continental books cataloGUe 1474 maGGs bros ltd 1 continental books s p r i nG 2015 maGGs bros ltd 1 [aesop] Fabularum quae hoc libro here in this early collection are by Dorp’s friend continentur interpretes atq[ue] and correspondent Erasmus and fellow Maggs Bros Ltd, 50 Berkeley Square, London W1J 5BA authores sunt hi... In libera Argentina. humanists Hadrianus Barlandus, Guilielmus Tel 020 7493 7160 (Strasbourg, Matthias Schürer, Goudanus, Angelus Politianus, Petrus Crinitus Fax 020 7499 2007 December 1515) and Ioannes Antonius Cambanus. The ‘Vita Email [email protected] Aesopi’ is that of Maximus Planudes. Opening hours Monday to Friday 9.30am–5pm Title within fine one-piece white-on-black Our copy corresponds to the VD16 online woodcut border after Urs Graf incorporating copy (BSB Munich) which only has an imprint Bank account Allied Irish (GB), 10 Berkeley Square, London W1J 6AA architectural columns, two fools at the top and ‘In Libera Argentina’ on the title-page while Sort code 23-83-97 at the bottom two putti holding an empty another issue is known to also read on the title- Account no 47777070 shield, white-on-black initials. page ‘apud Matthia[m] Schurerium’ and hold IBAN GB94AIBK23839747777070 the initials ‘M.S.’ in the shield. The fine title BIC AIBKGB2L Sm 4to (208 x 145mm). [36]ff (last blank). 19th border is a version of one by Urs Graf used by VAT no GB239381347 century marbled boards. £3,500 Froben in Basle in the same year (see Hieronymus). In our copy Aesop’s fable no 50 ©Maggs Bros Ltd 2015 A rAre eArly StrASbourg edition published by De Adolescente & Cato ‘Of a Young-Man and a Design and production by Cat’s Pyjamas Publishing Matthias Schürer of Maarten van Dorp’s Cat’ obviously caused offence to an early reader www.catspyjamaspublishing.co.uk anthology of fables, chiefly by Aesop and and has been neatly inked over. Photography: Ivo Karaivanov Avianus, which was one of the most popular Light marginal staining and a few small Printed and bound by Latimer Trend Renaissance collections and much used in wormholes at blank lower margin of last schools; in this copy one fable has been censored. few leaves. Front cover: 16, Bonaventura , page 24. Initially a product of Dutch humanism, the VD16 A449. Ritter, Rep. I, 93. Schmidt VIII, Inside front cover: 47, Leonrodt, page 68. collection was expanded in the 1520s and 1530s 121. OCLC (USA: Harvard & Illinois only). Page 1: 22, Jacob Cats, page 33. and became, for example, the standard school Ref: Hieronymus Oberrheinische Back cover: 60, Plato, page 82. Aesop in England. The Latin translations found Buchillustration 172 & abb. 313. 3 2 albertUs de padUa one of the authors cited in the work. (See A Madre, Expositio evangeliorum dominicalium Nicolaus de Dinkelsbühl, Leben und Schriften, et festivalium. [With:] nicolaUs 1965, p 310.) de dinkelsbUHl (pseUdo). In terms of early printing history, the copy is Concordantia in passionem dominicam. remarkable for the clearly visible textile Ulm, Johann Zainer, 15 June 1480 impressions on several sheets (eg ff. 19, 45, 141, 145, 148, 151, 152, 256, 259, 260, 262, 265, Opening 8-line initial in blue with red penwork 267) which are a consequence of a printing extensions into the margins, 3- to 8-line initials method which makes use of moist pieces of linen in red, some rubrication in red. cloth to dampen the paper before printing, a technique which resulted in an Folio (290 x 200mm). 385 leaves. 41 lines, register in improved printing quality. This was a method double columns. 