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Verlag: Hamburg, Meiner Verlag, 1958., 1958
Anbieter: Ganymed - Wissenschaftliches Antiquariat, Meldorf, Deutschland
Unveränderter Abdruck der Ausgabe von 1925. 8°. 131 Seiten. Ausgabe Meiner Verlag (1958). Unveränderter Abdruck der Ausgabe von 1925. 131 Seiten. Kartoniert. Handschriftlicher Besitzervermerk auf dem Titelblatt. Textseiten papierbedingt leicht gebräunt. Stellenweise Anmerkungen/Anstreichungen im Text. Einband leicht berieben und etwas bestoßen. (Philosophische Bibliothek, Band 8/9).
Verlag: Hildesheim, Georg Olms Verlag, 1962, ., 1962
Anbieter: Antiquariat Matthias Wagner, Berlin, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: GIAQ
Hardcover. Herausgegeben von Gustav Georg Wolff. Leinen mit goldgeprägtem Titel, Fadenheftung, 253 Seiten. Einband lichtrandig, Besitzervermerk und Etekettspur im vorderen Buchdeckel. Gut erhaltenes Exemplar. Unveränderter reprografischer Nachdruck der Ausgabe Berlin 1856. Gewicht: 400.
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Brinkman, since 1954 / ILAB, Amsterdam, Niederlande
Leiden, Brill, 1969. x,142 Ss. Broschiert.(Phil.Ant.15; Oberecke etw.bestossen).
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Brinkman, since 1954 / ILAB, Amsterdam, Niederlande
Leipzig, Teubner, 1886. xxiv,320 Ss. Leinen (BT.).
Verlag: LIGHTNING SOURCE INC, 2016
ISBN 10: 1356827306ISBN 13: 9781356827305
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Gebunden. Zustand: New.
Verlag: De Gruyter 2016-11-21, Berlin, 2016
ISBN 10: 3110425165ISBN 13: 9783110425161
Anbieter: Blackwell's, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Buch
hardback. Zustand: New. Language: GRC.
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Neu ab EUR 81,76
Gebraucht ab EUR 60,48
Mehr entdecken Hardcover
Verlag: De Gruyter, 1975
ISBN 10: 3110261464ISBN 13: 9783110261462
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Buch
Buch. Zustand: Neu. Druck auf Anfrage Neuware - Printed after ordering.
Verlag: De Gruyter, 1887
ISBN 10: 3111244369ISBN 13: 9783111244365
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Buch
Buch. Zustand: Neu. Druck auf Anfrage Neuware - Printed after ordering - Commentaries on Aristotle's writings have been produced since the 2nd century AD. This edition contains Greek commentaries on his work from the 3rd to the 8th centuries AD by, among others, Alexander of Aphrodiensias, Themistios, Joh. Philoponus, Simplicius in Greek.
Verlag: Madrid, Gredos, 1987
ISBN 10: 8424912349ISBN 13: 9788424912345
Anbieter: Antiquariat Bookfarm, Löbnitz, Deutschland
Buch
Hardcover. 247 S. Ehem. Bibliotheksexemplar mit Signatur und Stempel. GUTER Zustand, ein paar Gebrauchsspuren. Ex-library with stamp and library-signature. GOOD condition, some traces of use. AD5750 8424912349 Sprache: Spanisch Gewicht in Gramm: 450.
Verlag: De Gruyter, 1993
ISBN 10: 3598717210ISBN 13: 9783598717215
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Buch
Buch. Zustand: Neu. Druck auf Anfrage Neuware - Printed after ordering.
Verlag: Chez Pierre Chevalier, Paris,, 1622
Anbieter: Bouquinerie du Varis, Russy, FR, Schweiz
180x115mm, page de titre gravé + 9 ff. + 514 pages + 1 ff. (Fautes survenuës en l'impression), bandeaux, lettrines, reliure de l'époque veau marbré. Dos usé, devenu muet. Mors craquelés. Intérieur en bon état. En cas de problème de commande, veuillez nous contacter via notre page d'accueil / If there is a problem with the order, please contact us via our homepage.
