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GREEK & LATIN
~ CLASSICS
A-B
C-E F-H
I-Lt
Lu-Q R-S
T-Z
Raphel,
Georg. Annotationes philologicae in Novum Testamentum ex Polybio &
Arriano collectae. Hamburgi: Apud Christianum Liebezeit, bibliopolam, 1715. 8vo
(16.8 cm, 6.625"). [28] ff., 722 (i.e., 702) pp., [21] ff. [bound with]
Raphel, Georg. Annotationes philologicae
in Novum Testamentum ex Xenophonte collectae. Hamburgi: Apud Christianum Liebezeit,
bibliopolam (Leoburgi: Typis Christ. Alb. Pfeifferi), 1709. 8vo. [24] ff., 374
pp., [13] ff.
$525.00
Georg Raphel (1673–1740, co-rector of the Luneburg Athenaeum in 1709
but by 1715 pastor of St. Nicholas’Church) was a philologist and New
Testament scholar. He produced a goodly amount of work comparing the Bible
with classical literature, an especially profitable area of study in the case
of the New Testament, showing the influence of classical language and historical
writing on its language and style. In the first of the works here he gives
correspondences between Polybius and Arrianus and the sacred writers, and in
the second work he does the same with Xenophon. These are apparently the first
editions of these works, the second of which was once reprinted (in 1720).
Contemporary vellum over paste boards; spine with inked author
and paper shelf labels: soiled with a few spots. Front hinge (inside) partially
open, but sewing holding. Pages generally clean, with a few small dog ears.
Inked ownership inscriptions on front endpapers and title-page; a few instances
of underlining.
Ricchieri,
Lodovico. Lectionvm antiqvarvm libri triginta.... Genevae: Excudebat Philippus
Albertus, 1620. Folio (33 cm, 13"). ¶6 a–b6 C–Z6 Aa–Zz6 AAa–ZZz6 AAaa–CCcc6;
[6] ff., 1720 columns, [2] ff., lacking [62] ff.
$850.00


Lodovico Ricchieri (a.k.a. Ludovicus Caelius Rhodiginus, 1453–1525) here
gives a survey from Classical Greek and Latin authors on life, the universe,
and everything, beginning with the nature of God and including overviews of
such diverse subjects as sleep and rhetoric. First published in 1517, this
work saw many 16th- and 17th-century editions. For those who can read it, quite
a read!
Old calf, rebacked and recornered; abraded with some loss on
edges. Some waterstaining and browning; soiling and shallow chipping. Lacking
final [62] ff., the index (only).

French Translation of the NT with
Exegesis of Text
& of PICTURES
Rohault de Fleury, Charles. L'évangile études iconographiques et archéologiques. Tours: Alfred Mame et Fils, 1874. Folio (33 cm, 13"). 2 vols. I: Frontis., [8], vii, [1], 287 pp.; 53 plts. II: Frontis., [4], 320 pp.; 46 plts.
$350.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
Sole edition. A study of the iconography of Jesus in Late Roman and Medieval art, from the 3rd to the 12th century. Each chapter (165 in all) covers a particular scene in the life of Jesus, and the text begins with a Catholic translation in French of the relevant passages from the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. The text is accompanied by illustrations, copious interpretive notes of the iconography and critical commentary, both exegetical and archaeological. Officially endorsed by the Roman Catholic Church, the preliminary leaves including an “approbation” by the Archbishop of Tours and a letter from the Archbishop of Paris.
The book is illustrated with 100 engraved plates and numerous in-text engravings, as well as a frontispiece map of the Holy Land in each volume. The plates are mostly figural illustrations taken from paintings in catacombs and on sarcophagi, illuminated manuscripts, mosaics, ivory figurines, murals, etc. The title-pages are printed in black and red ink, and decorated with an engraved vignette.
