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Verlag: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies
Zustand: Fair. Acceptable condition. Former Library book. Book 3 and 4. (psychology, mind and body, medieval, science) A readable, intact copy that may have noticeable tears and wear to the spine. All pages of text are present, but they may include extensive notes and highlighting or be heavily stained. Includes reading copy only books.
Verlag: Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies
ISBN 10: 9997684680ISBN 13: 9789997684684
Anbieter: Powell's Bookstores Chicago, ABAA, Chicago, IL, USA
Buch
Zustand: Used - Good. 1979. paperback. Octavo. 113 pp. Primary text in Latin, secondary text in English. Mild shelf wear and creasing to wraps. Underlining and margin notes to text. Altogether a copy in Good condition. Good.
Verlag: Alpha Editions, 2023
ISBN 10: 9356895821ISBN 13: 9789356895829
Anbieter: Buchpark, Trebbin, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: Sehr gut. Zustand: Sehr gut - Gepflegter, sauberer Zustand. | Seiten: 92 | Sprache: Englisch.
Erscheinungsdatum: 1991
Anbieter: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Deutschland
Buch
Kölner Med. Beitr., 58. - Hrsg. v. Marielene Putscher. - Köln 1991, 8°, (10), 400, (4) pp., 50 Abbildungen, orig. kartonierter Einband. Erstdruck! Mit einem Essay von Joachim Gaus über eine illuminierte Handschrift des Werkes aus Jena (um 1390).
Verlag: Outlook Verlag, 2023
ISBN 10: 336835387XISBN 13: 9783368353872
Anbieter: Buchpark, Trebbin, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: Wie neu. Zustand: Wie neu.
Verlag: Lyon Claude Davost pour Jean Genin (Jehan Dyamantier) 17 April Type 1 2 und 3, 1500
Anbieter: Versandantiquariat Christine Laist, Seeheim-Jugenheim, Deutschland
Zweispaltiges, 52-zeiliges Original-Inkunabelblatt mit sechs 5-zeiligen Holzschnitt-Initialen. Blatt mit zwei Wasserrändern und fleckig. Blattgröße: 23,2 x 31,2 cm. - - - Seltenes Blatt, das weltweit nur in sieben Fragmenten erhalten ist!.
Verlag: Clarendon Press Oxford -1988, 1975
Anbieter: Francis Edwards ABA ILAB, Hay on Wye, Vereinigtes Königreich
3 vols., complete. From the Library of Dr James Bynon, good in price clipped d/ws. lightly faded to spines. Bartholomaeus Anglicus (before 12031272). Author of the compendium De proprietatibus rerum ("On the Properties of Things"), dated c.1240, an early forerunner of the encyclopedia and a widely cited book in the Middle Ages. US$279.
Verlag: [Colophon:] Nuremberg: Anton Koberger,, 1483
Anbieter: Nigel Phillips ABA ILAB, Chilbolton, Vereinigtes Königreich
Folio ( 315 x 220 mm), 264 leaves (of 268, lacking leaves 7, 170, 171 and 243). Printed in double columns, unsigned and unpaginated, 53 lines plus headline, initial capital letters supplied in red or blue throughout, chapter headings rubricated, tabs on fore-edge at beginning of each Book. Part of initial and final blank leaves missing, some dampstaining (worse in first 30 leaves). Contemporary bindstamped calf over wooden boards (surface crazed, worn at head and tail of spine and over raised bands), 5 brass bosses on each cover, corners reinforced with brass, brass clasps (but missing pigskin straps), vellum endpapers (pastedowns from an earlier manuscript, missing rear free endpaper). The first important encyclopedia of all the sciences of the Middle Ages, which by its wide dissemination over three centuries had a profound influence on medieval thought. It is ?still important for its information on political geography and its accounts of natural history? (Stillwell). Divided into nineteen books, the contents are as follows: ?(1) God; (2) angels and demons; (3) psychology; (4?5) physiology; (6) family life, domestic economy; (7) medicine; (8) cosmology, astrology; (9) time divisions; (10) form and matter, elements; (11) air, meteorology; (12) flying creatures; (13) waters and fishes, dolphins, whales; (14) physical geography; (15) political geography, (in 175 chapters; this contains a number of interesting remarks, notes on economic geography, etc.); (16) gems, minerals, metals; (17) trees and herbs; (18) animals; (19) color, odor, savor; food and drink, eggs; weights and measures; musical instruments? (Sarton, II, p. 586). ?Book 16 contains 104 short chapters on as many mineral substances as earths, stone, ores, metals, salts, etc., as well as gemstones, the latter often given names that now defy identification of the materials concerned. Gemstones are alabaster, adamante, amethyst, agate, alabandina, beryl, carbuncle, chrysoprase, chalcedony, chrysolite, rock crystal, coral carnelian, hematite, heliotrope, jet, jasper, hyacinth, pearl, marble, onyx, opal, prase, sapphire, emerald, sard, sardonyx, topaz, turquoise; very brief descriptions with comments on curious or medicinal lore associated with each? (Sinkankas, Gemology, p. 70). Although lacking four leaves, this is a fine example of fifteenth-century book making, entirely contemporary and original. Klebs 149.8. Stillwell, The Awakening Interest in Science during the First Century of Printing 1450-1550, p. 186. DiLaura, Bibliotheca Opticoria, 3. Simon, Bibliotheca Bacchica, 19b. Simon, Bibliotheca Gastronomica, 173. Thorndike, II, pp. 401?435. Sarton, Introduction to the History of Science, II, pp. 586?587.