Verlag: Utrecht, (Traiecti ad Rhenum), Sumptibus Abrahami v. Paddenburg, 1765, 1765
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
4to. XXXIV,(2),XXXVI,122,8 p. Contemporary half calf 26.5 cm (Ref: STCN ppn 203268296; Hoffmann 3,284; Schweiger 1,274; Brunet 4,823/24; Ebert 17795; Graesse 5,415) (Details: Probably an Italian binding. Back gilt and with a red morocco shield. Title and the first leaf of the preliminaries, leaf chi1, and also L2 printed in red and black. Greek text followed by the Latin translation of Holstein, at the bottom of the page are the 'variae lectiones'. At the end has been added a second Latin translation, that of Conrad Gesner. A small text engraving on page 117) (Condition: Back slightly rubbed, its head very sligthtly damaged. Boards scuffed. Corners bumped. Some tiny wormholes in the right lower corner, not coming even close to the text. Paper age-toned) (Note: The author of this treatise on the Odyssean Cave of the Nymphs is the Greek scholar and philosopher Porphyrius (Porphyry), 232/3 - ca. 305 A.D., who was more a polymath than an original thinker. In his numerous treatises and commentaries he had the good habit of quoting his sources by name. He thus preserved many fragments of older learning. (OCD, 2nd ed. p. 864/65) Porphyrius was a student of Plotinus, whose Enneads he edited somewhere after 300. Most of his work is written from a Plotinian point of view. He produced also numerous philosophical commentaries on Plato, Aristotle, Theophrastus and Plotinus. His commentary on the Categories of Aristotle became a standard medieval textbook of logic. His philologic work include his 'Homeric Investigations', a landmark in the history of Homeric scholarship, and 'De antro Nympharum', a specimen of allegorizing interpretation, in which Porphyrius symbolically explains the passages in the 13th book of Homer's Odyssey on the Cave of the Nymphs. In this cave, situated on the island of Ithaca, Odysseus hid the treasures of the Phaeacians on his return home. (Od. XIII, 102-112, 361-365) The edition of 1765 opens, after a dedication to young prince William V, with a 'Dissertatio Homerica ad Porphyrium' by the Dutch classical scholar Rijklof Michaël van Goens, 1748-1810. The Greek text, which follows, is accompanied by 2 Latin translations. The first one, by the German philologist Lucas Holstein, or Holstenius, 1596-1642, is printed parallel to the Greek text. It was first published in 1630 in Rome, where he was librarian of the Vatican. At the end of the Greek text comes the second translation, made by the Swiss classical scholar Conrad Gesner, 1516-1565, which was first published in Zürich in 1542. After that translation follow the 'Collectanea ad Porphyrium De antro Nympharum' in which the editor Van Goens offers the Homeric text with the relevant scholia and commentaries and observations of Eustathius, Johannes Spondanus, Joshua Barnes, Madame Dacier, Alexander Pope, and among others Willem Canter, who declared that the complete Odyssey was an allegory of man searching for wisdom and happiness, which he only could reach through death, for Odysseus' sleep on board of the Phaeacian ship that brought him home must be understood as a stay in death. (p. 81) At the end we find 38 pages filled with observations and commentary by Van Goens himself. Van Goens was a precocious polymath. He matriculated at the age of 12, and only 18 years old he succeeded his professor at the University of Utrecht, Peter Wesseling. He had to quit his chair in 1776 because he had made himself impossible. He went into Utrecht politics, made more ennemies, and left his country disappointed in 1786. His principal work is his edition of Porphyrius of 1765. He does not agree with the allegorical explanations of Porphyrius and Dacier, which he calls 'nugae'. Such trifles only made the Odyssean passage incomprehensible, instead of clear. Van Goens wants instead to shed light on the beauty of Homer's description of the cave. (Praefatio p. (XXII)) His aim is not textcritical, but more philosophical (Epistola p. IV). Porphyrius explains the cave of the Nymphes and her double entrance as a profound allegory of the journey of the soul on it ways to and from its origin. (p. 23) The cave symbolises the material world into which the human soul has descended. The darkness in it stands for the unseen powers of the material world. Porphyrius discusses the famous cavern of Plato, refers to Pythagoras, Heraclitus, Mozes, Zoroaster, Stoics, and the Egyptians, and construes with bold imagination and wondrous combinations an allegoric explanation. In his 'Animadversiones ad Porphyrium de Antro Nympharum' (p. 85-122) Van Goens investigates, in order to explain the interesting passages in the work of Porphyrius, thoroughly and with a marvelous erudition old and new authors. He seems to plunder a whole library, from Plato to Spinoza, from the New Testament to Leibniz, to prove his point) (Provenance: Bookplate on the front pastedown, depicting the coat of arms of the Vargas Macciucca family, with surrounding text: 'ex bibliotheca illris Ducis Thomae Vargas Macciucca'; on the recto of the first flyleaf has been pasted a leaf with a set of house rules which the Duke prescribed himself and others using or lending books from his library. The Italian noble Vargas Macciucia, or Vargas Machuca family is of Spanish, or rather Gothic origin. It dates back to the 8th century. By a degree of king Alfonso XI of 1267 the family has the privilege to bear the royal arms of Castiglia e Leon, which are also depicted on the bookplate. In the middle of the 17th century the family took root in the South of Italy under king Philip IV, who was also king of Naples. The 19th generation Vargas was Tommaso (or Tommasso) de Vargas Machuca (Thomas Vargas Macciucca), who was gouvernor of Capua. In 1732 he was created 'Duca de Vargas Machuca'. In 1748 the family lived in the monumental palace 'Real Monte di Manso' in Naples. He died in 1775. (See for this family: nobili-napoletani.it/Vargas_Macchucca.htm) (Collation: +-4+4, 5+1; *-4*4, 5*2, chi1, A-Q4, R2 (chi1 is originally.