Publisher's red cloth, stamped in gilt on the spines and front covers. Spines sunned and front cover of vol. II slightly sunned along fore-edge also; cloth of spines frayed at extremities and chipped in other places. Hinges (inside) of vol. I a little weak, stitching exposed; corners bumped with cloth damage; pages very shallowly bumped. Ex-library, with shelf labels on spines, institutional bookplates on front pastedowns, pressure-stamp to title-pages and one other page in each volume. Paper very good; pages clean and bright. (24688)

Hawkey's Sallust
Sallustius Crispus, Gaius. C. Crispi Sallustii opera. Dublinii: E Typographia Academiae, 1747. 8vo in 4s (18.6 cm, 7.4"). [2], 168 (i.e., 198) pp.
$350.00
Click the images for enlargements.
Uncommon first edition: Classical scholar John Hawkey's production of the Roman historian's accounts of the Catiline conspiracy and of the Jugurthine War, as well as fragments of his history of Rome from 78 to 67 b.c., and two brief pieces addressed to Caesar. The Hawkey classics — uniform, accurate, attractive renditions of Virgil, Horace, Terence, Juvenal and Persius, and Sallust — were a major project undertaken by Trinity College, a series which “far surpasses any similar [previous] conception in the city” (McDonnell & Healy, p. 29). Lowndes calls this “a neat and correct edition.” The title-page bears an engraved vignette; woodcut headpieces are present throughout.
OCLC and ESTC locate only six U.S. institutional holdings.
Binding: Contemporary treed calf with covers framed in gilt single fillet, spine gilt extra with gilt-stamped leather title-label. The sunburst tool with floral center used on the spine resembles that used by the Hallhead and McKenzie binderies on Dublin College books, lacking the border. Marbled endpapers; green silk placemarker present.
Provenance: Title-page with early inked inscription of “M. M'Causland” (possibly Marcus McCausland [1787–1862]).
ESTC T132869; Schweiger, II, 822; McDonnell & Healy, Gold-Tooled Bindings Commissioned by Trinity College Dublin, 27–30 & 295–99; Lowndes 1607; Graesse, VI, 241; Dibdin, II, 109; Brunet, V, 87. Binding as above, board edges lightly rubbed, leather lost at head of spine, small abrasion to front cover, some spine gilt chipped; still, quite nice. Inscription as above; pages otherwise clean and unmarked. Pp. 197/98 incorrectly paginated as 167/68. (25949)
The
PRESS of
the
Aldine
Forger
Sallustius
Crispus, C. [i.e., Sallust].
Salvstius. [Lugduni {i.e., Lyons}: The Aldine Forger, 1504]. Small 8vo. [116]
ff.
$4800.00
Click the images for enlargements.
Aldine forgery and expectedly scarce. Printed sans the Aldine device, which
Aldus began to use in 1502, but offering a clear knock-off of his famous italic type, this also
displays his characteristic initial spaces with guide letters. The text was edited by Thomas
Murchius (a.k.a., B. Fidelis). The editor's dedication is dated June, 1504.
Rare: COPAC locates only the copy at
the University of Manchester library, but we trace other U.K. copies in the
British Library and Cambridge University library. In the U.S. and Canada the
only copies we find are at the UCLA and the Pierpont Morgan libraries.
Provenance:
Ownership signatures on the front free endpaper: “J. Turner, 1790" and
“John S. Conner / North Bend Ohio / Oct. 18th 1877.”
Renouard 48:10 and
308:22; Baudrier, VII, 20; Adams S137; Shaw 44; Aldine Press. Catalogue of the Aldine
Collection, UCLA, 1115. Full dark walnut modern calf old style: Spine with
raised bands accented with gilt and blind rules, the blind ones extending onto covers to terminate
in trefoils; burgundy leather author label and gilt date; gilt tools to spine compartments. Blind
double fillets framing covers. Heavy browning to the first two and a half signatures and again in
the last gathering; minor worm damage to blank area of title-leaf; additional dampstaining,
mainly though not exclusively to margins, more often than “occasionally” and yet not quite
“throughout.” Withal, a reputable copy of a notable forgery. (25748)
Sansovino, Francesco, ed. Delle orationi recitate a principi di Venetia.... Venetia: [Apud Franciscum Sansovinum], 1562. 4to (20.5 cm, 8.125"). *4, A–Z4, AA–EE4; [4], 112 ff.
