorative headpieces and initials. <br /> <br /> Originally published in 1575 this first French language edition of the works of Philo a first-century Alexandrian philosopher known for his mostly allegorical interpretations of the Torah known in the Hellenic world as the Pentateuch. His works also include histories and comments on philosophy. <br /> <br /> Many of the titles by which texts and text groups are known as modern conventions and not inventions of Philo.<br /> <br /> This book contains no less than 24 titles including the following:<br /> <br /> - De la Création du Monde On The Creation of the World<br /> - Allégories des Saintes Lois Allegorical Expositions of the Holy Laws<br /> - Du Plantement On Planting<br /> - De la Vie de Moïse On the Life of Moses<br /> - De la Charité et de l'Amour de son Prochain On Charity and Love for Others<br /> - De l'État et Devoir du Juge On a Judge's Duty<br /> - De l'Érection et Création du Prince The creation and elevation of the Prince<br /> - De la Force et Grandeur de Courage On the Power and Grandeur of Courage<br /> - Les Dix Commandements The Ten Commandments<br /> - Des Lois Particulières On the Specific Laws<br /> - De la Circoncision On Circumcision<br /> - De la Monarchie On Monarchy<br /> - Quels doiuent estre les loyers & honneurs des Sacrificateurs Rents & Honors of Priests<br /> - Des animaux qui sont propres aux Sacroifices: & quelles sont les elpeces des Sacrifices Elements of Animal Sacrifices<br /> - De ceux qui offrent les hosties au Sacrifice Hosts of Sacrifices<br /> - Qu'il ne faut point receuoir au temple le loyer & gain de la paillarde Rent and Profit of the Merchants<br /> - Que tout homme de bien est libre Every Good Man is Free<br /> - De la vie contemplariue ou des vertus des personnes deuotes Contemplative Life and Virtues<br /> - De la Noblesse On Nobility<br /> - Des loyers & peines Rents and Penalties<br /> - Des maledictions Curses<br /> - Que le monde n'est perissable That the World isnot Perishable<br /> - Contre Flaccus: ou de la prouidence Against Flaccus: or the Providence<br /> - Des vertus & ambassade fait à Caius Virtues & Embassy to Caius<br /> <br /> Binding age-toned. Book block separating from binding but still holding. Fore-edge of front free endpaper and fly leaf creased and torn. Clear and sporadic water-staining along upper margin of pages throughout. Text in old French. Binding in overall fair to good interior in good to very good condition. Michel Sonnius hardcover
1592PHO-1814Paris, Estienne, 1592, folio, relié demi basane (19eme), dos à nerfs avec auteur et date, coins usés, frottements aux plats, petite déchirure au titre, mouillure par intermittence.
15836293Lutetiae Paris E Typographia Steph. Prevosteau . 1583-85. Two works bound in one volume: 12mo pp. xxiv 347 i. 12mo pp. ii 11 xi 90. Old ink-burn D11-E9 in the first work ie pp. 93-114 particularly noticeable E3-E6. Second work lacks two of the final leaves of text. Text concludes with the errata on verso of H1; H2 and H3 have been extracted; H4 blank as called for by Adams is present. Greek and Latin text. Contemporary limp vellum. Two early ownership inscriptions on title. The clearer of the two reads Ex libris Ioa. Maussaci in an early seventeenth century hand possibly Philippe Jacques de Maussac 1590-1650 president in Montpellier and a Greek scholar he edited Harpocration in 1614 cf. Sandys II p. 287. First edition of the commentary on the Golden Verses of Pythagorus by the fifth-century Neoplatonist Hierocles discovered in the library of François de la Rochefoucauld-Randan and edited and translated by Curterius; bound here with the first edition of Théodore Marcile's Latin translation. Both works were printed by Stephan Prevosteau - he is credited in the colophon of the first work and a variant title page carries his imprint Adams P2312 rather than Nivelles - and pairings of the works are not unknown. The example in the recently dispersed Macclesfield library lot 2711 in part 8 October 2006 was similarly bound in limp vellum and issuing them together may have been Prevosteaus own recommendation to his clients.Adams P2313 & P2314; Brunet III 154-155; Sandys II 105. Book hardcover
156424296<p><strong>1564 Saint Athanasius of Alexandria Egypt 1ed Holbein Durer Style Bible Woodcuts</strong></p><p>Athanasius the Great of Alexandria was a 4th-century church father who was known as being one of the greatest Egyptian leaders in Christianity. He is often best remembered for his opposition to Arius and Eusebius of Nicomedia which ultimately relegated him to exile multiple times. </p><p>Athanasius's works mostly include letters though the letters are greatly in defense of Christianity. He sought to defend the Holy Trinity as well as decrees made at the Council of Nicaea. This Nicaean defense 367AD is one of the first-known written examples of the listings of the New Testament books. </p><p>The writings of Athanasius serve two purposes – attack paganism and defend teachings of Christian redemption. This mindset is fulfilled throughout his works including his Old Testament exegeses where he defends the truth of the Holy Spirit.</p><p>This 1564 Basel edition was published by Nicolas and Eusebius Episcopios in an impressive leather-bound tome. </p><p>Item number: #24296</p><p>Price: $1250</p><p>ATHANASIUS of Alexandria</p><p><strong><em>Athanasii Magni Alexandrini Episcopi graviss. scriptoris et sanctiss. martyris Opera : in quatuor tomos distribute</em></strong></p><p>Basileae: Ex officina Episcopiana per Nicolaum et Eusebium Episcopios 1564. First edition.</p><p><u>Details</u>: </p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->· <!--endif-->Collation: Complete with all pages</p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->o <!--endif-->8 730 142 24</p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->o <!--endif-->Numerous illustrated initials throughout</p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->· <!--endif-->References: USTC 613803</p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->· <!--endif-->Language: Latin </p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->· <!--endif-->Binding: Leather; tight and secure</p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->· <!--endif-->Size: ~12.75in X 9in 32cm x 22.5cm</p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->· <!--endif-->Very rare and desirable </p><p>Our Guarantee:</p><p>Very Fast. Very Safe. Free Shipping Worldwide.</p><p>Customer satisfaction is our priority! Notify us with 7 days of receiving and we will offer a full refund without reservation!</p><p>24296</p><p>Photos available upon request. </p> officina Episcopiana, per Nicolaum et Eusebium Episcopios], hardcover