Verlag: Köln Birckmann für A Mylius, 1600
Anbieter: Antiquariat Franz Siegle, Tübingen, Deutschland
Mit Holzschn.-Druckermarke a. d. Titel und vereinzelt schemat. Textholzschnitten. 395 Seiten. 4°. Mod. Halbpergamentband mit Rückenschild. Porphyrius (Porphyrios) war ein antiker Philosoph der neuplatonischen Richtung und namhafter Gelehrter. "Ein wichtiges Anliegen des Porphyrios war die Kommentierung von Werken Platons und des Aristoteles. Im Gegensatz zu seinem Lehrer Plotin, dem Begründer des Neuplatonismus, kritisierte er die logischen Schriften des Aristoteles nicht, vielmehr akzeptierte er die aristotelische Logik und integrierte sie in seinen Platonismus. Diese Verbindung der Lehren Platons mit denen des Aristoteles wurde für den späteren Neuplatonismus wegweisend. Porphyrios verfasste eine Einführung (Isagoge) in die aristotelische Logik, die in der Spätantike und im Mittelalter als Standardwerk der Logik außerordentlich einflussreich war." (Wikipedia). - Leicht gebräuntes, gutes Exemplar; ehemals in der Klosterbibliothek Bildhausen bei Münnerstadt (hs. Besitzvermerke a. d. Titel von 1605 eines Martin Stange aus Bildhausen, und 1645 von der Zisterzienserbibliothek). - VD16 P 4311 und A 3536. - Diese Ausgabe nicht im Brit. Museum, Adams (Cambridge Libr.), Hoffmann, Schweiger, Ebert etc.
Paris, Ex officina typographica Michaelis Vascosani, 1548. 8vo. (17x10,6 cm.). 88 leaves. Full speckled 18th-century calf, gilt spine w.raised bands (diamond-shaped library labels on spine; armorial bookplate, and small blind stamp of the library of the earls of Macclesfield; wholly printed in italic; flyleaves browned but a nice copy with ample margins) Giovanni-Bernardino Feliciano (ca.1490-ca.1554), Venetian medical man and latinist, was the first to divide this text in chapters and paragraphs. (see S.K.Strange, transl.) Porphyry, On Aristotle Categories, p.19. Hoffmann III/286.
Anbieter: Antiquariat Johannes Müller, Salzburg, Österreich
I) Krivatsy 9168 - Vicaire 704 - Schweiger I, 274 - vgl. Bitting 377 u. Bagnasco 1352 (jew. Anm.).- Erste griechisch-lateinische Parallelausgabe des wohl ersten Werkes über vegetarische Ernährung.- II) De Backer-S. VI, 591, 10. - Erste Ausgabe, griechisch-lateinische Parallelausgabe.- Geschichte Konstantinopels vom Patriarchen Nikephoros I. (?-828).- Beide Werke gleichmäßig leicht gebräunt, vereinzelt leicht braunfleckig od. etw. wasserrandig, insges. schönes Exemplar.# I. First edition with parallel text. Most probably the earliest work on vegetarian nutrition.- Mild dampstaining in places, foxing to few leaves.- II. First edition.- Foxing to title. Contemp. vellum.
