Produktart
Zustand
Einband
Weitere Eigenschaften
Gratisversand
Land des Verkäufers
Verkäuferbewertung
Verlag: DROZ, 1994
ISBN 10: 2600000224ISBN 13: 9782600000222
Anbieter: medimops, Berlin, Deutschland
Buch
Befriedigend/Good: Durchschnittlich erhaltenes Buch bzw. Schutzumschlag mit Gebrauchsspuren, aber vollständigen Seiten. / Describes the average WORN book or dust jacket that has all the pages present.
Mehr Angebote von anderen Verkäufern bei ZVAB
Neu ab EUR 84,08
Gebraucht ab EUR 18,69
Mehr entdecken Hardcover
Verlag: De Gruyter, 1864
ISBN 10: 3112348036ISBN 13: 9783112348031
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Buch
Buch. Zustand: Neu. Druck auf Anfrage Neuware - Printed after ordering - Frontmatter -- SILVA VARIORUM CARINII -- SCHEDIA ENCOMIASTICA SEI! ENCOMIA LIBRORUM -- FINERUM LIBER -- IAMBI GNOMICI -- 2TPQMATEY! nAPOIMlQN EMMETPQN -- A N B O A O riAEIIirPAMMATQN MAPTIAAIOT -- POEMATA SELECTA Virgilii, Horatii, Catilli, Tibulli ,Propcrtii et alieram graeee reddita -- PUBLII SYRI Selectae Sententiae -- DIONYSII CATOMS Disticha de Moribns -- SELECTA EPIGRAMMA ex Anthologia Graecorum [planudea.] -- CARMINA SELECTA -- S0PH0CLIS AIAX LORARUS, stilo Tragico translatus -- LYCOPHROMS CASSANDRA -- 0RPHEI HYMNI SACRI, sire indigitamenta deornm, Versibas antiqnis Latine expressa.
Verlag: Reimer, 1852
Anbieter: Antiquariat Dorner, Reinheim, Deutschland
Prolegomena de olypiadum recensu universo et de auctore eius Iosepho Scaligero scripta praemisit, notas tum Mauricii Dittrichii tum suas, veterumscriptorum locis, et Scaligeriani huius opusculi et totius fere historiae antiquae fontibus, instructas subiecit, denique indices olympionicarum, archontum, scriptorum locupletissimos addidit Evaldus Scheibel. Berlin, Reimer 1852. LXXVIII, 232 S, Interimsbroschur. 4to. Unaufgeschnitten. Etwas stockfleckig, sonst gut.
Cologne (Rouen), Gerbrandus Scagen, 1667. 12mo. [xii], 268 (=252) pp. Avec vignette. Veau moucheté, dos doré à 5 nerfs orné de fleurons. Coiffe sup. légerement endommagée / top of spine slightly frayed) Smitskamp catalogus Scaliger 167: 'Second edition of the Scaligerana Secunda, brought out by Daillé to correct a very faulty first edition published by Isaac Vossius at The Hague (''Geneva''), 1666.'.
Cologne (Amsterdam?), n.n., 1695. Large in-12. [xii],418 pp. Avec frontisp. Vélin. (vélin avec quelques taches; provenancesur feuillede garde; quelques lignes au crayon (et quelques annotations au crayon de E.J. Kenney sur feuille de garde); qq.pages réparés dans la marge) * "Second combined edition, in which the Prima & Secunda Scaligerana have been arranged into one alphabet, but distinguished by an asterisk. The preliminaries consist of Tanaquil Faber's Praefatio ad Borellum, followed by a catalogue of books." (Smitskamp 170) Texte en latin et en français.
Anbieter: Scrinium Classical Antiquity, Aalten, Niederlande
Zustand: Antiquarian. G. Reimer, Berlin, 1852. VII,LXXVII,232pp. Nicely rebound. Antiquarian.
Verlag: N.pl. (Geneva), (Jacob Stoer for Gaspard de Hus), 1574., 1574
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
8vo. (IV),663,(1 blank) p. Vellum. 18 cm (Ref: GLN-2523; USTC 450676; cf. Smitskamp's 'The Scaliger collection' no. 146; Brunet 5,179; Graesse 6/289; Ebert 20452) (Details: Back with 4 raised bands. Woodcut printer's mark on the title, depicting two men who are planting and watering young trees; above them, in a cloud, the divine Tetragrammaton, a 4-letter Hebrew word, the name of the biblical God of Israel, Yahweh. § Printed in italics. Volume 1 only, containing the poetry of Julius Caesar Scaliger: 'Apiculae, p. 1; Nemesis, p. 59; Teretismata, ubi Satyrae, p. 76; Nova Epigrammata, p. 113; Farrago, p. 150; Thaumantia, p. 224; Arae Fracastoreae, p. 256; Nymphae indigenae, p. 272; Adamantij Catulli tumulus, p. 391; Heroes, p. 307; Archilochus, p. 329; Hipponax, p. 385; Sidera, p. 458; Lacrymae, p. 526; Aenigmata, p. 546; Urbes, p. 582; Logogriphi, p. 614; Manes Catulliani, p. 634. § Lacking the second volume with poetry of his son Josephus Justus Scaliger) (Condition: Vellum soiled and age-toned. Owner's inscription on the front flyleaf. Old stamp on the title, depicting the Holy Cross, on which rests the Crown of thornes; the monogram C.S. is written across its standard. § A name erased on the title. Paper yellowing. On page 578 has been erased with black ink a 6 lines poem called 'Fratres monachi, iterum', 3 elegiac couplets directed against monks, who are compared to pigs. § Volume 1 only, containing the poetry of Julius Caesar Scaliger only, and lacking the second volume with poetry of his son Josephus Justus Scaliger) (Note: The greatest contribution of the classical scholar of Italian origin Julius Caesar Scaliger (Giulio Bordone della Scala), 1484-1558, to the history of classical scholarship is his brilliant son Josephus Justus Scaliger. In 1524 Julius Caesar Scaliger moved to France where he became physician to bishop Antonio della Rovere of Agen, and where his son Joseph Justus was born in 1540, the same year in which his 'De causis linguae latinae libri tredecim' was published. This book is among his most important philological works. § Scaliger published collections of his Neo-Latin poetry in 1533 and 1546. He considered the mastery of Latin composition not as a pastime, but as the scholar's most valuable skill. In 1574 his son Josephus Justus produced a new edition of his father's collected poetry during his stay at Geneva, where he took refuge because of the French wars of religion and St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre (1572). Here he delivered public lectures and tutored students, and met fellow humanists, Beza, Henricus Stephanus et alii, all interested in or writing Neo-Latin poetry.) (Provenance: On the front flyleaf: 'Ad usum D. Romanus Merighij Camald.sis'. This is Don Romanus Merighius (Romano Merighi), born near Imola in 1658, head (procurator generalis) of the Camaldolese Order, the 'Ordo Camaldulensium', a monastic community that traces its lineage to a monastic movement begun by Saint Romuald. Their name is derived from the Holy Hermitage, Sacro Eremo, Camaldoli, near Arezzo. Because of the colour of their habit they are called 'White Benedictines'. Romanus was a theologian, but he also earned fame as a prominent vernacular poet. He is known for the Idyll in Toscan 'Nesso e Logilde'. He died in 1737. His portrait can be found via Google, search for "Porträtsammlung" and "ÖNB", then Schnellsuche: "Merighi". A useful article on Merighi in 'Centifolium Camaldulense, Sive Notatia Scriptorum Camaldulensium', by M. Ziegelbaur, Venice 1750, p. 69/71) (Collation: *4, a-z8, A-S8, T4 (leaf T4 verso blank) 700 gr.