153212434Cologne: Eucharius Cervicornus Eucharii Cervicorni. Very Good with no dust jacket. 1532. Vellum. 16 240 ie 238 32 pp. In 8s R8 is the last blank. Small octavo 6" x 4" 15 cm x 10 cm full vellum with yapp edges all edges stained dark blue. Beautiful engraved title page with architectural frame and Cleopatra and the asp at the bottom done by Holbein. Wonderful engraving of St. Jerome in his study with his lion and his book the facing page has a spectacular initial with a Roman head along with a small intricately engraved illustration of a saint with a swan with Mary and the infant Jesus in the background St. Hugh . Tables of concordance at the rear. Condition is very good. General light age and patina to the vellum old shelf marks in brown ink to the front cover handwritten spine title quite faded. Interior end papers have an Italian book seller's label some small brown ink marks. Title page has an owner's inscription in old ink of Flavius Floriani Fulginatis occasional small marks or underlinings all seem to be quite old. Paper is a bit toned with some foxing occasional other small flaws which don't hinder reading or appreciation. Entirely in Latin. A quite scarce book. Ammonius of Alexandria was a 3rd century Christian philosopher who is thought to have developed one of the earliest gospel harmonies. The Ammonius text here was said to have been translated by Victor de Capua a 6th century bishop who also worked with the Syriac gospel harmonies the Diatesseron of Tatian. According to a note on a University of Ghent copy Victor de Capua was hesitant whether to ascribe the work to Tatian or to Ammonius. Appears to be a re-setting of the also very hard to find 1524 Mainz edition which identifies Michael Memlius as the modern editor. Very hard to find. Only 3 copies at auction in the last 60 years none for sale now not many in libraries. USTC 689184 VD16 B 4634 ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall . Eucharius Cervicornus (Eucharii Cervicorni) hardcover
1566002448Venice: Curtio Troiano 1566 Bound in vellum with hand written spine titles 351 632 pp. numerous illustrations. Title page dated 1565 colophon dated 1566. Second Tataglia translation with the first Tatarglia translation being the first translation of Euclid into a modern language. This copy with cancel between pages 8 and 9 few marginal notes marginal worming affecting at most two letters and that on few pages front cover first nine leaves and last leaves from page 309 to end with damp stain light intermittent damp stain between. Otherwise still a very good copy. Curtio Troiano hardcover
152232993-1175Strasbourg Johannes Knobloch March 1522. Title within fine wide woodcut border of numerous scenes from the lives and miracles of Saints Peter and Phillip. 6 314 ff. Folio. 17th vellum. small monastery library stamp on title. Strasbourg Johannes Knobloch March 1522. Important collections of Athanasius' works preceded only in 1519 and 1520 by non-identical editions printed by Jean Petit in Paris. Editors of the present book were Christopher Porsena St. Ambrosius of Camaldoni Johannes Reuchlin and Angelo Poliziano. St. Athanasius Magnus 295-373 bishop of Alexandria "Father of Orthodoxy" is one of the greatest Church Fathers. He played a leading role against Arianism in the first Council of Nicaea. His "Disputatio contra Arrium" is printed here on ff. CCLXIIr-CCLXXIv as well as Eramus' "Paraclesis ad lectorum plum" on ff. 2-5 at the beginning VD 16 E 3288 which was printed for the first time in 1516 as the introduction to his NT translation. A.o. the Wolfenbüttel copy lacks index and additional 6 leaves incl. title at the beginning. In this present copy the 10 ff. index was originally not bound in.- Some old ms. annotations in the text otherwise a fine copy. - VD 16 A 3977; Index aur. 109.392; Muller 340; Hoffmann Griech. I 389; Adams A-2080; not in Kristeller. Strasbourg, Johannes Knobloch hardcover
15541506230049Venice: Apud Hieronymum Scotum 1554-01-01. Hardcover. Good. Folio. Original vellum. Minor soiling to cover. Good binding and cover. Later leather binding straps. Later end pages. Printer's device on title page. Text generally clean a few lines of early marginal notation and underlining. Collated: A-L8 M-M6 N-N4 in 8's with the title as leaf A1. Faint stain on first few leaves. Edito princeps 1535. Refs: British Museum p. 44. STC Italy Vol I. p. 99; Not in Brunet. <br><br> Johannes Philoponus John the Grammarian or John of Alexandria was an important Aristotelian commentator and Christian theologian. John's commentaries on Aristotle were influential on medieval and early modern thinkers in Europe such as Gianfrancesco Pico della Mirandola and Galileo. Philoponus has been seen as an important precursor to the establishment of empirical philosophy. <BR> In this book Philoponus comments on Aristotle's De Anima On the Soul and substantially modifies Aristotle's ideas. His commentary deals specifically with Aristotle's theory of light "Philoponus contends that Aristotle' view fails to account both for the laws of optics. Philoponus modifies the theory so as to save the phenomena he proceeds to re-interpret the term Energeia not as a state of actuality but rather as an 'incorporeal activity' which besides constituting the transparency of the medium is also capable of warming bodies.Due to this novel interpretation of Aristotle's terminology light is now understood not statically but as something dynamical." - Stanford Philosophical Encyclopedia. <BR>It should also be noted that since Michael Hayduck's edition Berlin 1897 it is generally assumed by scholars that the third book of the commentary that had been ascribed to John Philoponus wasoriginally written by Stephanus of Alexandria as is attested in the manuscript Parisinus gr. 1914 11th/12th cent. An important early work in physics and natural philosophy. Venice: Apud Hieronymum Scotum hardcover
159254283Urbino, Bartholomeo, e Simone Ragusij fratelli, 1592. Small 4to. Hcalf (19th century), gilt spine, raised bands, titlelabel with gilt lettering. Spine a little rubbed and fronthinge weakening. Corners strenghtened with vellum. Ff (4),82. With around 90 woodcuts in the text including one on the title-page. A stamp on verso of titlepage (the Salamander Collection). Title-page with light browning. A few scattered brownspots, but internally clean. Verso of last leaf with errata. Light fraying to the first 3 leaves.