16th century blind-tooled pigskin predominantly used by Johann Zainer, trained over bevelled wooden boards, covers panelled with by Mentelin in Strasbourg and the first fillets and a variety of ornamental rolls, spine with four printer in Ulm (see: Claire Bolton, ‘Cloth raised bands, paper shelf-labels on spine (clasps impression marks in the 15th-century editions missing, a few marks and stains, small tear to one of Johann Zainer – evidence for paper spine band). £9,500 damping?’’, Journal of the Printing Historical Society, new series, number 12 (2008), pp5-33) Second edition of Albertus de Padua’s aid for and A Schulte, ‘Uber das Feuchten des Papiers preachers and the first of the Concordantia mit nassen Tüchern bei Joh. Zainer’, Gutenberg- which, although called for, is rarely found in Jahrbuch 1941, pp19-22). As is the case in other surviving copies. This copy also provides copies, some sheets are in a somewhat smaller evidence of Johann Zainer’s use of textiles in his size and one has the full ms. sheet signature still process of dampening the paper sheets before visible (f. 32). printing, with clear impressions of the textiles Provenance: 17th century monastic still visible on many leaves. inscription of the Franciscan Recollects at Albertus de Padua’s (d. 1328) exposition of the Passua at head of first leaf of register, ‘Pro Gospels was first published in Venice, 1476. Apart Conventu Passaviens. FF Min. Recollectoru[m] from the present edition it was not published again ad S Annam’, some instances of marginal until the 16th century; it is also known in around annotation. Armorial bookplate of Robert 30 manuscripts (see: Schneyer Repertorium I, Walsingham Martin (1871-1961), whose fine pp124-130). In this collection, the Augustine library was sold by Parke-Bernet Galleries of Hermit provided exegetical notes on the Gospel New York City on 12 November 1963. The readings for Sundays and Feast Days as well as introduction to the catalogue states: ‘Considered two or three sermons for each day. It served as a as a unit, the Martin Collection represents what sermonic aid for preachers not least for those is probably the most outstanding library to be brothers in the relatively recently formed dispersed at auction in this country since the sale mendicant order, Order of Hermits of St. of the books of the late Lucius Wilmerding in Augustine of which Albert was a member. The 1950-1951’. ascription of the Concordantia to Nicolaus de A little damp stained in places, mostly at the Dinkelsbühl (c 1360-1433) is mistaken. Although top margin, one or two quires lightly browned, he is known as the author of a passion story he did a few marginal paper flaws/tears with no loss. not produce a concordance to it, and he is in fact H *574. GW 785. BMC II, 526. Goff A-340. 4 5 überlieferten mariologischen Schriften (1954) pp5-80, 130-131, and A Kolping, in Recherches de théologie ancienne et médiévale 25 (1958) pp285-328 (Sack (Freiburg)). Our copy has a pinhole visible in the lower inner margin. In 1466 and 1467 all Zell’s books had four pinholes on each page, the pins fixed the paper in the press before it was brought down on to the inked type and enabled the careful printer to make the two pages on two sides of a leaf cover each other exactly line for line, a matter much affecting the appearance of the book. Using four pins was soon reduced to 3 albertUs maGnUs, st. of Cologne, Ulrich Zell. As noted by BMC the two and by 1469/1470 they mostly disappear De laudibus beatae virginis Mariae. copy at the University Library of Uppsala is dated from the visible part of the page and can be [Cologne, Ulrich Zel, not after 1473] 1473 by the rubricator. found in the fold unless of course they have been The works ascribed to Albertus Magnus trimmed off during the folding and binding Folio (274 x 200mm). 165 leaves (of 166, lacking led him to be considered to be the greatest process. (See: Martin Boghardt, ‘Pinholes in final blank). Gothic type, 36 lines, double column. 