$800.00
Single-click any image for an enlargement.
Sole edition of this collection of speeches in Italian and Latin by many different authors, edited by historian and printer Francesco Sansovino (1521–86). All but the last of these speeches were delivered to the Doge of Venice, many by ambassadors; the last was delivered to the senate. The earliest was delivered before Nicolo Trono (r. 1466–73), and the most recent were delivered before Lorenzo Priuli (r. 1556–59); all together they provide a good overview of Italian diplomatic and court oratory of the late 15th and early 16th centuries.
The title-page here has a most
striking xylographic printer's device depicting a man looking up at the moon. The work is also decorated with a number of
handsome, rather unusual woodcut historiated initials and headpieces.
The text is in italic and roman with sidenotes.
Provenance: “D.M. Armstrong / Venice 1872.”
Not in Adams. Limp vellum with indications of lost ties; soiled, stained, and cockled with some holing (a natural hole in the vellum of the rear cover is repaired by sewing). Front fly-leaves with some holing and chipping, partially repaired with paper. Pages lightly waterstained and cockled with some shallow dog-earing, a little shallow tattering, and some browning and soiling, usually on the edges. Inked ownership inscription on front fly-leaf.

With the
RUBENS-Designed “Bathing” Plate
Seneca, Lucius Annaeus. Opera quae exstant omnia: a Justo Lipsio emendata et scholiis illustrata. Antuerpiae: Ex Officina Plantiniana Balthasaris Moreti, 1652. Folio extra (41 cm; 16.25") Engr. frontis., engr. t.-p., [6] ff., xxxvi, 911, [1 (blank)] pp.
[SOLD]
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“Famous” is the word here: This is a famous and much sought after book from the Plantin–Moretus Press, being the last edition of Spanish-born Seneca's Opera to bear illustrations after Rubens. Textually this is a reprint of Justus Lipsius' famous recension.
The large volume has three full-page plates and an architectural/figural title-page engraved by Theodore Galle after designs by the famous painter, who worked occasionally for the Plantin–Moretus Press without signing his illustrations. The press has also used a wide, wide variety of striking initials.
Corpus Rubenianum Ludwig Burchard, part XXI (Book Illustrations and Title-pages [by Peter Paul Rubens]), vol. I, pp. 154–65; vol. II, p. 443; Brunet,V,276-77; Schweiger, II, 912. Late 17th-century plain calf; rebacked with modest blind tooling, and red spine-label. Late 20th-century private bookplate on front pastedown; early 20th-century private pressure-stamps in margins of first two leaves. With minor worming in upper inner margins of some leaves and some spots/soiling generally light and marginal, this is a nice copy. (26571)

Nero Lives!
Sienkiewicz, Henryk. Quo vadis? Verona: Printed for the members of The Limited Editions Club, 1959. Small folio (27.3 cm, 10.75"). [4], v–xiii, [1], 3–595, [3] pp.; 35 plts.
$100.00
Click the images for enlargements.
Henryk Sienkiewicz's novel about the last years of the reign of Nero Caesar appeared in 1896. This work, along with his trilogy on the 17th-century wars between the Russians, Turks, Swedes, and his native Poland, was first translated into English by the multilingual Jeremiah Curtin, who first came across Siekiewicz's writings by peering over the shoulder of a man reading a Polish newspaper in a Washington streetcar; that translation appears here. Sienkiewicz won the Nobel Prize in 1905, and spent the remainder of his life aiding Poles who suffered during the German invasion in World War I. He died in 1916.
Harold Lamb wrote the introduction. Of the author's attention to the minutiae of daily life in the Rome of A.D. 63–66 he writes, “The city itself appears in exact historical detail. Praetorians idling at their posts pass the time with their favorite dice games; girl attendants at Petronius' bath finish their duties punctiliously and break away to their own diversions as soon as the door curtain falls behind the master. Sienkiewicz knows how the dishes, including blackbirds, were prepared for a nobleman's feast; he knows what the oriental dancers wore on their heads and what the priests of Cybele carried in their hands, and what you see when you round a corner of the Vicus Sceleratus.”
