Produktart
Zustand
Einband
Weitere Eigenschaften
Land des Verkäufers
Verkäuferbewertung
Verlag: Lugdunum (Lyon), Michael Hubertus, 1743., 1743
Anbieter: Peter Bichsel Fine Books, Zürich, Schweiz
With engr. frontispiece by Strahovsky. 708 pp. 12mo. Contemp. half vellum. Clean copy.
Verlag: Lugduni Hubert, 1744
Anbieter: Zentralantiquariat Leipzig GmbH, Leipzig, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: BOEV
Kl.-8°. M. gest. Front. 708 S. Hprgt. d. Zt. m. Rsch. Einbd. leicht fleckig u. berieben. St. u. Sign. a. Tit. Gebräunt, teils braunfl. Schweiger II, 599. la.
Verlag: Halae : in Orphanotropheo, 1806
Anbieter: Antiquariat Im Baldreit, Baden-Baden, Deutschland
Buch
564 Seiten Text in altgriechisch ; Besitzvermerk von alter Hand, einige Seiten mit Flecken am oberen Rand, Rücken am unteren Kapital etwas beschädigt, Einband etwas gebraucht u. am Vorderdeckel mit einer Abplatzung am oberen Rand Sprache: Deutsch 8°, braune O Pp mit goldgeprägtem Rückenschild.
Verlag: Halle und Berlin. Waisenhausbuchhandlung., 1830
Anbieter: Antiquariat C. Dorothea Müller, München, Deutschland
8°. - 19,6:11,5 cm. 2 Blätter, 564 Seiten, 1 Blatt Vlgs.-Anz. Schlichter brauner Halblederband der Zeit mit Rückenschild. - Etwas stockfleckig. Titel seitlich mit kleinem weißem Randausriß. Einband berieben, oberes Kapital stärker bestoßen, Gelenke oben etwas brüchig, Rückenschild teils abgesplittert. - 9150 Ausgabe in griechischer Sprache für den Schulgebrauch.
Verlag: J. Bringer, Franckfort, 1614
vélin ivoire de l ép. 168 pp., papier, roussi, taches marg. Première édition à Londres en 1602. Contient (pp. 100-127) la première édition de cent poèmes de Heinrich Fabricius (Bergzabern 1547 - Hornbach 1612). Couronné poète lauréat par l'empereur Maximilien II en 1572, il enseigne la philosophie en 1573 au lycée de Hornbach dont il devient recteur en 1577. Suivi de poèmes de Crambre, Jacques-Auguste de Thou, Martinus Baremius, Nicolas de Clamenges, Conrad Rittershausen, Georgius Remus, etc.
Verlag: Halae et Berolini: E. Librariis Orphanotrophei, 1820
Anbieter: Antiquariat im Kloster, Weilheim, BY, Deutschland
Buch
564 S., 2 S. Verlagswerb. - ORIGINALAUSGABE, KEIN NACHDRUCK ! - Ebd. etw. berieben, kl. Besitzervermerk auf Vorsatz, S. stellenweise gering fleckig, vereinzelt zarte Bleistiftanmerk. i. Text, Titelei u. wenige Bll. etw. gebräunt. -- Wir akzeptieren PayPal, VISA und MASTERCARD. Credit cards accepted. --- la Gewicht in Gramm: 1100 OHalbleder m. Rückenschildchen 21x13 cm.
Verlag: (Eder), Angelorum Urbs (Ingolstadt), 1581
Anbieter: Versandantiquariat Rainer Kocherscheidt, Velbert, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: GIAQ
Erstausgabe
Pergament. Zustand: Etwas beschädigt. Erste Ausgabe. .Das ist/ Allenthalbische Newezeittung/ von der Bergischen Vaetter Wundergeburt und Newangestellten Concordien: Darinn derseleben Autorn Lehr/Bekandtnuß und Wandel/ neben vil anderen sonderbaren Secreten und Agenden/ kürtzlich begriffen werden. Zum theil in Teutscher/ zum theil in Lateinischer Sprach/ Ubique und uberal von den Protestierenden zusamen gebracht/ und an jetzo von newem in offnen Truck verfertigt/ gemehrt und verbessert; (2 leere Bl.), (84 Bl.), 2 leere Bl.); mit 4 Holzschnitten, ferner mit Druckermarken, Vignetten, Schmuckbordüren u. Initialen in Holzschnitt; vgl. Emil Weller: Die ersten deutschen Zeitungen (# 547); die erste Holzschnittseite mit Eckabriss ausserhalb des Bildes, mit geringem Textverlust, diverse Bll. randbestossen u. mit Randläsuren od. Eckknicken, Vorsätze stärker, ein Bl. mit Perforation, Einband gewölbt, fleckig, rückwärtiger Deckel mit Fehlstellen u. Knickspuren; vollständiges Expl. dieser seltenen Streitschrift, Titelbl. mit handschriftl. Bibliotheksvermerk (evtl. Werden/Ruhr) Size: 18,3 cm.