2-4 Mariologist of the Middle Ages. A product of the Large-format Incunabula’, The Library s. 7, vol line initial spaces, alternating spaces filled in red, red mid-13th century and a hugely influential work 1 (2000), pp263-289). paragraph marks, underlining and capital strokes. Single in Marian scholarship, ‘the Mariale represents Provenance: Bibliothecae J[ohann Heinrich pinhole visible in the lower margins. Early 19th century the first systematic theology of Mary, inasmuch Joseph] Niesart (1766-1841), pastor in Velen ochre paper boards, spine label in red lettered in gilt, as all assertions about Mary are reduced to one 1816, with his manuscript inscription on first red edges (spine darkened, a little soiled and marked). single principle, that of the all embracing fullness leaf and his bibliographical notes on a loose Preserved in a box. £14,000 of grace.’ (Encyclopedia of theology: a concise inserted leaf. Sacramentum mundi, ed Karl Rahner, 1975, Inner margin of first leaf lightly soiled FirSt edition. A superb wide-margined copy with p 903.) Only relatively recently has Albertus otherwise extremely fresh. deep impressions of the types on remarkably Magnus’ authorship been challenged, see A Fries, H460. GW 678. BMC I, 192. BSB-Ink A185. fresh paper, printed by the prototypographer Die unter dem Namen des Albertus Magnus Goff A271. Bod-inc A119. 6 7 4 alciati (andrea) Les the only copy that they can firmly assign to this emblemes de nouueau translatez en edition is at the Bodleian. françois. Lyon, Macé Bonhomme for Both French editions are the only ones to Guillaume Rouillé, 1549 contain the fascinating dedication of Aneau to the son of James Hamilton, earl of Arran and Woodcut printer’s device on title-page and 165 duke of Chatelherault, who spent much time in 5 alciati (andrea) Emblemata to convey to others the pleasure he himself has woodcut emblematic illustrations. France and was a favourite of Henri II. Henry Latinogallica… Les emblems Latin- taken in the emblems. This does not prevent him Green states that, ‘it was probably through him Francois… la version Françoise non criticising his predecessors, Jean Lefevre (1536) Small 8vo (136 x 85mm). 266pp. [3]ff. Antique style that emblem books became known in Scotland, encorveue cy devant. Paris, Jean and Aneau (1549). Mignault’s translations are blind-tooled calf, red morocco label. £2,800 so as to engage Mary and the ladies of her court Richer, 1584 much more varied than Lefevre in the practice of the emblem art’. Arran, regent or Aneau’s: some are weak, A rAre And eArly exAmple from the Bonhomme- during the minority of Mary, Queen of Scots, Woodcut device on title-page and while others show a certain Rouillé editions of Alciati which appeared with 1542-54, was the first incorporate the family last leaf, portrait on verso of title literary intention. As well as a new series of woodcuts by Pierre Eskrich, this motto ‘Saw through’ into the arms and it was he and 211 woodcut emblems. the emblems and their brief edition dedicated to the son of James Hamilton, who began building Hamilton Palace and Kinneil commentaries in Latin and earl of Arran. with their extensive painted ceilings. 12mo (130 x 75mm). Contemporary French, the 1584 edition Bonhomme-Rouillé’s first was a Latin edition Rouillé commissioned the woodcuts by Pierre vellum (remains of later ties). £3,000 contains an important account of 1548, with two editions in French following Eskrich in imitation of those designed by Bernard of Alciati’s life, likewise in the early in 1549 with further editions in Spanish and Salomon for Jean de Tournes. Eskrich has expanded FirSt edition thus, a new two languages.’ (Alison Italian printed later in the year. The present small the scenes and added detail. We also find at the end translation into French by Claude Saunders, Glasgow University 8vo edition followed shortly after the first French 14 woodcuts of different varieties of trees taken from Mignault and a newly cut series of Emblem Project, online). edition, with Aneau’s new translation and the set prepared for Leonhard Fuch’s De historia 211 emblems in thematic order. Provenance: Title-page with a reorganisation of the emblems, which was in a stirpium commentarii insignes of 1549. ‘Mignault’s translation, he contemporary inscription of Fr larger 8vo format