Verlag: Ad 1: Utrecht, (Traiecti ad Rhenum), Sumptibus Abrahami v. Paddenburg, 1765. Ad 2: Utrecht, (Traiecti ad Rhenum), Apud Abrahamum a Paddenburg, 1767. ((colophon: Daventriae e typ. J. de Lange), 1765
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
2 volumes in 1: 4to. XXXIV,XXXVI,(2),122,(8 index); (XXXIV),398,(14 index) p. Contemporary half calf. 26 cm (Ref: Ad 1: STCN ppn 203268296; Hoffmann 3,284; Schweiger 1,274; Brunet 4,823/24; Ebert 17795; Graesse 5,415. Ad 2: STCN ppn 203266617; Hoffmann 3,284; Schweiger 1,274; Brunet 4,823/24; Ebert 17791; Graesse 5,415) (Details: Back gilt and with 5 raised bands. Red morocco shield in the second compartment. Title and the first leaf of the preliminaries, leaf chi1, and also L2 printed in red and black. A small text engraving on page 117. The second title is also printed in red and black) (Condition: Binding slightly worn. Corners bumped) (Note: Ad 1: The author of this treatise on the Odyssean Cave of the Nymphs is the Greek scholar and philosopher Porphyrius (Porphyry), 232/3 - ca. 305 A.D., who was more a polymath than an original thinker. In his numerous treatises and commentaries he had the good habit of quoting his sources by name. He thus preserved many fragments of older learning. (OCD, 2nd ed. p. 864/65) Porphyrius was a student of Plotinus, whose Enneads he edited somewhere after 300. Most of his work is written from a Plotinian point of view. He produced also numerous philosophical commentaries on Plato, Aristotle, Theophrastus and Plotinus. His commentary on the Categories of Aristotle became a standard medieval textbook of logic. His philologic work include 'De antro Nympharum', a specimen of allegorizing interpretation, in which Porphyrius symbolically explains the passages in the 13th book of Homer's Odyssey on the Cave of the Nymphs. In this cave, situated on the island of Ithaca, Odysseus hid the treasures of the Phaeacians on his return home. (Od. XIII, 102-112, 361-365) § The edition of 1765 opens, after a dedication to young prince William V, with a 'Dissertatio Homerica ad Porphyrium' by the Dutch classical scholar Rijklof Michaël van Goens, 1748-1810. The Greek text, which follows, is accompanied by 2 Latin translations. The first one, by the German philologist Lucas Holstein, or Holstenius, 1596-1642, is printed parallel to the Greek text. It was first published in 1630 in Rome, where he was librarian of the Vatican. At the end of the Greek text comes the second translation, made by the Swiss classical scholar Conrad Gesner, 1516-1565, which was first published in Zürich in 1542. After that translation follow the 'Collectanea ad Porphyrium De antro Nympharum' in which the editor Van Goens offers the Homeric text with the relevant scholia and commentaries and observations of Eustathius, Johannes Spondanus, Joshua Barnes, Madame Dacier, Alexander Pope, and among others Willem Canter, who declared that the complete Odyssey was an allegory of man searching for wisdom and happiness, which he only could reach through death, for Odysseus' sleep on board of the Phaeacian ship that brought him home must be understood as a stay in death. (p. 81) At the end we find 38 pages filled with observations and commentary by Van Goens himself. § Van Goens was a precocious polymath. He matriculated at the age of 12, and only 18 years old he succeeded his professor at the University of Utrecht, Peter Wesseling. He had to quit his chair in 1776 because he had made himself impossible. He went into Utrecht politics, made more enemies, and left his country disappointed in 1786. One of his principle philological works is this edition of Porphyrius. He does not agree with the allegorical explanations of Porphyrius, which he calls 'nugae'. Such trifles only made the Odyssean passage incomprehensible, instead of clear. Van Goens wants instead to shed light on the beauty of Homer's description of the cave. (Praefatio p. (XXII)) His aim is not textcritical, but more philosophical (Epistola p. IV). § Porphyrius explains the cave of the Nymphes and her double entrance as a profound allegory of the journey of the soul on it ways to and from its origin. (p. 23) The cave symbolises the material world into which the human soul has descended. The darkness in it stands for