Verlag: Lugduni Batavorum, ex Officina onaventurae et Abrahami Elzevir, 1627
Anbieter: Gabriele Maspero Libri Antichi, Como, Italien
Erstausgabe
Zustand: Like New. In-8° (cm. 17,2), legatura coeva in piena pergamena, pp. [24] 887 in ottimo stato, con marca elzeviriana al frontespizio; una leggera brunitura e sporadiche lievi fioriture. Prima edizione postuma dell'epistolario di Giuseppe Giusto Scaligero (1540-1609), grande umanista e filologo, successore alla cattedra di Giusto Lipsio e inventore del periodo giuliano in cronologia. Cfr. Willems 228; Graesse VI, 289. Ottimo esemplare. (SC5).
Verlag: Utrecht (Ultrajecti), Apud Petrum Elzevirium, 1670., 1670
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
8vo. (X),101,(1 blank) p. 19th century marbled boards. 15.5 cm (Ref: Willems 1605: one of the few Elzevier-editions from Utrecht; Rahir 1782; Berghman 1339; Not in the 'Scaliger Collection', Smitskamp, Leiden 1993, only mentioned in the register, p. 128) (Details: Marbled endpapers; woodcut printer's mark on the title) (Condition: Head & tail of the spine chafed. Joints starting to split. Some faint pencil marks in in a few margins) (Note: The place of Josephus Justus Scaliger, 1549-1609, in the history of classical scholarship is royal. His preeminence is best understood from the entry which the French classicist Isaac Casaubon made in his diary after the death of this great man: 'Exstincta est illa seculi nostri lampas, lumen litterarum, decus Galliae, ornamentum unicum Europae'. His erudition was considered by his contemporaries to be a wonder of mankind. 'He not only exhibits a remarable aptitude for the soundest type of textual emendation; but he is also the founder of historical criticism. His main strength lay in a clear conception of antiquity as a whole, and in the concentration of vast and varied learning on distinctly important works' (Sandys, A History of Classical Scholarship, volume 2, p. 199-204). He was one of the first to point the way to a sounder method of emendation founded on the genuine tradition of MSS. In 1590 he filled the vacant place left by Justus Lipsius at the young University of Leiden. 'His disinclination to lecture was duly respected; all that the authorities at Leyden desired was his living and inspiring presence in that seat of Protestant learning' (Sandys, op. cit. p. 202). On this honorary post he produced works that made him immortal. His immortality was further ensured by the publication after his death of the 'Prima Scaligerana', a collection of table conversations in which observations of great scientific value can be found, and which is an exceptional and much-quoted source in the historiography of the late humanistic republic of letters. The complicated history of this 'Prima Scaligerana' and 'Secunda Scaligerana' is explained best online at The Warburg Institute (research/projects/scaliger/scaligerana). The table conversations were originally penned down by a friend of Scaliger, the medicin Franciscus Vertunianus. 'Soweit sie also mündliche Aeusserungen Scaligers enthält, umfasst die Sammlung die Periode 1574 bis 1593.' (.) Nach Vertunians Tode (1607) blieben diese Aufzeichnungen unter seinen Papieren in Poitiers liegen, bis sie um das Jahr 1669 ein dortiger Advokat, de Sigogne, an sich brachte und dem Tanaquil Faber nach Saumur zur Herausgabe schickte'. (Bernays,J., 'Joseph Justus Scaliger', Berlin, 1855, p. 232) They left the press in Saumur in that same year under a fake imprint, i.e. 'Groningae, apud Petrum Smithaeum, 1669', this to escape the attention of the authorities of the church and the state. This work was edited by the French classical scholar Tanneguy Lefebvre, or Tanaquillus Faber, 1615-1672. In the short preface to this work M. Lefebvre explains also why this edition was called: 'Prima Scaligerana'. That was because the edition of an other collection of Scaligerana which was published a few years earlier (1666 & 1668) contained material of a later date than his edition. The Dutch printer Pieter Elzevier, one of the last Elzeviers of this celebrated family of booksellers, publishers and printers of the 17th century, published in 1670 this reprint of the Groningen edition of 1669) (Collation: A-G8) (Photographs on request) 250 gr.