159254283Urbino Bartholomeo e Simone Ragusij fratelli 1592. Small 4to. Hcalf 19th century gilt spine raised bands titlelabel with gilt lettering. Spine a little rubbed and fronthinge weakening. Corners strenghtened with vellum. Ff 482. With around 90 woodcuts in the text including one on the title-page. A stamp on verso of titlepage the Salamander Collection. Title-page with light browning. A few scattered brownspots but internally clean. Verso of last leaf with errata. Light fraying to the first 3 leaves. <br/><br/><em>Second Italian edition of Heron's main work Spiritalium being his first publication. The work stimulated and contributed substantially to the interest in pneumatics that arose suddenly in the late 16th century and led to the work of Toricelli and Boyle. The "Pneumatics" was not published in Greek until 1693. It is one of the major sources to our knowledge of the techniques and mechanics of Antiquity and the many hydraulic and mechanical inventions by Hero are here depicted for the first time in print. The work includes studies of pneumatics and mechanics and include 89 illustrations of different inventions such as siphons fountains engines an account of a small stationary steam-engine which is of the form now known as Avery's patent the double-force pump etc. which "by the union of compressed air earth fire and water and the concurrence of.elementary principles. supply the most pressing wants of the human life or produce amazement and alarm." The book describes many gadgets and magical tricks and includes the first suggestion of a steam engine see f. 53 verso. Sarton Introduction.Vol. I pp. 208 ff. - Adams H:372 - Poggendorff I: 1084. - Brunet III129. </em> hardcover
155848886Basel: Nikolaus Episcopius the Younger 1558. Hardcover. Fine. Two volumes octavo. I: a-z8 blank a8 A-Z8 alpha-gamma8 delta4 396 leaves pp. 14 2 blank 774 1 blank 1 printer’s device. II: Aa-Zz8 AA-ZZ8 Aaa-Ggg8 blank Aaa8 Hhh4 428 leaves pp. 2 779-1526 2 blank 103 index 1 colophon 1 blank 1 printer’s device. Imprint from colophon vol. 2. Woodcut printer’s devices at titles and final leaves both volumes; woodcut historiated initials open each book. Contemporary paneled pigskin over beveled wooden boards tooled in blind. Spines with raised bands in four compartments library tickets at bottom compartment. Brass clasps and caches intact. Spines cleaned with later library shelf marks and traces of older manuscript titling. Very occasional faint touches of marginal foxing or soiling. A fine amply-margined set of an uncommon edition.<br /> <br /> Second Episcopius edition and the first Latin version of Philo’s complete works here in octavo format and augmented with treatises translated from the Greek on the resurrection of the dead and the immortality of the soul by Athenogorus of Athens and Aeneas of Gaza. Sigmund Gelen’s 1497-1554 version had first appeared from the press of Episcopius as a single folio volume in 1554. The first volume contains no imprint data apart from the device’s at the title and final leaf. The colophon of the second volume provides the complete information while the imprint at the title omits Episcopius’ name. <br /> <br /> Provenance: Old manuscript entries of “Bibliotheca Eccta Scaph. ad D. Joan.†at titles both volumes. References: Adams P-1029; Fürst 3:89; Goodhart & Goodenough 451. Hofmann 3:70. VD16 ZV 12448/12449 total of only 5 libraries located between the two entries.<br /> <br /> Full titles and imprint: Philonis Iudaei scriptoris eloquentissimi ac philosophi summi lucubrationes quotquot haberi potuerunt Latinae factae per Sigismundum Gelenium. His accessit propter argumenti similitudinem Athenogoras De moruorum resurrectione Petro Nannio interprete et Aeneas Gazaeus De immortalitate animarum et corporum resurrectione Ioanne Vuolphio interprete uterque integritati restitutus addito rerum memorandarum Indice. vol. 2: Tomus II Philonis Iudaei Commentariorum Sigismundo Gelenio interprete. from colophon: Basileae apud Nic. Episcopium Iun. M.D.LVIII. Nikolaus Episcopius the Younger hardcover
156624827Basileae: Per Thomam Guarinum 1566. Folio 33.5 cm; 13.125". 364 pp. 8 ff. <br><br>also bound in Vermigli Pietro Martire. In selectissimam D. Pauli priorem ad Corinthios Epistolam. Tiguri: apud C. Froschouerum 1567. Folio. 6 242 17 ff. lacks final blank.<br>Â Â Â Â Wonderful large folio volume containing the Works in Latin translation of St. Clement of Alexandria ca. 150 ca. 215 here in the second edition as edited by Gentian Hervet 14991584; the first was in 1556 from Isengrin's press. In this edition Isengrin's device appears on the title-page and the verso of the final leaf. As with the first edition this has scholia at the end notes including sidenotes and an index. The contents are Liber adhortatorius adversus gentes qui Protrepticus inscribitur; Paeagogi libri tres; and Stromaton sive Commentariorum de varia multiplicique literatura ad instituendum Christianum philosophum libri octo.<br>Â Â Â Â The second work is Peter Martyr's commentaries on Corinthians here in the second edition. It has a full-page woodcut => portrait of him on the recto of leaf aa6. The printer's woodcut device is on the title-page and there are numerous woodcut initials. The sidenotes are printed in italic while the text proper is in roman.<br>Â Â Â Â Peter Martyr 8 September 1499 12 November 1562 was an Italian theologian who began his religious life as an Augustinian friar converted to the Protestant cause was closely associated on the continent with Ochino Bucer and some prominent Lutherans and while in England where he held the Regius Chair of Divinity at Oxford was an intimate of Thomas Cranmer and Bishop Jewel.<br>Â Â Â Â Both works are uncommon in these editions in the U.S.: We locate three institutions reporting ownership of the first title and three totally different institutions owning the Vermigli.<br>Â Â Â Â Binding: Contemporary alum-tawed pig over wooden boards with bevelled edges and metal and leather clasps; one clasp perished. Leather tooled elaborately in blind using a variety of rolls and fillets including one roll incorporating the date 1546 a medallion of David and his harp and another medallion depicting John the Baptist with the words below the image "Ecce Agnus Dei. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â Clement: VD16 C4070; Index Aurel. 104.903; Adams C2106. Vermigli: VD16 B5054; Adams M788. Bound as above. Ex-library with bookplate on front pastedown small blind pressure- not perf. stamp on title-page and remnant of charge pocket at rear; six-digit number stamped in lower margin of one leaf. Early inked ownership indicia on title-page and old private ownership stamp on front free endpaper; a little old marginalia and underlining. A very little foxing and the odd spot only. => Excellent copies of both works in a handsome contemporary binding. Per Thomam Guarinum hardcover books
157531751Urbini, (D. Frisolini), 1575. Small 4to. Fine recent full vellum in old style with written title on back. Titlepage + 80 leaves (title unnumb. + F 1-80 with 4 leaves misnumb., e.g. F70 instead of 80). The dedicationleaf (unnumb.) after title missing. Text complete, fine and clean with broad margins. One large initial in woodcut and 89 large textillustrations in woodcut.