Verlag: London: Thomas Berthelet, 1535, 1535
Anbieter: Peter Harrington. ABA/ ILAB., London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Second edition in English, the earliest obtainable, of the first printed English encyclopaedia, an important translation here revised and corrected "textually closer to the original" (Schäfer) - "one of the most widely read scientific works of the Middle Ages" (Garrison-Morton 91). Bartholomaeus, who may have studied at Oxford when Robert Grosseteste was master of the schools, studied in Paris and wrote his encyclopaedia in about 1245 while serving as lector of the newly formed Franciscan province of Saxonia. His scientific grasp is not as strong as his putative Oxford master, but he is one of the earliest to cite Avicenna extensively. Alongside lengthy expositions on astronomy and natural history, his two most important contributions are in the fields of geography and medicine. At a time when medical knowledge was not readily available in English, Bartholomaeus's synopsis of both medical theory and specific remedies was one of the most learned published sources in that language, treating specific infirmities in some 70 chapters and covering psychology, sensation, physiology, and, innovatively, depression. Book XV, entitled De regionibus, is an early geographical dictionary informed by modern and perhaps even first-hand experience. He describes Paris at length, and even Constantinople, China, and Arabia have significant entries. Overall, his account "is of considerable value for the political geography of Europe in the thirteenth century, both as a general survey showing what regions he deemed important enough to mention and what he thought might be omitted" (Thorndike, p. 425). Bartholomaeus Anglicus's encyclopaedia plays a repeated role in the history of the English book. Trevisa's translation, completed by February 1399, marked the watershed when English, rather than French, became the preferred language for the reading of the educated classes. Alongside Chaucer and the Wycliffe Bible, it is the third most frequently cited source in the Oxford English Dictionary for the first occurrence of a word (cf. Peeters, 2012). When William Caxton went to Cologne to learn to print in about 1471, one of the first books he cut his teeth on was a Latin edition of it, and his successor Wynkyn de Worde's 1495 first edition is the first book printed on English paper. The first edition is now unobtainable, preserved in only four complete copies, all in the US, with no copy at auction since 1938 (and that lacking five leaves). "Lexicographically, the [second] edition is an advance over the editio princeps, which had only a systematic table of Latin chapter headings to guide the reader, misplaced between books 1 and 2. This list has now been put in its proper place at the beginning, translated into English, and, most important, re-arranged alphabetically" (Schäfer, XII). Provenance: bound by James Hayday, active in London 1833-61; "E. Hy", purple ink stamp on flyleaf; Major William Herbert Mullens (1866-1946), armorial bookplate on pastedown; Charles Bigham, second Viscount Mersey (1872-1956), ex-libris on pastedown; pencilled collation and condition report of E. M. Dring for Bernard Quaritch on rear free endpaper. ESTC S106992; Garrison--Morton 91 & 92 (first English edition); cf. also Heinz Meyer,Die Enzyklopädie des Bartholomäus Anglicus, 2000; A. S. G. Edwards, "Bartholomaeus Anglicus'De Proprietatibus Rerumand Medieval English Literature" inArchivfür das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen222, 1985; Jürgen Schäfer, "Introduction" inBatman uppon Bartholome: his bookDe proprietatibus rerum, 1976; T. M. E. Peeters, "From Chaucer to Trevisa: Exploring Language Using The Oxford English Dictionary" (thesis, Utrecht University, 2012); and Brent A. Pitts,Le Livre des Regions, 2006. Folio (260 x 188 mm). Mid-19th-century red morocco by James Hayday, spine with five double bands, double gilt rules either side, gilt-lettered in three compartments, others with gilt tool with stylised coronet and flower-heads, turn-ins with double gilt rules, marbled endpapers, gilt edges. Woodcut device on verso of last leaf and woodcut initials throughout. Light rubbing, 11 leaves re-margined at front and rear of volume including title page, a few letters of headline of second leaf recto partly supplied in pen facsimile, brown staining affecting approx. 30 leaves, a few minor wormholes, nevertheless a very good copy.