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Brinkman, since 1954 / ILAB, Amsterdam, Niederlande
(Heidelberg), Petrus Santandreanus, 1584. [xxxii],451 (=455) pp. Full calf (spine restored; rubbed; corner from one leaf (no loss); some waterstains, marginal worming in the gutter of 30 pages; front paste-downs loosening showing old printed paper; end paste-down missing; last endpaper restored; old owners entries made illegible.) * First published in 1540 by Gryphius in Lyon, to whom the introductory letter is directed. This is the third (second Santandreanus') edition. ". an acute and judicious work on the leading principles of the language, in the course of which he claims to have corrected 634 mistakes made by Valla and his other predecessors." (Sandys II, p.178) Adams S576.
Verlag: Utrecht (Ultrajecti), Apud Petrum Elzevirium, 1670., 1670
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
8vo. (X),101,(1 blank) p. Modern half vellum 16 cm (Ref: Willems 1605: one of the few Elzevier-editions from Utrecht; Rahir 1782; Berghman 1339; Not in the 'Scaliger Collection', Smitskamp, Leiden 1993, only mentioned in the register, p. 128. Not in Brunet, Graesse or Ebert) (Details: Boards with marbled paper. Woodcut printer's mark on title, depicting a celestial sphere) (Condition: Small stamp on the title) (Note: The place of Josephus Justus Scaliger, 1549-1609, in the history of classical scholarship is royal. His preeminence is best understood from the entry which the French classicist Isaac Casaubon made in his diary after the death of this great man: 'Exstincta est illa seculi nostri lampas, lumen litterarum, decus Galliae, ornamentum unicum Europae'. His erudition was considered by his contemporaries to be a wonder of mankind. 'He not only exhibits a remarable aptitude for the soundest type of textual emendation; but he is also the founder of historical criticism. His main strength lay in a clear conception of antiquity as a whole, and in the concentration of vast and varied learning on distinctly important works' (Sandys, History of Classical Scholarship, p. 199-204). He was one of the first to point the way to a sounder method of emendation founded on the genuine tradition of MSS. In 1590 he filled the vacant place left by Justus Lipsius at the young the University of Leiden. 'His disinclination to lecture was duly respected; all that the authorities at Leyden desired was his living and inspiring presence in that seat of Protestant learning' (Sandys p. 202). On this honorary post he produced works that made him immortal. His immortality was further ensured by the publication after his death of the Prima Scaligerana, a collection of table conversations in which observations of great scientific value can be found, and which is an exeptional and much-quoted source in the historiography of the late humanistic republic of letters. The complicated history of this Prima Scaligerana and Secunda Scaligerana is explained best online at The Warburg Institute (research/projects/scaliger/scaligerana). The table conversations were originally penned down by a friend of Scaliger, the medicin François de Saint-Vertunien (Franciscus Vertunianus). 'Soweit sie also mündliche Aeusserungen Scaligers enthält, umfasst die Sammlung die Periode 1574 bis 1593.' (.) Nach Vertunians Tode (1607) blieben diese Aufzeichnungen unter seinen Papieren in Poitiers liegen, bis sie um das Jahr 1669 ein dortiger Advokat, de Sigogne, an sich brachte und dem Tanaquil Faber nach Saumur zur Herausgabe schickte'. (Bernays,J., Joseph Justus Scaliger, Berlin, 1855, p. 232) They left the press in Saumur in that same year under a fake imprint, i.e. 'Groningae, apud Petrum Smithaeum, 1669', this to escape the attention of the authorities of the church and the state. This work was edited by the French classical scholar Tanneguy Lefebvre, or in Latin Tanaquillus Faber, 1615-1672. In the short preface to this work M. Lefebvre explains also why this edition was called: Prima Scaligerana. That was because the edition of another collection of Scaligerana which was published a few years earlier (1666 & 1668) contained material of a later date than his edition. The Dutch printer Pieter Elzevier, one of the last Elzeviers of this celebrated family of booksellers, publishers and printers of the 17th century, published in 1670 this reissue of the Groningen edition of 1669. There exists an editio altera, priore emendatior, with the imprint Ultrajecti, Apud Petrum Elsevirium, 1671, which is however a counterfeit, executed in France, and considered a false Elsevier) (Collation: A-G8) (Photographs on request) 300 gr.
Verlag: Leiden apud Christophorum Raphelengium, 1599
8°. 16 unnummerierte Blätter, 136 S. Pappeinband um 1900. Der französische hugenottische Humanist Joseph Scaliger (1540-1609) hat sich in mehreren Schriften um ein korrekteres Verständnis der antiken Chronologie bemüht. Auf seine umfassende Marcus Manilius-Ausgabe von 1579 folgte die vorliegende Arbeit, die auf einer in Gembloux (= "Gemblacensis") aufbewahrten Manilius-Handschrift beruht. Im Folgejahr erschien ein (umfangreicherer) zweiter Teil. - Ein Vorbesitzer unseres Exemplars war der deutsche Astronom (Friedrich Wilhelm) Hans Ludendorff (1873-1941). Einband um 1900, Papier nur leicht gebräunt.