157531751Urbini D. Frisolini 1575. Small 4to. Fine recent full vellum in old style with written title on back. Titlepage 80 leaves title unnumb. F 1-80 with 4 leaves misnumb. e.g. F70 instead of 80. The dedicationleaf unnumb. after title missing. Text complete fine and clean with broad margins. One large initial in woodcut and 89 large textillustrations in woodcut. <br/><br/><em>First edition of Heron's main work being his first publication. The work stimulated and contributed substantially to the interest in pneumatics that arose suddenly in the late 16th century and led to the work of Toricelli and Boyle. The "Pneumatics" was not published in Greek until 1693. It is one of the major sources to our knowledge of the techniques and mechanics of Antiquity and the many hydraulic and mechanical inventions by Hero are here depicted for the first time in print. The work includes studies of pneumatics and mechanics and include 89 illustrations of different inventions such as siphons fountains engines an account of a small stationary steam-engine which is of the form now known as Avery's patent the double-force pump etc. which "by the union of compressed air earth fire and water and the concurrence of.elementary principles. supply the most pressing wants of the human life or produce amazement and alarm." The book describes many gadgets and magical tricks and includes the first suggestion of a steam engine see f. 52. - Sarton Introduction.Vol. I pp. 208 ff. - Adams H:369 - Poggendorff I: 1084. </em> hardcover
1521D6762Haguenau: Thomas Anshelm Badensis December 1521. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Folio 319 x 203mm. Signatures: a-z in 8s; A-B in 6s. Double column numbered to 776 text in Greek. Woodcut initial beginning letter A. Large woodcut printers device on final leaf by Hans Baldung Grien d.1545 German artist and printmaker is called one of his best works Butsch I p. 48 pl. 75. Period limp vellum neatly rebacked remnants of old index tabs; light staining or wear with use otherwise very good. Few instances of marginalia in Greek mostly in letter A; Armorial bookplate of Reverend William B. Hayne Master of the free grammar school of Hinton Maurice in Devon; sold by Thomas Baker to Cuthbert H. Turner 1860-1930 English ecclesiastical historian and Biblical scholar his ownership inscription dated 1919 Magdalen College Oxford; John Waynflete Carter 1905-1975 English author diplomat and book collector his book label on front pastedown; BL early emblematical bookplate on front pastedown; gilt monogram on covers CML. <br/><br/>First edition printed in a German speaking country of Hesychius Lexicon of obscure Greek words this copy with an interesting scholarly provenance. First Edition printed in a German-speaking country correcting the Aldine edition of 1514. The Lexicon suffered substantial alterations including abridgements and additions on its way from the author to the only surviving manuscript of the fifteenth century. This production gives all-important information about the manuscript and the work of earlier scholars. Hesychius of Alexandria lived in the fifth century A.D. and compiled this dictionary of unusual or difficult Greek words with explanations in Greek. Approximately 51000 entries make it the richest surviving Greek lexicon compiled until the invention of printing. Hesychius Lexicon is of great importance to Ancient Greek studies because it contains countless words and expressions from poetry administration medicine and so on that are otherwise unknown or insufficiently explained. In particular this work preserves numerous words from the Greek dialects that are important not only for Greek but also for Indo-European philology. Staikos says A unique source book Hesychius Lexicon deals mainly with words that exist in unusual forms or have more than one meaning that is to say rare words that were not in everyday use. It also quotes a great many passages from lost works by orators poets historians and medical writers. Excellent survival and passed through many learned hands. Adams H509; Staikos I 348. Thomas Anshelm Badensis hardcover
151919915Parisiis: Joanne Paruo i.e. Jean Petit 1519. Folio extra. 6 255 66 ff. <br><br>also bound in: Basil Saint Bishop of Caesarea. Basilii Magni Caesariensium in Cappadocia Antistitis sanctissimi opera plane diuina variis e locis sedulo collecta: & accuratione ac impensis Iodici Badii Ascesii recognita & coimpressa quorum index proxima pandetur charta. Paris: Venundantur eidem Ascensio i.e. Badius Ascensius 1520. Folio extra. 10 178 ff.<br>Â Â Â Â Two editions of Church Fathers from two scholar/printer presses. St. Athanasius's text was translated into Latin by three noted Renaissance scholars edited by Nicholas Beraldus and has the added prestige of apparatus by Erasmus. The title-page is printed with a four-piece woodcut border with the title in red and black and bears the famous Petit printer's device. => The text enjoys handsome typography side- and shouldernotes and large woodcut initials.<br>Â Â Â Â The works of St. Basil is from Badius Ascensius's press and he acted as the editor the translators having been Johannes Argyropoulos Georgius Trapezuntius and others. The title-page uses the same four-part woodcut title-page border as found on the St. Athanasius bound in at the front which makes much sense given the familial relationship between Ascensius and Petit. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â Athanasius: Index Aurel. 109.388; Moreau II 1982. Basil: Index Aurel. 114.440; Renouard Ascensius II 145/146; Moreau II 2246. Alum-tawed pigskin elaborately tooled in blind over wooden boards with metal and leather clasps; binding dust-soiled with one clasp perished head pulled one corner tip broken off small hole in leather on rear board. Inside some early marginalia and underlining in red; narrow arc of old light waterstaining to fore-edges of one part. Pages generally very clean. Joanne Paruo [i.e., Jean Petit] hardcover books
155832859Basel, Johannem Hervagium & Bernhardum Brand, 1558. Folio. (30,5x21,5). Bound in 19th century brown hmorocco with 5 raised bands. Light wear to back and corners a bit bumped. (2),587 pp.Numerous wood-cut diagrams and initials throughout. First ab. 20 leaves with different degrees of yellowing and occasional with marginal faint dampstaining. 3 leaves with upper right corners repaired without loss of text. The ""privilege"" at verso of title partly unreadable as a piece of paper is pasted on, some of these letters are faint, just as some letters in ""Basiliae"" on title are weak. Last leaf with colophon and printers large woodcut-device on verso is mounted, but not hiding the wood-cut. The word ""Basiliae"" on last leaf recto, is weak or nearly gone. Overall a large good copy as usually without the foreword by Melanchton. A small rubber-stamp on title: ""Duplum Bibliothecæ V.E."" and in old hand: ""Bibliothecæ Conventij Romani S. Andrea de Fratrij (?)""