Verlag: Padua (Patavii), Excudebat Josephus Cominus, Superiorum permissu, 1774., 1774
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
8vo. (XVI),222 p. Contemporary limp cardboard. 18.5 cm (Details: Cover still remarkably fresh; woodcut printer's device on title: a man digging for antique objects, Motto: 'Quidquid sub terra est in apricum profert aetas'; the inscriptions in the text are set in all kinds of capitals to make them look like real inscriptions; fresh paper) (Condition: small slip of paper pasted over a name on the title) (Note: Why the ICCU attributes this publication to Giovanni Domenico (or Giandomenico) Polcastro (1710-1787) is not quite clear. Perhaps they rely on the Handbuch der klassischen Literatur by J.J. Eschenburg, Berlin, 1818, p. 74, where the book is attributed to Comite Polcastro. Or it is attributed to the Padovian Polcastro because the firm of Giuseppe Comino used to print scientific texts produced by professors of the University of Padova, among which in 1773 Polcastro's Notizia della scoperta fatta in Padova d'un ponte antico con una romana iscrizione. Polcastro was a well known philologist born in Padua. G. Mussato began a laudatio on him like this: En Polcaster adest, Patavi lux alma, decusque/ qui domus et patriae nomen ad astra vehit. (G. Vedova. Biografia degli scrittori padovani II, p. 111/15). However it seems far more probable that the son of Giuseppe Comino (Josephus Cominus), Angelo, produced this anthology. On page 3 we find a kind of subtitle which we have, to elucidate matters, put between brackets immediately after the title, described above. In this 'subtitle' it is stated that Angelus F. Josephi Cominus gave this fasciculum inscriptionum to/for students (tironibus studiosis) who study epigraphy. He wants them to understand old inscriptions better, and to be able to produce them elegantly themselves. After the death of Giuseppe in 1762, his son Angelo continued the firm more than 30 years still using the name of his father in the imprint. The inscriptions of this collection come from 31 sources, among which Gruter, Montfaucon & Muratori. After each inscription the source is mentioned; the collection is devided into 12 classes: 1: Diis sacra; 2: templa, aedes sacrae; 3: elogia; 4: opera publica; 5: senatus consulta, leges et plebescita; 6: monumenta historica; 7 militaria officia; 8: tituli sepulcrales; 9: opera figulina; 10: monumenta christianorum; 11: carmina ex lapidibus; 12: appendix miscellanea; & 22 p.of notae) (Collation: *8, a-e8, f-i4, k-p8, q-r4 (minus blank leaf r4) (Photographs on request) 300 gr.
Anbieter: Libreria Oreste Gozzini snc, Firenze, FI, Italien
Lutetiae - Antverpiae, apud Aegidium Beysium, sub insigni albi Lilij, via Iacobaea - ex officina Christophori Plantini, architypographi regij, 1584 - 1588, volumi 2 legati in 1, in-8, legatura coeva in piena pergamena floscia (tre piccole mancanze al dorso, pp. [16], 116, [12] - 182, [2], l'ultima carta bianca. Con marche tipografiche in xilografia sui frontespizi. Alcune carte mal-posizionate nel fascicolo D della prima opera. Leggermente brunite, per il tipo di carta usato, le carte della seconda opera. Nel complesso volume in buone condizioni e cinquecentesco in ogni sua componente.
Anbieter: Centralantikvariatet, Stockholm, Schweden
Erstausgabe
Zustand: Good. Amsterdam, Jacob Wetstenii, 1747. 4to. (8),+ 51,+ (4) pp. Title printed in red and black with an engraved vignette. A few marginal ink notes probably by Samuel Älf. Some foxing. Well preserved contemporary half vellum with marbled board papers and red edges. Owner?s inscriptions by Samuel Älf on title and by P. A. Sondén on front pastedown. From the library of Bengt Löw, with his signature in pencil. Old handwritten library label on front paste down. Schweiger I, 7. This is a prospect and manifest for his ?Anthologia veterum latinorum epigrammatum et poematum? that was published in Amsterdam 1759-73. The anthology is considered one of the best editions of the so called ?Anthologia latina?, a collection of small anonymous latin poems. The first collected edition of them was edited by Scaliger in 1573. Petrus Burmann the younger (1714-78) was neveu of the older P. Burmann and also his pupil. He became professor at the Atheneum in Amsterdam in history and philology. This is his last publication with the name ?Junioris?, which he therefter changed to ?Secundus?. Hardcover / Hardback.