Verlag: N.pl. (Geneva), (Jacob Stoer for Gaspard de Hus), 1574., 1574
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
8vo. 3 parts in 1: (VI),663,(1 blank); 337,(1 corrigenda),(2 blank); 70,(1 errata),(1 blank) p. Calf. 17.5 cm (Ref: GLN-2523; USTC 450676; cf. Smitskamp's 'The Scaliger collection' no. 146; Brunet 5,179; Graesse 6/289; Ebert 20452) (Details: Back gilt and with 5 raised bands. Marbled endpapers. First title-page removed. Edges dyed red. § Printed in italics. The title-pages of the 2nd and 3rd part have been preserved. Part 1 contains: Apiculae, p. 1; Nemesis, p. 59; Teretismata, Satyra, p. 76; Nova Epigrammata, p. 113; Farrago, p. 150; Thaumantia, p. 224; Arae Fracastoreae, p. 256; Nymphae indigenae, p. 272; Adamantij Catulli tumulus, p. 391; Heroes, p. 307; Archilochus, p. 339; Hipponax, p. 385; Sidera, p. 458; Lacrymae, p. 526; Aenigmata, p. 546; Urbes, p. 582; Logogriphi, p. 614; Manes Catulliani, p. 634. Part 2 contains: Ata, p. 3; Hymni, p. 79; Epidorpidum libri octo, p. 98; De Regnorum eversionibus, p. 324; Part 3 contains a Latin translation (only) of the Ajax of Sophocles by the son of Julius Caesar, Josephus Justus Scaliger, and concludes with 20 pages epigrammata composed by junior. § On the verso of the first flyleaf has been pasted an engraved portrait of Scaliger, printed between 1750 and 1775 by the Parisian printer Daumont. The legend reads 'Iule Cesar Scaliger Critique, Poète, Médecin, Philosophe, né à Ripa dans le Verronois en Italie mort à Agen en france l'an 1558 agé de 75 ans'. The portrait is cut from a larger engraving, this engraving can be found via 'Gallica') (Condition: Lacking the first title-page. Binding somewhat scuffed. Corners bumped. Joint of the lower board split for ca. 3,5 cm. Paper yellowing. The first leaf is browning and shows some small inkstains. Occasionally some old ink underlinings or marks. Tear in page 311/12) (Note: The greatest contribution of the classical scholar of Italian origin Julius Caesar Scaliger (Giulio Bordone della Scala), 1484-1558, to the history of classical scholarship is of course his brilliant son Joseph Justus Scaliger. In 1524 Julius Caesar Scaliger moved to France where he became physician to bishop Antonio della Rovere of Agen, and where his son Joseph Justus was born in 1540, the same year in which his 'De causis linguae latinae libri tredecim' was published. This book is among his most important philological works. The work is, according to Sandys, an acute and judicious work on the leading principles of the Latin language. § Scaliger published collections of his Neo-Latin poetry in 1533 and 1546. He considered the mastery of Latin composition not as a pastime, but as the scholar's most valuable skill. In 1574 his son Josephus Justus produced a new edition of his father's collected poetry during his stay at Geneva, where he took refuge because of the French wars of religion and St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre (1572). Here he delivered public lectures and tutored students, and met fellow humanists, Beza, Henricus Stephanus et alii, all interested in or writing Neo-Latin poetry. § To the edition of his father's poetry the son added a work of himself, the translation of Sophocles' Ajax. This translation was first published in 1573 in Paris with a Greek text and the translation on the facing page. The appropriate medium for the translation of the Ajax was in Scaliger's eyes archaic Latin. 'He used as many arcane or distinctively pre-classical words as possible (.). He dressed ordinary words in primitive spellings (.). And, like the archaic poets, he freely coined new compound words'. (Grafton, A., Joseph Scaliger, a study in the history of scholarship', volume 1, Oxford 1983, p. 114/115) After the Ajax Scaliger jr. added 20 pages with epigrammata, Greek and Latin, also of his own. § (Collation: *4 (minus leaf *1, the title-page), a-z8, A-S8, T4 (leaf T4 verso blank); Aa-Xx8, Yy2 (leaf Yy2 blank), AA-DD8, EE4 (leaf EE4 verso blank)) 700 gr.
Verlag: Leiden (Lugduni Batavorum), Ex officina Bonaventurae & Abrahami Elzevir, 1627., 1627
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
8vo. (XXIV),887,(1 blank) p. Overlapping vellum 19.5 cm (Ref: STCN ppn 840010095; Willems 288; Berghman 1393; Rahir 253; Smitskamp Scaliger Collection 166; Graesse 6/2,289; Ebert 20438) (Details: Elsevier's printer's mark on the title, depicting an old man who stands in the shade of a vine-elmtree, symbolising the symbiotic relationship between scholar and publisher; the motto: 'Non solus', probably indicates the interdependency of publisher and scholar) (Condition: Vellum age-toned and spotted, some faint ink lettering on the upper board. Traces of a label on the back. Front flyleaf renewed. Occasional old ink underlinings and a few notes. Partly some foxing) (Note: The place of Josephus Justus Scaliger, 1549-1609, in the history of classical scholarship is royal. His preeminence is summarized masterly in the blurb text of the dustjacket of the intellectual biography of Anthony Grafton 'Joseph Scaliger, A study in the history of classical scholarship', Oxford, 1983/93. 'In an age of great classical scholars, Joseph Scaliger was the greatest. His early work as an editor of Latin texts won the attention of the learned throughout Europe and contained technical innovations that remain of interest. His later work as the founder of the discipline of historical chronology involved him in the superhuman task of trying to reconstruct every sophisticated calender and to date every significant event in human history. Along the way he emended hundreds of corrupt passages in classical texts, collated scores of manuscripts, quarrelled with dozens of his rivals, failed humiliatingly (.) to prove that he was descended from the della Scala of Verona - and dashed off in his spare time works that would remain standard for centuries, like Gruter's Corpus of inscriptions, the publication of which Scaliger oversaw. His work was perhaps most important in that it showed that the Bible and the events it recorded could not be understood except in the light of the writings of the pagans and the methods of classical scholarship'. In 1593 Scaliger filled the vacant place left by Justus Lipsius at the young the University of Leiden. 'His disinclination to lecture was duly respected; all that the authorities at Leyden desired was his living and inspiring presence in that seat of Protestant learning'. (Sandys 2/202) On this honorary post he produced works that made him immortal, and lend lustre to Leyden and its Universtiy. Scaliger spent the last 16 years of his life in Leiden as the jewel of the University. There he enjoyed also the friendship of a great number of pupils and admirers. To his circle belonged H. Grotius, D. Heinsius, the Dousae, and in France Du Thou and Casaubon. Scaliger died in the arms of his favourite pupil and closest friend Daniel Heinsius, who wrote a funerary oration for him. His correspondence reflects his relations with contemporary scholars and scientists, and the scholarly circles in which he moved. He corresponded with Salmasius, Heinsius, Casaubon, Lindenbrogius, Gruter, Lipsius, Labbaeus and many others. Scaliger had inherited from his father Julius Caesar Scaliger a profound belief in his descent from the noble Veronese family Della Scala. The correspondence opens with a 58 page letter addressed to Dousa, and is on this matter, 'De vetustate gentis Scaligerae in qua & de vita utriusque Scaligeri'. Here Scaliger tried to prove his princely descent, and failed humiliatingly according to Grafton) (Collation: *8, 2*4; A-3I8, 3K4 (leaf 3K4 verso blank)) (Photographs on request) 800 gr.