1588F4CBKZTH4G5BLyon 1588. 4to. Sybille de la Porte Contemporary limp calf parchment sewn on 2 tanned leather thongs manuscript title on spine remnants of tanned leather ties. With Porta's woodcut device on title-page showing Samson carrying the doors of Gaza with the motto "Libertatem meam mecum porto" Baudrier VII pp. 350 no. 3 a woodcut headpiece also incorporating an illustration of Samson with the doors Baudrier VII pp. 350 no. 1 several woodcut tailpieces numerous decorated woodcut initials at least 3 series and decorations built up from cast fleurons. 24 454 25 1 blank pp. First edition of Agelli's translation and first separate edition of any version of Cyril's "the adoration and worship of God in spirit and in truth" a commentary on the Old Testament concerning Mosaic law written in the form of a dialogue between Cyril and Palladius. It is the first commentary by the patriarch of Alexandria Cyril of Alexandria ca. 376-444 whose "precision accuracy and skill as a theologian has often been remarked" The Oxford Dictionary of Saints. "St. Cyril uncovers this mysterious allegorical and immutable sense of Mosaic Law and adds a coherent sketch of Old Testament foundations of spiritual preparation. In particular he dwells on the Old Testament prototypes of the Church" Florovsky. It is published by the female printer Sybille de la Porte 1540-1608 widow of the printer Henry de Gabiano.With 17th-century owner's inscription on title-page. In very good condition with a minor water stain in the outer margin of ca. 20 leaves some small stains from the ties of the binding through the first few leaves. Binding also very good only slightly chipped in the lower spine and ca. 10 tiny wormholes.l Baudrier VII pp. 355-356; French vernacular books 63857; USTC 156678; cf. Florovsky The Byzantine Fathers of the fifth century p. 186. hardcover
1521D6762Haguenau: Thomas Anshelm Badensis December 1521. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Folio 319 x 203mm. Signatures: a-z in 8s; A-B in 6s. Double column numbered to 776 text in Greek. Woodcut initial beginning letter A. Large woodcut printers device on final leaf by Hans Baldung Grien d.1545 German artist and printmaker is called one of his best works Butsch I p. 48 pl. 75. Period limp vellum neatly rebacked remnants of old index tabs; light staining or wear with use otherwise very good. Few instances of marginalia in Greek mostly in letter A; Armorial bookplate of Reverend William B. Hayne Master of the free grammar school of Hinton Maurice in Devon; sold by Thomas Baker to Cuthbert H. Turner 1860-1930 English ecclesiastical historian and Biblical scholar his ownership inscription dated 1919 Magdalen College Oxford; John Waynflete Carter 1905-1975 English author diplomat and book collector his book label on front pastedown; BL early emblematical bookplate on front pastedown; gilt monogram on covers CML. <br/><br/>First edition printed in a German speaking country of Hesychius Lexicon of obscure Greek words this copy with an interesting scholarly provenance. First Edition printed in a German-speaking country correcting the Aldine edition of 1514. The Lexicon suffered substantial alterations including abridgements and additions on its way from the author to the only surviving manuscript of the fifteenth century. This production gives all-important information about the manuscript and the work of earlier scholars. Hesychius of Alexandria lived in the fifth century A.D. and compiled this dictionary of unusual or difficult Greek words with explanations in Greek. Approximately 51000 entries make it the richest surviving Greek lexicon compiled until the invention of printing. Hesychius Lexicon is of great importance to Ancient Greek studies because it contains countless words and expressions from poetry administration medicine and so on that are otherwise unknown or insufficiently explained. In particular this work preserves numerous words from the Greek dialects that are important not only for Greek but also for Indo-European philology. Staikos says A unique source book Hesychius Lexicon deals mainly with words that exist in unusual forms or have more than one meaning that is to say rare words that were not in everyday use. It also quotes a great many passages from lost works by orators poets historians and medical writers. Excellent survival and passed through many learned hands. Adams H509; Staikos I 348. Thomas Anshelm Badensis hardcover books
15084444Paris: Printed by Wolfgang Hopyl for himself Jean Petit and Thielmann Kerver 1508. First Complete Edition. Very good. Folio. a-o8 p3 A101 B-G8 H10 q-z8 A-C8 D4 COMPLETE. Inconsistent foliation: 115 64 116-223 i.e. 222 ff. With Wolfgang Hopyl's elegant title-page woodcut Sylvestre Marques typographiques 1066 depicting two eagles displayed in their beaks a circle crowned with letterpress title in the center in their claws a second circle early ownership canceled evidence of what may have been MS notes surrounding it in the margins are fine renderings of trees and plants. Slight foxing or toning occasional minor stains or wormholes in blank margins inexplicable 2 cm. tears in lower blank margins of a number of consecutive leaves 55-126 second numbering none affecting text. Occasional marginal notes and notes of chapter parts. Contemporary Italian blind stamped leather heavily restored SEE IMAGES modern smooth spine with portions of original spine laid down four deerskin ties replacements original pastedowns and endleaves retained 3 at the front and 3 at the back. The binding and annotations are INTRIGUING and the paper stock is VERY CRISP AND CLEAN. FIRST EDITION OF CYRIL'S COMMENTARY ON THE GOSPELS OF SAINT JOHN. OUR COPY WAS EXPORTED TO ITALY AT AN EARLY DATE WHERE IT WAS BOUND POSSIBLY IN ROME AND BEARS AN EXTREMELY