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311

1.

Very rare

1st ed. by Erasmus

of Seneca’s philosophical works, as well as of the writings of Seneca

Rhetor. Title within elaborate

woodcut border by Urs Graf

. Woodcut side border on verso of title.

On f. a2r text within elaborate woodcut border. Woodcut mark at the end. Cont. ownership entries

on front endpaper “Iste liber pertinet ad co(n)uentu(m) Fratru(m) Minor(um) in Ruffach 1530”,

and on title “Pro Bibliotheca Rubeacensi Fr(atr)um Min(orum)’”, i.e. Rouffach (Alsace). Paper

labels on front cover (erased) and on spine.

Ref.

VD-16 S-5758. Erasmus Online 4659. Adams

S-883. STC German (BL) 808. Not in BnF, De Reuck.

2.

2nd ed. (1st Paris 1516) of this important

liturgical treatise by the Flemish theologian Clichtoveus (Nieuwpoort 1472 – Paris 1543), a pupil

of Lefèvre d’Étaples. Title within elaborate

woodcut border by Urs Graf

.

Ref.

VD-16 C-4193. B.B.

II: 591-592 C-402. Ind. Aurel. 141.724. Adams C-2201. Not in BL, Opac KBR.

1075 [Estienne imprint]

 -

MAXIMUS TYRIUS

 - Sermones sive Disputationes XLI, Graece nunc

primum editae [bound with] ID. - Idem [Latin trsl. Cosimo Pazzi, rev. Henri Estienne].

[Geneva],

H. Estienne, 1557 id., 2 works in 1 vol., 8vo, old English calf (somewhat worn), spine on 5 raised

bands (broken, head and tail def., joints split, front cover loosening), [8]-363 (= 263)-[1], [16]-320

pp. (quires I-L bound in wrong order; some sl. spotting).

€ 250/400

Editio princeps

of the 41 Greek dissertations (...) by the itinerant Platonist lecturer Maximus of

Tyre, reputed to have been the teacher of Marcus Aurelius” (Schreiber). The Latin trsl. was 1st publ.

Rome 1517. Woodcut mark on titles. Capital spaces with guide-letters. Old name on title “Jacobus

Janssonius”. Collector’s stamp.

Ref.

GLN 2041-42. Renouard 116:2. Schreiber 141a-b. Hoffmann

III:82 & 84. Adams M-939/940.

1076

1074