Verlag: Genf Rover, 1629
Anbieter: Zentralantiquariat Leipzig GmbH, Leipzig, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: BOEV
Fol. Mit schöner Holzschnitt-Druckermarke (Feuersalamander) auf d. Titel. 7 Bl. LII S., 2 Bl., 784 S., 24 Bl. (das letzte weiß), 59 S. Prgt. d. Zt. (Beide Deckel m. Wappenstempeln, datiert m. 1688). Einbd. stark beschäd., insbes. Vorderdeckel. Rücken fehlt. Einbd. u. S. (fast durchg.) m. Brandspuren, jeweils ob. Ecke am Falz weggebrannt (o. Textverl.). Teils m. leichter Feuchtigkeitsspur. Gebräunt, teils braunfl. Titel in Rot u. Schwarz. Ebert II, 20426. Brunet V, 180. Houzeau/Lanc. 12828. - "Beste Ausgabe" (Ebert); Hauptwerk Scaligers zur wissenschaftlichen Grundlegung der historischen Chronologie: "Man kann sich heute schwer vorstellen, wie man ohne eine ausreichende durchlaufende Chronologie, die sich auf Scaligers Synchron-Prinzip stützt, überhaupt Geschichte schreiben könnte" (Carter/Muir 202). Scaliger verfügte über eine einzigartige Kenntnis aller alten, auch der orientalischen, Sprachen und der antiken orientalischen, griechischen, römischen und christlichen Geschichte. Unter Benutzung der verbesserten astronomischen Kenntnisse seiner Zeit und mit einer "wohl nie wieder erreichten Beherrschung der gesamten chronologischen Überlieferungen" (Gudeman 191) versuchte er alle chronologischen Systeme der alten Welt zu rekonstruieren und miteinander zu synchronisieren. Mit Quellenzitaten in den Originalsprachen, darunter äthiopisch, arabisch, samaritanisch, persisch und syrisch, die das 'Opus de emendatione temporum' auch zu einem typographisch anspruchsvollen Werk machen. "The publication . (first ed. in 1583) placed him at the head of all the living representatives of ancient learning" (Sandys II, 202). la.
Verlag: N.pl. (Geneva), Apud Petrum Santandreanum (Pierre de Saint-André), 1581., 1581
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
8vo. (XXIV),945 (recte 949; p. 1-432, 431-462 459-945),(67 index) p. Half calf. 18 cm (Ref: GLN-2893; Graesse 6/1,289; Ebert 20450) (Details: Back gilt and with 4 raised bands. Santandrea's 'Veritas' printer's device on the title: a woman, the naked truth, seated on a cubus, holding a radiant sun in her right hand; in her left hand she holds an opened book and a palm leaf; her feet rest on the globe; the garland of fruit which surrounds her shows a ribbon with the text in Greek: 'Alêtheia Pandamatôr', i.e. 'Allmighty Truth) (Condition: Small hole at the junction of the spine and the joint near the foot of the spine. Wear to the head and tail of the spine. Edges a bit worn. Marbled paper on the boards wearing away. Right upper corner of the upper board bending. Bookplate on the front pastedown. Endpapers slightly stained. Three small wormholes in the first leaves. Some small wormholes in the blank lower margin in a few places. Paper yellowing) (Note: The greatest contribution of the classical scholar of Italian origin Julius Caesar Scaliger (Giulio Bordone della Scala), 1484-1558, to the history of classical scholarship is of course his brilliant son Joseph Justus Scaliger. In 1524 he moved to France where he became physician to bishop Antonio della Rovere of Agen, and where his son Joseph Justus was born in 1540, the same year in which his 'De causis linguae latinae libri tredecim' was published. This work is among his most important philological works. § A far more comprehensive work is Scaliger's 'Poetices libri septem', posthumously published at Lyon in 1561, which offers his generically organized classifications of kinds of ancient and modern Latin poems, and comparative criticism of ancient and modern poets, recognizing the rivalry and imitation in Greek, Roman and modern writings. It is 'one of the earliest modern attempts to treat the art of poetry in a systematic manner. Here he deals with the different kinds of poems, and the various metres, together with figures of speech and turns of phrase, criticises all the Latin poets ancient and modern, and institutes a detailed comparison between Homer and Virgil to the distinct advantage of Virgil, while the epics of Homer are regarded as inferior to the 'Hero and Leander' of Musaeus. He also declares Seneca inferior to none of the Greeks in majesty. He makes all literary creation depend ultimately on judicious imitation'. (Sandys 2, p. 178) This Genevan edition of 1581 is a reissue of the edition of 1561. This fundamental work remained the standard in matters of Latin poetry well into the 18th century) (Provenance: Engraved armorial bookplate of 'Robert Chambre Vaughan Esq. Burlton Hall, Co. Salop'. Vaughan, Robert-Chambre, esq. of Burlton Hall in the County of Salop, born in 1796, was a graduate of Brasenose College, Oxford. (See for him and his ancestors J. Burke, 'A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland', London 1835, Volume 2, p. 238/242). In 1818 the degree of Bachelor of Arts was conferred to him. He died in 1876)(Collation: *8, 2*4, a-z8, A-Z8, Aa-Rr8, Ss4) 700 gr.