INTRIGUING APOCALYPTIC POEM IN MANUSCRIPT AS WELL AS A MANUSCRIPT COPY OF A LITTLE KNOWN POEM BY PETRARCH. <br /> <br /> The Apocalyptic Prophecy: <br /> <br /> On the rear pastedown is following 14-line poem dated 1529: <br /> <br /> "Bella fames pestis fraudes Saturnia regna <br /> Sternent et veteres pellentur ubique tyranni. <br /> Monstra loquor tunc cum pariet bos rubeus hydram <br /> Nec Deus extinguet flammas nec deseret iram <br /> Ni prius Ausoniae feriant mala singula gentes. <br /> Poenae Tempus erit prope lustrum. Mox aliger ingens <br /> Surget et issomno rostro metuendus et ungue. <br /> Colla bovis caedet sitibundus iniqui draconis <br /> Viscera depascet. Gallorum insignia flores <br /> Sternet humi; reduces statuetque in propria reges. <br /> Galatia genitus terra Vir Justus et aequus <br /> Pastor erit coeli claves non sceptra gubernans. <br /> Pax erit: et toto surget Concordia Mundo. <br /> Una fides unus regnabit in omnia Princeps." <br /> <br /> TRANSLATION: "War famine pestilence and deceit shall prostrate the Saturnian i.e. ancient Italian kingdoms and the old tyrants shall everywhere be expelled. A shepherd will hold the keys not the one governing kingdoms. I speak of monsters! When the red cow shall give birth to the hydra God will not extinguish the flames nor abandon his anger until all these calamities shall have stricken the people of Ausonia. This state of affairs shall last about five years. Then an enormous bird shall awaken as from a sleep and with its terrible beak and claws shall cut off the neck of the ox and shall feed on the entrails of the thirty wicked dragon. He shall spread the insignia and flowers of the Gauls on the ground and restore the legitimate kings. Born in the land of Galatia is a just and equitable man he will lead as a shepherd with the keys of heaven not govern with scepters. There will be peace and harmony shall rise throughout the world. One faith one ruler shall reign over all." <br /> <br /> A number of variants of this extraordinary apocalyptic prophecy exist and its authorship remains unconfirmed. Petrus Galatinus Pietro Galatino has been proposed for which see Sharon Ann Leftley Millenarian Thought in Renaissance Rome with Special Reference to Pietro Galatino c. 1465- c. 1540 and Egidio da Viterbo c. 1469-1532 Univ. Bristol thesis 1995. Jennifer Britnell mentions Boethius Severinus in conjunction with Galatinus for which see "Jean Lemaire de Belges and Prophecy" in: Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 42:1 p. 160 & n. 86. A revisionist political version of the poem was published in "I futuri destini degli stati e delle nazioni ovvero Profezie e predizioni" 1860 pp. 135-136 and it is presumably this that appears uncredited in R. Gerald Culleton's The Reign of Antichrist 2009 no. 347.<br /> <br /> The Petrarch Poem:<br /> <br /> On the front binder's blanks are written by the same hand as the preceding two poems the second and longer one being a copy of Francesco Petrarch's beautiful but little known 36-line "Dulcis amica Dei" Petrarch Seniles XV 15. 6 in hexameters in praise of and supplication to Mary Magdalen:<br /> <br /> "Dulcis amica dei lacrimis inflectere nostris<br /> Atque humiles attende preces nostræque saluti <br /> Consule namque potes. Nec enim tibi tangere frustra <br /> Permissum gemituque pedes perfundere sacros <br /> Et nitidis siccare comis ferre oscula plantis <br /> Inque caput Domini pretiosos spargere odores" etc.<br /> <br /> Petrarch had made a pilgrimage to the shrine of Mary Magdalene in Sainte Baume near Marsailles and wrote several Latin hymns in her honor. Petrarch here commences with a brief imprecation to Magdalen to "look kindly" on his tears. Michael Haag explains: "In a manner suggesting at once the spiritual and the carnal Petrarch is calling on Mary Magdalene who soaked the wounds of Jesus with her tears to soak his own wounds with her tears also" see The Quest for Mary Magdalene: History and Legend. Petrarch then reflects upon Mary Magdalene as a contemplative hermit in her cave where her "hunger cold and hard bed of stone were sweetened by her love and hope." <br /> <br /> THE WATERMARKS: On three of the six binder's blanks appear a very distinctive Bull's Head with 5-leaf flower above being a distorted version of Briquet 14950 which he recorded at Ferrara in 1505 and Constance in 1507. <br /> <br /> THE BINDING: At least one tool on this binding is reproduced by De Marinis i.a. the unmistakale corner ornaments which are shared on BAV R.I.II.1069 Vipera Rome 1517 and which De Marinis attributed to Rome. <br /> <br /> THE PUBLISHERS: Responsible for printing and publishing this book was a multinational consortium acting in Paris: Wolfgang Hopyl was from the Low Countries Thielmann Kerver was German and Jean Petit Parisian. Roger Chartier described the latter as "a capitalist who without question was at the head of the Paris book trade at the end of the 15th century and in the early 16th century. From 1493 to 1530 he published more than a thousand books most of them of major importance amounting to one tenth of the entire output of the Paris trade" The Coming of the Book p. 121. Our publishers engaged Judocus Clichtoveus Josse van Clichtove as the editor who utilized the Latin translation by Georgio Trapezontio. <br /> <br /> THE PRINTING TYPE: This was Wolfgang Hopyl's "English-bodied Roman" r 98 which was apparently used here for the first time and was apparently proprietary to him. Records of his 1523 estate list an entry for "texte romyn" almost certainly the type used for printing this book according to Vervliet "Early sixteenth-century Parisian Roman types" in: De Gulden Passer 83 2005 p. 27 and fig. 10. <br /> <br /> BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE: Two so-called issues of this first edition exist; our copy belongs the second and obviously most complete issue "with fresh material inserted" according to Adams. This so-called "fresh material" consists of an additional 64 ! folios which literally constitute Books 5-8 of the total 12 books thereby rendering ours the first complete edition of Cyril's Commentary on the Gospels of Saint John. <br /> <br /> CATALOGUER'S NOTE: We believe that in this instance the term "issue" has been wrongly employed by bibliographers. "Issue" is a conscious publishing effort i.e. issued on fine paper special binding etc. Here however Hopyl's press made a series of colossal errors in which only Books 1-4 and 9-12 were printed and then sold. Was that intentional We find it to be very unlikely.