the unseen powers of the material world. Porphyrius discusses the famous cavern of Plato, refers to Pythagoras, Heraclitus, Mozes, Zoroaster, Stoics, and the Egyptians, and construes with bold imagination and wondrous combinations an allegoric explanation. In his 'Animadversiones ad Porphyrium de Antro Nympharum' (p. 85-122) Van Goens investigates, in order to explain the interesting passages in the work of Porphyrius, thoroughly and with a marvelous erudition old and new authors. He seems to plunder a whole library, from Plato to Spinoza, from the New Testament to Leibniz, to prove his point. Ad 2: The second work 'On the abstention of eating flesh' is the most important work on ancient vegetarianism that has survived. In it Porphyrius tries to convince his friend Firmus Castricius to abstain from the eating of flesh of slaughtered animals at the official offerings to the Gods. It is a kind encyclopaedia of ancient vegetarian and anti vegetarian thought. As for Plotinus, the aim of philosophy was for Porphyrius the communion with God, and an ascetic life was the way to achieve this. An important element of ascetism was the abstinence of eating flesh and killing animals for that purpose. The Greek philosopher Pythagoras, 6th century B.C., is considered to be the founder of vegetarianism. Membership to his order entailed inter alia a strict discipline of purity and the abstention from flesh. Many ancient vegetarians believed in the transmission of the human soul to other human beings, including animals. Others believed that eating flesh was injurious to the health of body and soul. For others a vegetarian lifestyle was preferable out of concern for animals themselves. Animals can suffer like humans, and therefore the use of violent and unnecessary killing of them ought to be avoided. 'Perhaps the most sophisticated grounds for ancient vegetarianism, however, are found in Porphyry. His argument (.) involves the claim that rationality is.
Verlag: Georg Olms, Hildesheim 1983 (= Nachdruck der Ausgabe / Reprint of the edition Berlin 1856)., 1983
ISBN 10: 3487002027ISBN 13: 9783487002026
Anbieter: Antiquariat Andree Schulte, Grafschaft-Ringen, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: GIAQ
Buch
8°, Original-kartoniert, VI/253 S. sehr gutes Exemplar ohne Gebrauchsspuren, / original softcover, very fine copy. Text partly Latin, partly ancient Greek, 0 Gewicht in Gramm: 300.
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Gebraucht ab EUR 19,30
Verlag: Hamburg, Felix Meiner Verlag,, 1974
ISBN 10: 3787300023ISBN 13: 9783787300020
Anbieter: Galerie für gegenständliche Kunst, Kirchheim unter Teck, Deutschland
Buch Erstausgabe
Vollständige Ausgabe im original Verlagseinband: grüner Steifumschlag / Broschur / Kartoneinband 8vo im Format 12,2 x 19 cm mit Rücken- und Deckeltitel. 131 Seiten. - Philosophische Bibliothek Band 8 /9. - Erstausgabe in guter Erhaltung (Bibliotheksstempel auf Titelblatt, Bibliotheksschildchen am Rücken, sonst gut) Versand an Institutionen auch gegen Rechnung Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 2000.
Verlag: Les Belles Lettres, 1982
ISBN 10: 2251003614ISBN 13: 9782251003610
Anbieter: Scrinium Classical Antiquity, Aalten, Niederlande
Buch
Zustand: Antiquarian. Les Belles Lettres, Paris, 1982. 34,35-127(x2),128-200p. Hardbound. Plasticized. Misbinding: first gathering loose. Series: Budé. Antiquarian.
Verlag: Nordhausen, Förstemann, 1869., 1869
140 S. 22 cm. - Priv.Hl.
Verlag: Nabu Press, 2012
ISBN 10: 1278327134ISBN 13: 9781278327136
Anbieter: Buchpark, Trebbin, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: Sehr gut. Zustand: Sehr gut - Gepflegter, sauberer Zustand. | Seiten: 126.
Verlag: Lipsiae, 1886
Anbieter: Anybook.com, Lincoln, Vereinigtes Königreich
Zustand: Good. This is an ex-library book and may have the usual library/used-book markings inside.This book has hardback covers. In good all round condition. No dust jacket. Please note the Image in this listing is a stock photo and may not match the covers of the actual item,400grams, ISBN:
Verlag: Cambridge Ex celeberrimae Academia Typographeo impensis G Morden, 1655
8vo (164 x 108 mm). (4) ff., 495, (17) pp., (1) f.; 285, (11), 87, (15) pp. 19th century calf. Foxing to 10 first leaves. Upper margin cut short.