Verlag: Leiden (Lugduni Batavorum), Ex officina Henrici Ludovici ab Haestens, Impensis Ludovici Elzevierii, 1607., 1607
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
Small 4to. 3 parts in 1: 103,(3),(2 blank);(40);(40) p., folding table. Contemporary limp vellum 19.8 cm (Ref: STCN ppn 115523170; Willems 50; Rahir 33; Berghman 1444; Not in Smitskamp, the Scaliger Collection; Graesse 6/1,289; Ebert 20432) (Details: Two thongs laced through the joints. Short title in ink on the back. All 3 parts have different title pages. First title in red and black. Woodcut of Elsevier's first printer's mark, depicting an aegle that holds a bundle of 7 arrows in its beak, the bird is surrounded by the motto: 'A. 1595, Concordia Res Parvae crescunt'; the seven arrows represent the union of the Seven Provinces of the Dutch republic; since its foundation in 1588 the motto of the seven United Provinces was 'Concordia res parvae crescunt', in Dutch 'Eendracht maakt macht', a still popular motto in the coat of arms of many countries. The saying was coined by the Roman historian Sallust. ('Bellum Jugurthinum', caput 10) Woodcut initials. § The second part, with the first 'Elenchus' has a title of its own: 'Iosephi Scaligeri Iul. Caes. a Burden F. Elenchus primae Orationis Chronologicae Davidis Parei. Lugduni Batavorum, Ex officina Ioannis Patii, 1607, Impensis Ludovici Elzevierii'; The printer's mark, an angel with book and scythe, has the motto 'Scrutamini', or 'Search!, examine!, explore!' The title of the third volume is: 'Davidis Parei oratio chronologica altera, de quaestione utrum chronologia integra ab Adamo ad Christum ex sola historia sacra haberi possit? (.) Lugduni Batavorum, Ex officina Henrici Ludovici ab Haestens, Impensis Ludovici Elzevierij, 1607'. It has no printer's mark) (Condition: Binding slightly soiled and spotted. Right lower corner of lower board cover expertly repaired with vellum. All 4 ties gone. Front flyleaf gone. Faint stamp and old ownership inscription on the title. Lower margin of first & last leaf slightly spotted. The last of the 3 volumes slightly foxed. The tip of the right lower corner of the last 10 pages gone, without loss of text) (Note: In the 16th and 17th century the study of chronology, calendars and historical dates was controversial. Chronology was a battlefield for theologians, classical scholars, astronomers and the church. The debate raged fiercely about the reliability of the dates and the dating in the Bible, and in early Christian writings. The French scholar Josephus Justus Scaliger, 1540-1609, was the very man for this debate. He was already famous as an ingenious and innovative editor of Latin texts, when he published in 1583 his 'De emendatione Temporis', a work which placed him according to Sandys 'at the head of all the living representatives of ancient learning'. (Sandys 2,202) His efforts to combine calvinism and classical scholarship led to attacks on him from Flanders and Germany by the Jesuits and their scholarly straw men. Scaliger wanted to read the Bible with the same philological method that he applied to the Greek and Roman authors, and to compare the information of ancient historians and the data of astronomy with the Bible. In 1601 he was denounced by Martin Delrio because he denied the genuineness of the work of Dionysius Areopagites, now called Pseudo-Dionysius Areopagites. He was attacked for his lack of sufficient knowledge of Hebrew, but especially for his arrogance and vanity. This book on offer is part of that ongoing war. In 1606, the year of his triumph, when he published in Leiden his last large work on the chronology of the world history 'Thesaurus Temporum', Scaliger received a public challenge from one of his protestant opponents, the German theologian David Pareus, since 1598 professor of the exegese of the Old Testament at Heidelberg (extraordinarius controversiarum theologicarum exactor et censor). Since 1605 this dogmaticus, who believed that the 'ars critica' was an invention of the devil, published a series of polemic commentaries on the Bible. The attempt to create an exact astronomical table of history was according to him a thing above human capacity. Pareus 'considered the pagans entirely mendacious and cited their myths as evidence in favour of this view in two sharply polemical orations'. Scaliger responded with this 'Elenchus' (Refutation) of Pareus orations, 'in which he argued that the myths were not veiled accounts of philosophical doctrines but confused accounts of historical events. (.) He claimed that simple common sense sufficed to find the facts beneath the myths: 'For it is equally certain that Hercules existed, and that the Hydra, continually reborn with its innumerable heads, did not exist'. (.) At the same time, Scaliger insisted all over again that the ancient Greek scholars had used their knowledge of the calendar and astronomy as dexterously as their understanding of the nature of myth. They could have given a far more precise and accurate account of Greek history than the Jews - to take a people supposedly exemplary for their records - could give of their early times'. (A. Grafton, 'Joseph Scaliger, A study in the history of classical scholarship', Oxford, 1993, vol. 1, p. 611/12; see also Grafton's monography on Casaubon of 2010) At the end, after both refutations by Scaliger, the second oration of Pareus has been added. The first one, with Pareus' commentary on Hosea, was omitted in this edition of 1607, because it was still for sale in Heidelberg. Only one copy Dutch libraries (Leiden)) (Provenance: A round rubber or metal stamp on the title with the legend: 'M.D.I.P.D.R.D.I.' In its center the letters 'C.G'. This stamp belongs to: 'Commissario Governativo, Ministero Della Istruzione Pubblica Del Regno D Italia'. In 1870, with the occupation of Rome by Italian troops and the unification of Latium with the rest of Italy, the new government closed down convents and religious organisations. All documents, libraries and furniture had to be transfered to the municipalities. The confiscated books were all marked with the above mentioned stamp. In a short history of.