Verlag: Utrecht (Ultrajecti), Apud Franciscum Halmam, Guilielmum vande Water, 1697., 1697
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
8vo. 2 volumes: (XXXII),1-438; 369-496,(138); (16),758,(64 index) p., frontispiece, 6 engraved plates, and occasional engraved text illustrations. Vellum 21 cm (Ref: STCN ppn 833518089; Hoffmann 1,429: 'Vorzügliche Werth erh. diese Ausg. durch Spanheim's u. Bentley's Noten'; Dibdin 1,368/69: 'An excellent and erudite edition' and the scholar 'will have abundant reason to rejoice in the acquisition of this edition'; Moss 1,249; Brunet 2,1481/2: 'Belle édition faisant partie de la collection Variorum'; Graesse 2,17; Ebert 3344) (Details: 6 thongs laced through both joints. The frontispiece depicts Callimachus while offering to the gods. Title of the first volume in red & black. Engraved printer's mark on the title, it depicts Athena and Ceres, who are holding between them a painting with an allegorical scene which shows people harvesting a crop. They are surrounded by putti, the motto is: 'cultior his vita est'; another and bigger version of the printer's mark on the second title. 6 plates, showing statues of Greek gods, drawn by G. Hoet, and etched by I. van Vianen. Greek text with opposing Latin translation, commentary & notes) (Condition: Vellum slightly soiled; some gatherings are yellowing) (Note: The Greek poet and scholar Callimachus of Cyrene, c. 305 - c. 240 B.C. was given employment at the famous Alexandrian library. There he produced the first scientific literary history. 'It is clear that Callimachus was a poet of great originality and extraordinary refinement. His amazing productivity (.) was accompanied by bold experimentation in his poetry, and a great versatility of style. The scholarly element, it is true, often adds a frigidity to his verse, but the lively personal and realistic touches which appear, never allow his writings to degenerate into arid selections of obsure myths'. (OCD 2nd ed. p. 195/6) § This edition of the surviving works of Callimachus of 1697 was prepaired by the Dutch scholar Theodorus Georgius Graevius (1669-1692), the promising son of the professor of Classics at the University of Utrecht, Johannes Georgius Graevius (1632-1703). The young man died when 23. The book was finished and published posthumously by his mourning father in 1697 with pain in his heart. 'Id non potest non gravissimum rescindere vulnus' he laments in the 'Dedicatio'. Johannes Georgius Graevius (Greffe), of German descent, was the last 42 year of his life a star of the first order which adorned the University of Utrecht. (Van der Aa 7,353/58 & Van der Aa 7,358). The young man, the father tells in the 'praefatio', was fascinated by Callimachus, and he was planning an edition of that poet with his own notes and commentary and that of others. Alas, an immature death took away the young man's hopes and promisses, but still he left his Callimachus finished. 'Non infrequenter' had he also corrected the Latin translation. When the German scholar Ezechiel Spanheim, 1629-1710, heard that the father was preparing the posthumous edition, he sent him all he had written about Callimachus. His 'In Callimachi Hymnos observationes' fill the second volume of the set. The fame of Graevius also enticed the 'splendissimum Britanniae lumen' Richard Bentley, 1662-1742, to send him old and new material, emendations and notes, he had on Callimachus in his portfolio. (On Spanheim see Sandys 2,327)) (Collation: Volume I: *-2*8, A-2D8 (minus leaf B8; STCN erroneously doesnot mention this omitted leaf; nothing however is missing, the pagination is correct, the catchword between p. 30 and 31 is correct, and the text also connects correctly), Ee4. 2a-2i8 (between leaf 2i3 and 2i4 have been bound 2 gatherings: +8, 2+4, in STCN notation: 2i8(2i3+ 8 2 4)), 2k-2p8, 2q4 (leaf 2q4 recto has 'aan den binder' (for the binder), where the irregular pagination of the first volume is explained) Volume II: 2*8, 2A-3E8, 3F4 (leaf 3F4 blank)) (Photographs on request) 1800 gr.