and the emblems within A little dampstained in places but generally a tells us in his Preface, was Gilbertus of Bethune. Booklabel decorative frames. According to BFEB this good copy sympathetically rebound. undertaken merely to pass the of Bibliotheque Deprins. smaller format edition ‘is a completely different Adams, Rawles & Saunders, Bibliography of French time while travelling, and he Bookplate of Samuel Ashton setting with some variants, mainly of spelling, Emblem Books F.027. Baudrier IX,p166. Green no 39. endeavours to play down its Thompson Yates. Landwehr, 83. from the more common 1549 French edition’, Brun p140 (see note). Mortimer 15 (see note). value, emphasising only his desire Green, 106-107. BFEB F058. 8 9 6 aneaU (bartHélemy) Imagination poetique traduicte en vers Francois, des Latins, & Grecz, par l’auteur mesme d’iceux. Lyons, Mace Bonhomme, after 8 September 1552 Title-page with Bonhomme’s Perseus device and Sm. 8vo (162 x 98mm). 159pp. Limp ivory vellum by 105 cuts attributed to Pierre Eskrich (from Leighton, upper cover with gilt lettered title and date metal plates?). within elaborate frame, flat gilt spine. £12,000 extremely rAre FirSt edition of one the first two books of Ovid’s of the earliest French emblem books; Metamorphoses, and together it also has a depiction of tennis. with others were also later used in The French edition found here 1556 for an edition of the first was printed a few days before the three books (the third book being more common Latin edition; the translated by none other than dedication is dated 8 September Aneau himself). while the one for the Latin edition Barthélemy Aneau (1510-61) is 13 September. As Saunder’s ‘was an important figure in the notes, ‘Aneau’s French translation development of emblem literature does not follow slavishly his in the mid 16th century, not only original Latin text, but rather the producing his own emblem book, verses are tailored to fit the but also producing (in 1549) the perceived needs of a vernacular second French translation of reading public. They are about Alciati’s Latin emblems, 30% longer than the original Latin accompanied for the first time by a ones of the Picta poesis, allowing short commentary. Aneau was also Aneau to develop and explain his most probably responsible for material more fully. In the interests arranging Alciato’s emblems into of clarity more key words are logical groupings according to flagged in the French version than subject matter, thereby in the Latin, and much greater use significantly changing the is made of adjectives’. character of the work, although Interestingly, Aneau explains in this is the subject of debate.’ his preface that he found a set of (Alison Saunders, Glasgow woodblocks in Macé Bonhomme’s University Emblem Project, workshop and undertook to give online). them new life by creating a text. A Provenance: SA Thompson number of the blocks had already Yates bookplate dated 1894. been used by Bonhomme in Praz p256. Landwehr Romantic 1550/1551 for editions of a French 117. Adams, Rawles & Saunders, translation by Clément Marot of BFEB, F.084. 10 11 7 aristopHanes Κωμωδιαι potuit’), and therefore not printed. In the same εννεα. Comoediae novem (with passage Aldus tells the story that Theodore of scholia, ed Marcus Musurus) Venice: Gaza when asked what Greek author should be Aldus Manutius, 15 July 1498 read by those wishing to learn Greek, answered ‘Only Aristophanes’, and that St. John Chrysostom Folio (323 x 212mm). [348]ff, f. k8 and T6 blank (here used a manuscript as a pillow when he went to lacking), 42 lines, Greek type and Roman type (Gk. 1; sleep. In fact Lysistrata and Thesmophoriazusae Gk 2) 18th- century Dutch? red morocco, spine titled did not see the light of day until published by in gilt (binding rubbed, spine lightly faded) £35,000 Giunta in Florence in 1515/16. Provenance: Armorial book stamp on title- editio princepS oF nine plAyS together with the