Verlag: N.pl. (Geneva), Apud Petrum Santandreanum (Pierre de Saint-André), 1591., 1591
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Fragmenta Selecta, AMSTERDAM, Niederlande
8vo. 3 parts in 1: (VIII),663,(1 blank); 336; 70,(1 errata),(1 blank) p. Calf, end 19th century. 17 cm (Ref: GLN-2264; USTC no. 450529; Smitskamp's 'The Scaliger collection' no. 147; cf. Brunet 5,179; cf. Graesse 6/289 & & 6,444; cf. Hoffmann 3,425; Ebert 20452) (Details: Nice binding. Gilt panelled back with 5 raised bands. Boards with triple fillet gilt borders and an oval gilt ornament. Edges of the boards and the turn-ins gilt. All edges gilt. Marbled endpapers. 'Veritas' woodcut printer's device on the title, depicting a woman, the naked truth, seated on a cubus, holding a radiant sun in her right hand. In her left hand she holds an opened book and a palm leaf. Her feet rest on the globe; the garland of fruit which surrounds her shows a motto in Greek: 'Alêtheia Pandamatôr', i.e. 'Allmighty Truth'. 2 red/yellow/blue book ribbons. § Printed in italics. Each of the 3 parts has a title-page of its own. Part 1 contains: Apiculae, p. 1; Nemesis, p. 59; Teretismata, Satyra, p. 76; Nova Epigrammata, p. 113; Farrago, p. 150; Thaumantia, p. 224; Arae Fracastoreae, p. 256; Nymphae indigenae, p. 272; Adamantij Catulli tumulus, p. 391; Heroes, p. 307; Archilochus, p. 339; Hipponax, p. 385; Sidera, p. 458; Lacrymae, p. 526; Aenigmata, p. 546; Urbes, p. 582; Logogriphi, p. 614; Manes Catulliani, p. 634. Part 2 contains: Ata, p. 3; Hymni, p. 79; Epidorpidum libri octo, p. 98; De Regnorum eversionibus, p. 324; Part 3 contains a Latin translation of the Ajax of Sophocles by the son of Julius Caesar, Josephus Justus Scaliger, and concludes with 20 pages epigrammata composed by junior) (Condition: Some slight wear to the binding. Oval stamp cut out of the first 2 title-pages, but skillfully repaired. In old ink 'Expurgata' written on the title page. Paper yellowing, sometimes browning. § Occasionally a word, or a line, or sometimes a complete poem has been made illegible with ink stripes by a censuring cleric. Scaliger's Poemata figured in the Catholic 'Index librorum prohibitorum'. This 'Index' of forbidden books contained publications that were banned by the Catholic Church, because they were deemed heretical, anti-clerical or immoral. The censoring sometimes came down to the erasing or cutting out of names, or passages, or the removal of leaves, even complete chapters by catholic librarians. Such a librarian must have written, after having completed the job, at the foot of the title-page, 'Expurgata') (Note: The classical scholar Julius Caesar Scaliger (Giulio Bordone della Scala), 1484-1558, was of Italian origin. In 1524 he moved to France where he became physician to bishop Antonio della Rovere of Agen, and where his brilliant son Joseph Juste was born in 1540, the same year in which his 'De causis linguae latinae libri tredecim' was published. This book is among his most important philological works. § Another work of fundamental importance is his 'Poetices libri septem' (1561), a manual for the apprentice poet, that became Europe's standard in matters of Neo-Latin poetry for two centuries. § Scaliger published collections of his Neo-Latin poetry in 1533 and 1546. He considered the mastery of Latin composition not as a pastime, but as the scholar's most valuable skill. In 1574 his son Joseph Juste (Josephus Justus) produced a new edition of his father's collected poems during his stay at Geneva, where he took refuge because of the French wars of religion and St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre. Here Scaliger jr. delivered public lectures and tutored students, and met fellow humanists, Beza, Henricus Stephanus et alii, all interested in or writing Neo-Latin poetry. § This edition of 1591 is a line by line reissue of the edition of 1574. To the edition of his father's poetry the son added a work of himself, the translation of Sophocles' Ajax. This translation was first published in 1573 in Paris with a Greek text and the translation on the facing page. The appropriate medium for the translation of the Ajax was in Scaliger's eyes archaic Latin. 'He used as many arcane or distinctively pre-classical words as possible (.). He dressed ordinary words in primitive spellings (.). And, like the archaic poets, he freely coined new compound words'. (Grafton,A., Joseph Scaliger, a study in the history of scholarship', volume 1, Oxford 1983, p. 114/115) After the Ajax Scaliger jr. added 20 pages with epigrammata, Greek and Latin, also of his own) (Provenance: Before the title have been bound 2 leaves, the first from 1890, the 2nd much older, after 1633. The text of the first manuscript leaf: 'Ce volume, que j'ai acheté aux libraires Mayer et Muller, de Berlin, était alors relié avec un exemplaire du Poemata de J. César Scaliger, de l'édition rarisssime de 1546. L'un et l'autre, ainsi réunis avaient appartenu à une Bibliothèque de Vérone (on le voit à la maculature laissée par le timbre, en tête de la 2e partie). L'un et l'autre portait les suppressions imposées par l'Index. - Voir, à ce sujet, la note italienne écrite ci après, probablement par un religieux du couvent dont la Bibliothèque possédait ces volumes. Dans l'éd. de 1546, beaucoup des pièces biffées ici n'avaient pas été supprimées. R. Dezeimeris, 1890.' § The French historian and politician Reinold Dezeimeris, was 'Conservateur' of the 'Bibliothèque municipale' of Bordeaux, and a passionate bibliophile, but most of all he is remembered for his scholarly activities. He devoted many studies to Renaissance authors from his dear city. He participated in an important edition of the 'Essais' of Montaigne, Bordeaux 1870-1873. § This title on offer of father and son Scaliger will have caught his attention, because of their connection with Bordeaux. On the authority of Dezeimeris, who must have had sharp eyes, we assume that the removed stamp from the first 2 title-pages belonged to a library at Verona. In the leaf immediately after the second title the dent of the stamp that was cut out of the title is indeed still visible, though hardly legible. (See for much.