<br /> <br /> RARITY ON THE MARKET. Rare Book Hub which currently lists more than 15 million records in the Rare Book Transactions database lists just three copies at auction in over a century:<br /> <br /> 1. Gonnelli Casa Daste 3/12/25 lot 340 lacking fols. A2 and A7 or p8; this copy is currently being offered on by a British dealer;<br /> 2. Bonhams 12/2/12 lot 1006 Serendipity copy;<br /> 3. Sotheby's 12/5/1991 lot 95 in a Sammelband of two other titles printed by Hopyl.<br /> <br /> Ours is currently the only complete copy on the market. <br /> <br /> § Adams C-3177. Moreau Inventaire chronologique 1508 no. 59. Index Aureliensis 149.143. Bibliographie des oeuvres de Josse Clicthove Gand 1888 pp. 401-402. Printed by Wolfgang Hopyl for himself, Jean Petit and Thielmann Kerver unknown
15880031131588 A Paris, Chez Hierosme de Marnef & la veufve Guillaume Cavellat, 1588. Petit in-quarto (165 X 222) veau marbré, double filet doré et guirlande dorée en place des nerfs, caissons dorés, pièce de titre maroquin grenat, encadrement de filet noir sur les plats, coupes filetées, tranches rouges (reliure XVIIIe) ; (1) f. blanc, titre, (11) ff. (épitre, préface, table et portrait), 468 pages, (1) f. (achevé d'imprimer et marque de l'imprimeur). Restaurations à deux angles et un mors. Exemplaire un peu court de marge en tête mais sans atteinte au texte, infime travail de vers dans la marge inférieure des premiers feuillets, à peine visible ; cerne de mouillure claire dans la marge inférieure des cinq premiers feuillets, minuscule manque de papier en pied des deux premiers feuillets (feuillet blanc et titre).
1520909<p>Paris: Joanne Paruo i.e. Jean Petit with Venundantur eidem Ascensio i.e. Badius Ascensius 1520. Bound in Alum-tawed pigskin elaborately tooled in blind over wooden boards with metal and leather clasps; one clasp perished. Binding with one corner tip broken off; small hole in leather on rear board; dust-soiled. Inside some early marginalia and underlining in red; narrow arc of old light water staining to fore-edges of one part. Pages generally very clean. This is a pleasing copy of two substantial books edited and assembled by very notable scholars_ _contemporary to the publications of the works. Two Folios bound together; leaf size: 32 x 22 cm. Signatures: ad. I a-z8&8A-H8I6K8 aaa-ggg6hhh4iii6iii6 is blank & present ad. IIA¹0 a-x⸠yⶠzⴠBoth are first editions of quite influential books. Moreau II Nr. 2242m; P. Renouard Bibliographie des impres Paris I908s II I46 and BL STC France 16th cent.; Ind Aur III 311; Wierda 2006; p. 210 nr. 40 p. 42; Moreau 1511-1520: 2246; Imprimeurs et libraires parisiens du 16. sie_̀cle . Bade-438/. St. Athanasius's text was translated into Latin by three noted Renaissance scholars and edited by Nicholas Beraldus and has the added prestige of apparatus by Erasmus. The title-page is printed within a four-piece woodcut border with the title in red and black and the page bears the famous Petit printer's device. The St. Basil is from Badius Ascensius's press and he acted as the editor the translators having been Johannes Argyropoulos Georgius Trapezuntius and otherssee above and below . The title-page uses the same four-part woodcut title-page border as found on the St. Athanasius bound in at the front which makes much sense given the familial relationship between Ascensius and Petit. <br />Moreau II Nr. 2242m; P. Renouard Bibliographie des impres Paris I908s II I46<br /><br />Athanasius was the greatest champion of Catholic belief of Incarnation that the Church has ever known and in his lifetime earned the characteristic title of "Father of Orthodoxy" by which he has been distinguished ever since. "Athanasius the Apostolic was the 20th bishop of Alexandria as Athanasius I. His intermittent episcopacy spanned 45 years c. 8 June 328 – _2 May 373 of which over encompassed five exiles when he was replaced on the order of four different Roman emperors. Athanasius was a Christian theologian a Church Father the chief defender of Trinitarianism against Arianism and a noted Coptic Christian Egyptian leader of the fourth century. Athanasius' earliest work Against the Heathen – _On the Incarnation written before 319 bears traces of Origenist Alexandrian thought such as repeatedly quoting Plato and using a definition from Aristotle's Organon but in an orthodox way. Athanasius was also familiar with the theories of various philosophical schools and with the developments of Neo-Platonism. Ultimately Athanasius would modify the philosophical thought of the School of Alexandria away from the Origenist principles such as the "entirely allegorical interpretation of the text". Still in later works Athanasius quotes Homer more than once Hist. Ar. 68 Orat. iv. 29. Athanasius was not a speculative theologian. As he stated in his First Letters to Serapion he held on to "the tradition teaching and faith proclaimed by the apostles and guarded by the fathers." He held that not only was the Son of God consubstantial with the Father but so was the Holy Spirit which had a great deal of influence in the development of later doctrines regarding the Trinity. <br /><br />Athanasius' "Letter Concerning the Decrees of the Council of Nicaea" De Decretis is an important historical as well as theological account of the proceedings of that council and another letter from 367 is the first known listing of all those books now accepted as the New Testament.