page with motto ‘Doe wel en ziet niet om’ (a scholia which are printed round the text. Dutch proverb). Until the 19th century it was this edition of the Small marginal restorations to first and last scholia which remained (in various reprints) the leaves, a few leaves stained sole source for our knowledge of these ancient Goff A958. GW 2333. BMC V, 559. Bod-inc commentaries, which for the elucidation of A383. Legrand Bibl. Hellénique aux xv et xvieme Aristophanes are of great importance. As late as siècles vol 1, pp45-50, no 21; UCLA Ahmanson- 1830 the great German scholar Gottfried Murphy no 22. See Martin Sicherl Griechische Hermann described it as ‘unicus fons scholiorum’. Erstausgaben des Aldus Manutius: Druckvorlagen, The editor was the Cretan scholar Marcus Stellenwert, kultureller Hintergrund, Paderborn & Musurus who edited a number of works for Munich, 1996, who discusses at length (pp114 Aldus, including the editio princeps of Plato. sqq.) the manuscripts which Musurus may (or In his preface Aldus mentions Lysistrata but may not) have used. For Musurus see DJ says that in his manuscript this play was very Geneakoplos, Greek scholars in Venice, imperfect (‘qui vix dimidiata haberi a nobis Cambridge Mass, 1962. 12 13 9 bernard, of clairvaUX, st. Opuscula. Venice, Lucantonio Giunta, June 1503 Full-page woodcut of the Annunciation facing the opening text page, title and device (Kristeller 216) printed in red and opening chapter heading, 8-line white -on-black initials throughout, printed in double columns. 8vo (185 x 122mm). [400]ff. Contemporary German blind-tooled pigskin over wooden boards, fine outer roll of half-figures on covers (rubbed, split at head of upper joint, remains of later spine label, one clasp missing). £2,400 A rAre, eArly collection of St. Bernard of Clairvaux’s Opuscula illustrated with a full-page woodcut of the Annunciation which is described by Lilian Armstrong as ‘an early example of Venetian High Renaissance art’. ‘The traditional figures of the Virgin Mary and the Angel Gabriel are set in an elegant Renaissance interior, defined by classical architectural components: a 8 (benedict Xiii, pope) ornament, corner pieces of foliage springing from an Corinthian column, a coffered barrel vault, and Illuminated manuscript document on urn, superb purple gilt endpapers, the manuscript held roundheaded windows behind Gabriel. The diagonal vellum issued by Simon Gritti (Bishop in position by a pink cord. £2,750 lines of the tiled floor converge to suggest the depth of the of Ferentino), Domestic Prelate of Pope room. At the edges of the image are decorative columns Benedict XIII, nominating Cassian A Fine illuminAted document decorated in rococo that appear to support a segmented arch; these act as a Roch Jenner von Seeburg, of Brixen style nominating Cassian Roch Jenner to the frame through which the viewer looks at the holy event’ (Bressanone), South Tyrol, Protonotary Curia as Protonorary of the Apostolic See. (Armstrong). This spacious setting, perspective, and the of the Apolostolic See, signed by Simon The manuscript holds a portrait of Pope idealised and lightly modelled figures of Mary and Gabriel Gritti and others. Rome, 5 June 1728 Benedict XIII (Pietro Francesco Orsini, 1649- are to Armstrong the indicators of the High Renaissance 1730), who had been elevated to the papacy on style. The woodcut was first used two years earlier in Fine illuminated portrait of Benedict XIII 29 May 1724, this faces his papal arms and is another of LucAntonio Giunta’s publications, the facing his coat-of-arms, full-page coats -of-arms followed by the illuminated arms of Simon Officium beatae Mariae virginis of June 1501. of Gritti and Jenner, each page within a Gritti (1686-1761), Bishop of Ferentino and Provenance: early ownership monastic inscriptions decorative rococo border of flowers and later Titular Archbishop of Tyana (Cappadocia) from Memmingen, Bavaria, on title dated 1559 and ornaments, text in gold and brown ink, one and those of the appointee, Cassian Roch Jenner 1560, with ink shields. 