29 résultats
154344304Lyons: apud Seb. Gryphium 1543. <p>Rabelais François 1494 - 1553. Hippocrates 460 - 370 B.C.E. Aphorismorum Hippocratis sectiones septem. Ex Franc. Rabelaesi recognitione. 16mo. Collation: alpha - delta8 a - u8; signatures a - d and leaves e1 - e2 interleaved and bound after signature u in this copy. 64 318 pp. Lyon: Apud Seb. Gryphium 1543. 118 x 72 mm. Calf ca. 1543 rebacked some edgewear minor worming holes for leather ties present on front and rear covers. Very good copy. Extensively annotated in at least two 16th-century hands in the text front endpapers and on interleaved pages; 18 leaves of manuscript notes and commentary in what appears to be the same hands bound in the back followed by 16 blank leaves. Old woodcut armorial bookplate of D'Esbiey tipped to verso of title; later signature "A. de Grateloup" on bookplate. "Collection Victor Jansen" in blue ink on front pastedown.</p> <p> Very rare second edition first published in 1532 of the Aphorisms of Hippocrates edited by François Rabelais 1494-1553 the great Renaissance humanist writer and scholar. Rabelais entered monastic life at the age of sixteen spending about fifteen years at the Franciscan convent of Fontenay-le-Comte before leaving around 1525 to join the more liberal Benedictine order. It was at about this time that he began training as a physician in Paris and Montpellier obtaining his Bachelor of Medicine degree in 1530 and spending the following year studying Hippocrates' Aphorisms and Galen's Ars parva. In 1532 after moving to Lyon to serve as physician to the city's Hôtel-Dieu Rabelais published the work on which his reputation as a serious humanist scholar rests: A small 16mo volume containing Latin translations by other scholars of Hippocrates' Aphorisms Presages De natura humani and De ratione victus and Galen's Ars medicinalis augmented with his own annotations.</p> <p> "Rabelais's role in preparing this edition of the Aphorisms was that of editor. He had in his possession a Greek manuscript for which he claims the twin virtues of age and unimpeachable clarity. While lecturing at Montpellier he had used this to check the Latin translations current among his pupils and had discovered them to be incomplete and incorrect. He then embodied the result of his observations in a set of notes; and the following year while he was at Lyons Stephanus Gryphius saw these notes and suggested their incorporation in a pocket edition of Hippocrates. Rabelais was annoyed by the smallness of the proposed format which meant that his remarks had to be fitted into a very small space but pressed by Gryphius he consented. He took as the basis of his work an edition of the relevant parts of Hippocrates and Galen which Colines had published in 1524. It was decided to reprint this and then to add Rabelais's notes in the form of interpolation and marginal comment; and Rabelais's Greek text of the Aphorisms according to his much vaunted manuscript was printed as an appendix" Bolgar p. 63.</p> <p> Our copy of the second Rabelais edition begins with the Greek text of the Aphorisms which has its own title-page; in most copies these signatures are bound at the end of the work. It is likely that the interleaving and eccentric arrangement of the remaining signatures was done at the request of the 16th-century owner whose copious annotations written in a tiny beautiful and legible italic hand fill most of the interleaved sheets as well as the margins of many text pages. Some notes in a different hand are also found on several leaves. Adams H-576 H-558. Bakhtin Rabelais and his World p. 361. Bolgar "Rabelais's edition of the Aphorisms" Modern Language Review 350 1940: 62-66. </p> . apud Seb. Gryphium unknown books
1583098620Venice: Gioacchino Bregnolo 1583. Vellum. 236 leaves 17 of 19: text complete missing final blanks. 16mo. Leaf 175 mis-numbered as 165. Contemporary vellum. Headpieces tailpieces and decorated initial capitals. Very good. USTC No 835774. A collection of propositions "concerning the symptoms and diagnosis of disease and the art of healing and medicine. The first aphorism which serves as a kind of introduction to the book runs as follows: Life is short Art long Occasion sudden and dangerous Experience deceitful and Judgment difficult. Neither is it sufficient that the physician be ready to act what is necessary to be done by him but the sick and the attendants and all outward necessaries must be lightly prepared and fitted for the business." - Britannica. [Gioacchino Bregnolo] unknown
15551408648Lugduni Lyon: Apud Ioan. Tornaesium et Gul. Gazeium 1555. Early Printing. Hardcover. Small Octavo 348 16 pages. In Very Good minus condition. Bound in full brown leather with gilt ornamentation to boards. Paneled spine with gilt ornamentation. Boards have slight warping chipping to corners and rubbing wear throughout. Textblock has an ex-libris bookplate titled "R.E.O. Pearson" to the front pastedown a maroon leather bookplate of "Roger Budin Geneve" adhered to the second front free end page cracking to the front hinge slight worming to the second front free end page to page 4 an archival repair to page 273 slightly impacting text light age toning and light soiling to some pages throughout. Text in Latin. Shelved in Case 3. 1408648. Shelved Dupont Bookstore. Apud Ioan. Tornaesium et Gul. Gazeium hardcover
1583027485Venetiis: Brognolo Giaacchino 1583. 12mo. 237 pages 35pp. index. commentary by Joannis Marinello. OCLC shows two copies in the U.S. University of Texas Medical Library; Welch Library at John Hopkins. Niccolo Leoniceno 1428-1524 made the original translation from the Greek in 1490. Edward P. Maoheny's festschrift for Paul Oskar Kristeller has an article on Leonicerno's influence on humanist medical education. It would be hard to find a Sixteenth Century medical doctor or student of medicine who did not carry this small book with him. Bound in brown cloth green spine label. Cloth worn through corners and edges of boards spine label chipped one tiny worm hole through all lower margins not affecting any text. Small contemporary owner's name in brown ink. A very good clean copy. [Brognolo, Giaacchino] unknown books