<br />With <br />Basil the Great is sapientissimus potentissimus sanctissimus piissimus. <br />This volume includes the following works: the Hexameron translated by Argyro- pulos for Sixtus IV; Adversus Eunomium translated by George of Trebizond at the re- quest of Cardinal Bessarion and sent by him to Eugenius IV; Gregory Nazianzen's funeral oration on Basil the Great in the translation of Raphael Volaterranus; a large selection of Basil's sermons and several letters also translated by Volaterranus; and finally the De institutis monarchorum RuEinus' transation adaptation and fusion of Basil's two monastic rules the Regulaefusius tractatae and Regulae brevius tractatae. Texts in Migne P.G. XXIX XXX XXXI and F. Boulenger Gre'goire de NazEanze. Dis- coursfunebres en l'honneur de sonfrere Ce'saire et de Basile de Cesarete Paris I908 pp. S8-23I. Argyropulos' Hexameron was sent to Badius from Rome by Lefevre fol. Ir and Badius' preface: 'Nuper autem divi Basilii vere magni monumenta aeterna cedro dignissima ab urbe Roma ad nos usque perlata hinc ad negocia sua profecturus prelo nostro commisit'. It and the translations of Volaterranus had been printed in Rome by Mazochius in September and December ISIS Panzer vm 255 no. 92 and 256 no. 9S; inJune ISo8 Matthias Schurer had printed Basilfi Oratio de invidia Nic. Perotfo interprete in Strasbourg Panzer VI 42 no. I3I; the letters on reading the pagan classics and on the solitary life were well known; but Badius' is the first printing of so important a collection of Basil's works.</p> Joanne Paruo [i.e., Jean Petit] with Venundantur eidem Ascensio [i.e., Badius Ascensius
154334704Colophon: Venice Venturino Rossenelli 1543. Folio. 305x22 cm. Contemporary full Italian limp vellum. Remains of ties. Old handwritten title on spine. Upper part of front cover slightly creased. A few small nicks to hinges at cords. Vellum with brownspots. 242 leaves 2-241 numb. II-CCXXXIX. Misnumbering of leaves in sign. A 10 lvs. due to the insertion of corrections on f A5. Collation corresponds to that given by Thomas-Stanford No. 34. Large margins profusely illustrated with diagrams. Upper right corner of title gone with loss of of 3 letters "NSE" in MEGARENSE f A2-A6 with upper right corners and a wormtract-hole in lower margin repaired. A wormtract in lower margin on the next 11 lvs. A1-A6 mounted skillfully on thin opaque parchment-paper. A rather faint dampstain in upper right corner throughout. Last 5 leaves with a small nick in right margin no loss. Otherwise remarkably clean and printed on good strong paper. On the title a large woodcut device with arms with G.T. Gabriele Tadino to whom the work is dedicated. Colophon with large woodcut device with the letters .P.Z.F. and this repeated on verso of last leaf. <br/><br/><em>Scarce first edition of the first translation of Euclid into any modern language by the famous Niccolo Tartaglia. The translation and Tartaglia's commentaries strongly accelerated the development of physics and mechanics in the 16th century as it showed how mathematics could be applied to dynamics and mechanics as well as to architecture construction and perspective. More than 20 years should elapse before the next language would receive the privilege of displaying Euclid among their goods this was the French translation published by Pierre Forcadel Paris 1564. "When Tartaglia submits that his redaction was made "secondo le due tradittioni" there is no question that Campanus - who appears to be heavely favored - and Zamberti are meant. When Campanus has added propositions or premises Tartaglia has approriately translated them and noted their absence "nelle seconda tradittione" while things omitted by Campanus but included by Zamberti receive the reverse treatment" John Murdoch in DSB. Niccolo Fontana Tartaglia of Brescia has a great name in the history of mathematics. A cut in the face from a French soldier caused him to stammer and as a consequence of this he was called 'Tartaglia' the stammerer. He is famous for his solution of third-degree equations which occasioned a long polemic with Cardano about priority. He is also known for "Tartaglia's Triangle" later known as "Pascal's Triangle" and he is well-known for his Archimedes-edition of 1543 and 1551 with his commentaries. "The most famous source of Greek geometry is the monumental work of Euclid of Alexandria called the "Elements" around 300 B.C. No other book of science had a comparable influence on the intellectual development of mankind. It was a treatise of geometry in thirteen books which included all the fundamental results of scientific geometry up to his time. Euclid did not claim for himself any particular discovery he was merely a compiler. Yet in view of the systematic arrangement of the subject matter and the exact logical procedure followed we cannot doubt that he himself provided a large body of specific formulations and specific auxiliary theorems in his deductions. It is no longer possible to pass judgement on the authorship of much of this material; his book was meant as a textbook of geometry which paid attention to the material while questions of priority did not enter the discussion." Cornelius Lanzos in "Space through the Ages". Max Steck III:40 - Thomas-Stanford: 34 - Riccardi Euclideana 1543 1 - Adams E:992. - Brunet II:1090. Premiere edition de ce travail estimé. - Graesse II:513. </em> hardcover