Verlag: Centaur Press Ltd, London, 1965
Anbieter: Second Story Books, ABAA, Rockville, MD, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. First Edition. Octavo. Translated from Greek. VG Hardcover w/ Good Dustjacket; light green spine with red lettering; DJ has some minor discoloration and a few very small tears on corners and is in protective cover; boards show only minimal shelf wear; binding tight; text block has minor discoloration; 196 pp. 1347185. FP New Rockville Stock.
Verlag: Georg Olms Verlagsbuchhandlung; Hildesheim, 1962
Anbieter: Fundus-Online GbR Borkert Schwarz Zerfaß, Berlin, Deutschland
Buch
Goldgepr. Originalleinen. Zustand: Gut. VI; 253 S.; 21,5 cm. Gutes Exemplar; Einband stw. minimal lichtrandig. - Latein; griechisch. - Aus der Bibliothek von Prof. Wolfgang Haase, langjährigem Herausgeber der ANRW und des International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT). - Porphyrios (latinisiert Porphyrius, ursprünglich syrisch Malik; * um 233 in Tyros; zwischen 301 und 305 in Rom) war ein antiker Philosoph der neuplatonischen Richtung und namhafter Gelehrter. Er zeichnete sich durch eine außergewöhnliche Bildung und schriftstellerische Produktivität sowie durch die Vielfalt seiner Arbeitsfelder aus. Sein Gesamtwerk umfasste neben philosophischen und philosophiegeschichtlichen Werken zahlreiche Schriften zu anderen Themenbereichen (alle in griechischer Sprache), von denen die meisten nicht erhalten geblieben sind. Insbesondere setzte er sich mit philologischen und religiösen Themen auseinander. Daneben verfasste er Handbücher zur Astronomie, Astrologie und Musikwissenschaft. Ein wichtiges Anliegen des Porphyrios war die Kommentierung von Werken Platons und des Aristoteles. Im Gegensatz zu seinem Lehrer Plotin, dem Begründer des Neuplatonismus, kritisierte er die logischen Schriften des Aristoteles nicht, vielmehr akzeptierte er die aristotelische Logik und integrierte sie in seinen Platonismus. Diese Verbindung der Lehren Platons mit denen des Aristoteles wurde für den späteren Neuplatonismus wegweisend. Porphyrios verfasste eine Einführung (Isagoge) in die aristotelische Logik, die in der Spätantike und im Mittelalter als Standardwerk der Logik außerordentlich einflussreich war. Bekannt wurde Porphyrios auch als Gegner des Christentums und Bibelkritiker. (wiki) / INHALT : Praefatio. - Caput I. Vita Porphyrii. - " II. Quaedam de iibrorum Porphyrii tempore. - " III. De librorum jccp\ x% h XOYLWV tptXoaotpias ratione - et distributione. - " IV. Qui scriptores veteres deorum oracula collegerint. - " V. Oracula nou hexametris, sed aliis metris edita. - " VI. Quae oracula incubantibus et evocantibus data vinc- - tain orationem praebeant. - " VII. De oraculorum Porphyrii fide. - " VIII. De codicibus. - Reliquiarum liber I. - , II. - . I". - Additamentuni I. De Tolucrium sacrificiis apud Graecos et Romanos. - " II. De rutae, turis, lauri, lacertarum usu niagico. - " III. De statuarum consecratione. - " IV. De daemonibus apud philosophos Graecos, - impriinis Platonein et Porphyrium. - " V. Oraculorum appendix. - Epilogus. - Addenda et corrigeuda. - Index fontium. - " rerum. Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 550 (Unveränderter reprografischer Nachdruck der Ausgabe Berlin 1856).
Couverture souple. Zustand: bon. RO40168693: 1944. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 33 pages pour le tome I, 43 pages pour le tome II, et 49 pages pour le tome III. Texte en français. Etiquettes de code sur les dos. Tampons et annotations de bibliothèque sur les 1ers plats et en pages de titre. . . . Classification Dewey : 870-Littératures des langues italiques. Littérature latine.