19th century printed label of large initial on gold ground, remaining pages of Bressanone, whose arms also appear on the the Redemptionists at Baltimore, later stamp. within borders of red, brown and gold. binding. CNCE 5500. Janauschek, Bibliographia Bernardina Provenance: Cassian Roch Jenner. Victor von 317. Sander 961. Essling 1383. COPAC: British 4to. 12 leaves. Contemporary Roman binding of brown Stedingk, Swedish bibliophile, with his Library & Oxford, Cambridge. OCLC US libraries: morocco gilt with large coat-of-arms of Cassian Roch bookplate and pencil notes on fly-leaf. Sir John Harvard & Western Michigan. A Heavenly Craft. The Jenner surmounted by a coronet and the hat of a Curial Pope-Hennessy (1913-94), art historian, with Woodcut in Early Printed Books (Library of Congress, official, covers with a roll-tooled border of leafy his bookplate. 2004), pp35-37 & cat. no 39. 14 15 10 bible (latin) (Biblia latina cum postilla Hugonis de Sancto charo). Sexta pars hui(us) operis continens postilla(m) super epistolas pauli... super Actus Apostolorum... Sup(er) epistolas Can(onicas)... super Apocalypsim. Basle, Johann Froben for Johann Amerbach & Johann Petri and Anton Koberger in Nuremberg, 1504 Large folio (362 x 240mm). 391ff. [1]f. (blank). Contemporary South German blind-tooled deerskin? over wooden boards, upper cover panelled in blind, and infilled with various large tools, leafy stems, thistles, and the central compartment with acorns and eagle 11 bible (new testament) stamps, the lover cover with diagonal Testamenti novi, editio vulgata. Lyon, fillets forming large lozenge Sébastien Gryphe, 1549 compartments infilled with the same large tools plus a further ornamental Printer’s woodcut device on title-page and 108 woodcuts, three and leafy tool, the spine with three of them signed ‘IF’, a few ornamental borders and initials. raised bands infilled with repeated large leafy tool (some worming and 16mo (125 x 75mm). 478pp. [1]f. ; 333pp. [17]ff. (first blank). 19th minor areas of wear, lacks clasps and century half brown morocco, marbled boards. £1,250 catches). £3,500 one oF the SeverAl illuStrAted editionS of the New A Superb exAmple of a monastic Testament produced by Gryphius in this handy format binding from the turn of the 16th between 1542 and his death in 1556. century, possibly from Altomünster. The illustrations for Matthew and Luke are signed ‘I F’ and The sixth and final volume they have been attributed to Jacques le Fèvre; the set of from this famous joint production illustrations is one of two New Testament sets based on the of the Bible by the renowned woodcuts owned by François Gryphe, both of them attributed printers Froben, Amerbach and to Le Fèvre. The series was cut for Sébastien Gryphe, brother Petri of Basle and Anton Koberger of François, and is recorded by Baudrier from 1542. This set is of Frankfurt. farther from the Paris originals in both style and composition Provenance: An ownership than the first ‘I. F.’ series. The background scenes which are inscription inside front cover in a such a distinctive feature of the earlier blocks have generally bold gothic hand of the Bridgettines been removed and enlarged into new subjects in the regular at Altomünster, Bavaria, dated sequence. This Lyons’ set is of importance chiefly because of its 1537, with title and shelf-mark. influence on Bernard Salomon’s New Testament cuts which Pencil note recording it as a duplicate appeared a year after the present edition. of the Royal Library at Munich. Provenance: bookplate of Henri Joseph Francotte. VD16 B2582. Adams B984. Title-page lightly soiled otherwise a fresh copy. Binding tools not found in Kyriss Adams B1743. Brun, p270 (1542 edition). Mortimer 90 or EBDB. (1560 edition). Not in Darlow & Moule. 16 17
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