Verlag: Köln: Th. Graminaeus, 1570
Anbieter: Wissenschaftliches Antiquariat Köln Dr. Sebastian Peters UG, Köln, Deutschland
Erstausgabe
Zustand: gut. 6 Bl., 152 S., 21 x 15,5 cm, die großen Textholzschnitte zeigen meist Papstporträts in üppig gestalteter Umrahmung, Halbledereinband des 18. Jahrh. mit goldgeprägter Rückenbeschriftung leicht berieben, am Anfang 3 Seiten mit alten handschr. Notizen, papierbedingt gebräunt, leicht stockfleckig. Scaliger (auch Skalich, Scalichius oder Skali, 1534-1575), polemische Schrift gegen die "Vaticinia" des Abts Joachim de Fiore (1132-1202). Sprache: Latin Erstausgabe.
Verlag: (Paris) Vascosanus, 1557
Anbieter: Zentralantiquariat Leipzig GmbH, Leipzig, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: BOEV
Kl.-4°. M. mehr. Textholzschn. u. 1 (spät.) gest. mont. Portr. verso Tit. 4, 476 (numer.), 31 Bl. Spät. blindgepr. Ldrbd. a. 4 Bünden u. Holzdeckeln. Wenige S. falsch paginiert. Innere Bezugspapiere d. Holzdeckel fehlen, 1 Holzdeckel längs gebrochen. 1 Lederecke fehlt. Rücken an d. Kapitalen beschäd. m. Einrissen bzw. kl. Fehlst. Ohne die beiden Schließen. Blätter anfangs leicht knittrig. Titelbl. m. Namen u. ausgebess. (m. kl. Textverl.). Gebräunt, teils etwas braunfl. bzw. m. kl. Nässespur. Teils m. Unterstreich. u. Marginalien u. alter Hd. Ansonsten aber gut erhalten. Adams S 579. Durling 4091. Wellcome I. 5806. Erste Ausgabe. - Julius Caesar Scaliger (eig. Giulio Bordone della Scala), italienischer Humanist, Dichter, Arzt u. Naturforscher, lebte von 1484-1558. "Er wurde mit 12 Jahren Page Kaiser Maximilians I., dem er 17 Jahre lang, auch als Soldat, diente, studierte dann in Bologna Philosophie, besonders die des Duns Scotus. Eine Zeitlang trug er sich mit dem Gedanken, dem Franziskanerorden beizutreten, zog es jedoch vor, seine militärische Laufbahn unter König Franz I. von Frankreich fortzusetzen, wobei er sich auch in vielen Feldzügen auszeichnete. 1529 ließ er sich als praktischer Arzt in Agen in Frankreich nieder. In umfassendem Selbststudium gewann er eine seltene Kenntnis der klassischen Literaturen. Berühmt war er seinerzeit aufgrund seiner ausgebreiteten Sprachkenntnisse und außergewöhnlichen Körperkräfte und etwas berüchtigt wegen seines polemischen Temperaments, das besonders Erasmus und Cardanus zu spüren bekamen. Für die Philosophie hat er vor allem durch seine Aristoteleskommentare gewirkt." (vgl. Geldsetzer, Philosophengalerie). la.
Verlag: Stuttgart, Frommann-Holzboog, 1987., 1987
ISBN 10: 3772802567ISBN 13: 9783772802560
Anbieter: Bojara & Bojara-Kellinghaus OHG, Osnabrück, Deutschland
Buch
2., unveränd. Nachdruck Ausgabe Lyon, 1561. 20 S., 6 Bll., 364 S., 18 Bll. OLwd. - Lateinischer Text. - Einband unbedeutend fleckig, sonst sehr gutes Ex. 1.
Mehr Angebote von anderen Verkäufern bei ZVAB
Gebraucht ab EUR 28,00
Verlag: HACHETTE LIVRE, 2012
ISBN 10: 201276908XISBN 13: 9782012769083
Anbieter: Buchpark, Trebbin, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: Sehr gut. Zustand: Sehr gut - Gepflegter, sauberer Zustand.
Mehr Angebote von anderen Verkäufern bei ZVAB
Neu ab EUR 47,97
Gebraucht ab EUR 32,22
Mehr entdecken Softcover
Verlag: WENTWORTH PR, 2019
ISBN 10: 0469123001ISBN 13: 9780469123007
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Kartoniert / Broschiert. Zustand: New.
Verlag: Imprimerie G. Gounouilhou, Bordeaux, 1877
Signiert
Couverture souple. Zustand: bon. RO40208672: 1877. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. défraîchie, Dos abîmé, Déchirures. Plaquette de 37 pages. Gravure en noir et blanc en page de titre. Bandeaux et culs-de-lampe ornés en noir et blanc. Envoi manuscrit du traducteur sur le 1er plat. Manques sur le dos. 2e plat abîmé. Galeries d'insectes en bas de pages n'altérant pas la lecture. . . . Classification Dewey : 97.2-Dédicace, envoi.
Verlag: HACHETTE LIVRE, 2017
ISBN 10: 2019171740ISBN 13: 9782019171742
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: New.
Verlag: HACHETTE LIVRE, 2012
ISBN 10: 2012746837ISBN 13: 9782012746831
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: New.
Verlag: WENTWORTH PR, 2019
ISBN 10: 046912301XISBN 13: 9780469123014
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Gebunden. Zustand: New.
Verlag: Let Me Print, 2012
ISBN 10: 5876515124ISBN 13: 9785876515124
Anbieter: Buchpark, Trebbin, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: Sehr gut. Zustand: Sehr gut - Gepflegter, sauberer Zustand. | Seiten: 310.
Verlag: HACHETTE LIVRE, 2012
ISBN 10: 2012769098ISBN 13: 9782012769090
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: New.
Verlag: Frommann-Holzboog, 2003
Anbieter: Librodifaccia, Alessandria, AL, Italien
Zustand: Buone. tedesco Condizioni dell'esterno: Buone Condizioni dell'interno: Ottime.