Verlag: Dissertatio. Cun ipsorum operum Philonis ac praesertim Eusebii speciminibus. Scribente Angelo Maio. (Graece et latine). Mediolani, Regiis Typis, 1816,, Milano, 1816
Anbieter: Libreria Antiquaria Pregliasco, Torino, Italien
Zustand: molto buono. 2 parti in un vol. in-8, pp. (6), VIII, 68; (2), LXXX, 28; legatura del tempo m. pelle decoraz. in oro e scritta verticale ''Angelo Mai''. Dedica di Angelo Mai al marchese Giangiacomo Trivulzio. Importante e rara edizione critica che, grazie al grande filologo A. Mai, dà alla luce per la prima volta testi di antichi autori andati perduti. La lettera di Porfirio (nato a Tiro nel 233 e morto a Roma nei primi anni del 300) ''A Marcella'', sua moglie, ''è una specie dei testamento spirituale, umanissimo., una specie di breviario di vita morale e religiosa, fondata su concetti che hanno grande affinità col Cristianesimo: fede, verità, amore, speranza'' (Diz. Bompiani, Autori, III, pp. 210-211). Quelli raccolti nella seconda parte sono frammenti inediti di scritti del filosofo Filone Ebreo (nato ad Alessandria intorno al 20 a.C.), ampi brani della ''Cronaca'' di Eusebio Pamfilo (nato in Palestina, probabilmente a Cesarea, tra il 260 ed il 265), considerato il ''padre della storia ecclesiastica'' ed il trattatello ''De virtute eiusque partibus'' di Giorgio Gemisto Pletone (n. a Costantinopoli intorno al 1355 e m. nel Peloponneso verso il 1450), ''singolare figura di pensatore e di riformatore politico e religioso''. Angelo Mai (Bergamo 1782 - Albano 1854), padre gesuita fino al 1819, fu profondo esperto di paleografia e grande filologo e, prima alla Biblioteca Ambrosiana di Milano e dal 1820 alla Vaticana, fece eccezionali ritrovamenti e recuperi di testi e frammenti di codici di oltre 350 autori dell'antichità latina e greca e del Rinascimento italiano, che pubblicò criticamente dal 1814 al 1845. Celebre su tutte, tanto da originare la celebre canzone di Giacomo Leopardi, fu la scoperta e la pubblcazione di parti del ''De re publica'' di Cicerone. Unica edizione, rara, impressa con cura su carta forte. De Backer-Sommervogel V, col. 327, nn. 12 e 13. DBIt., vol. 67, pp. 517-520 e Brunet III, 1311 (entrambi non registrano questi scritti). Book.
Verlag: Venedig, Aldus filios, März 1542., 1542
Anbieter: Versandantiquariat Wolfgang Friebes, Graz, Österreich
Zustand: 0. Erste Aldus-Ausgabe.- Der Venezianer Daniele Barbaro (1513-1570) diente der Republik Venedig als Botschafter am Hof Eduards VI. in London und als Repräsentant beim Konzil von Trient. 1550 wurde er zum Patriarchen von Aquileia gewählt. Er war auch Architekt und übersetzte und kommentierte Vitruv. - Einband leicht bestoßen bzw. angestaubt. Vorderdeckel (verblasst) u. Innendeckel m. handschriftl. Vermerk Duplicato". Hinterer Innendeckel m. kl. Kaufvermerk in Kugelschreiber. Titel m. kl. Namenszug u. etw. fleckig, sonst nur vereinzelt schwach gebräunt bzw. fleckig. - Insgesamt schönes, breitrandiges Exemplar. - EDIT 16 CNCE 4129; Adams B 169; BM STC, Italian Books 70; Renouard 124, 2; Fock, Bibliotheca Aldina S. 61; IA 112.845; Brunet I, 644; Hoffmann III, 287 ("Sehr selten"). la Gewicht in Gramm: 1000 4°. Mit Anker-Druckermarke in Holzschnitt am Titel u. am Ende. Mit einer Anfangsinitiale in Rot u. Blau sowie durchg. regliert u. rubriziert. 110 nn. Bll., Flex. Pgmt. d. Zt. m. durchzogenen Bünden u. verblasstem handschriftl. Rückentitel.
Verlag: Baarn/ Antwerpen, Ambo/ Athenaeum-Polak & Van Gennep 1984, 1984
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Pieter Judo (De Lezenaar), Hasselt, Belgien
Verbandsmitglied: ILAB
886pp., 23cm., linnen uitgeversband, stofwikkel, met leeslint, goede staat, gewicht: 1.2kg., F107742.
Verlag: Parisiis [Paris], Firmin Didot 1858, 1858
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Pieter Judo (De Lezenaar), Hasselt, Belgien
Verbandsmitglied: ILAB
lxx + 585 + 115pp., 27cm., original softcover (few loss of paper at ends of spine), text printed in two columns, bilingual: original Grek text with Latin translation, interior is clean, good condition, weight: 1.5kg., F107723.