Salvatore Fiume created the 35 drawings which were reproduced in three-tone process and mounted by hand. Giovanni Madersteig designed this edition, which is limited to 1500 copies, choosing a monotype Old Face font; the composition and printing of the text and illustrations was done by Madersteing at the Officina Bodoni in Verona.
The binding is full natural linen printed, in grey-blue, with an overall pattern derived from an old wood engraving. The signatures of Salvatore Fiume and Giovanni Madersteig appear on the colophon.
Limited Editions Club, Bibliography of the Fine Books Published by The Limited Editions Club, 1929–1985, 302. In the original slipcase, spine sunned with a long closed crack to paper and paper cracked/chipped; case good overall. Book with spine lightly faded and rear pastedown with small gold bookseller's label; volume in the original dust jacket (spine sunned to darker than sides are); near fine. (22293)
Sigonio,
Carlo. Historiarvm de occidentali imperio libri XX. Bononiae: Apud
Societatem Typographiae Bononiensis, 1578. Folio (30.6 cm, 12"). A–E6
F8 G–Z6 AA–ZZ6 AAa–EEe6
(EEe3–4 lacking); 564 (i.e., 568) pp., [24] ff. (of which 2 ff. lacking).
$975.00

Carolus Sigonius (Italian Carlo Sigonio or Sigone, 1524–84) was a professor
at the University of Bologna and a leading humanist noted as being the first
to apply “accurate criticism . . . to the chronology of Roman history”
(Sandys). His history of the western Roman Empire covers the period from 284—the
beginning of the reign of Diocletian, who divided the empire into east and west—until
Justinian’s death in 565. In addition, Sigonius wrote a number of works
in law and classical studies and a history of the kingdom of Italy from the
Lombard invasion in 568 through the 13th century.
This is this history’s
first edition and was followed by 1579, 1593, and 1628 editions.
It is printed with a woodcut printer’s device on the title-page showing
the goddess Liberty with two books labelled “Bononia docet” (“Bologna
teaches”) at her feet. The text is enclosed in double-ruled borders
and simply ornamented with a few woodcut initials, one of which shows Juno
being pulled in her chariot by peacocks.
Adams S1117; Soltész, Catalogus librorum sedecimo saeculo . . .
in Bibliotheca Nationali Hungariae . . . S524. On Sigonius, see: Encyclopædia
Britannica, 11th ed., XXV, 82; and Sandys, History of Classical Scholarship,
II, 143–45. Full calf old style: Round spine with raised bands, accented
in gilt beading; tan leather title label; fillets in blind extending onto
covers from each band to terminate in trefoils with blind double fillets beyond.
Pages lightly washed, clean, and crisp: a few instances of staining, not obscuring
text; a few short notations in ink and occasional worming in the margins,
neither affecting text; ink stain on p. 95 obscuring letters without loss
of sense. Inked title on lower edge, old style. Three ink ownership stamps
on title-page. EEe3–4, the last two leaves of the index, are lacking.
One
of the First
English
Histories IN
English
Speed,
John. The historie of Great Britaine under the conquests of
the
Romans,
Saxons, Danes and Normans. Their originals, manners, habits, warres, coines,
and seales: with the successions, lives, acts, and issues of the English monarchs
from Iulius Caesar, unto the raigne of King Iames, of famous memorie. London:
Pr. by John Dawson [and Thomas Cotes] for George Humble, 1632. Folio (33.5 cm,
13.25"). [10] ff., 1042 pp.; 1043–1086 ff., 1087–1237, [85 (index)]
pp. (lacking frontis.); illus.
$5000.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
Third edition of this archetypal early English history, a variant of the 1631 edition. Printed with all the archaic and “curious” spellings one could hope for in such a work (e.g., “Britaine” and “ye” on the title-page), each page bears both roman and italic types; the text contains a number of intricate initials, headpieces, and tailpieces, and is adorned with detailed woodcuts of kings, their coats of arms, and the seals and coinage of their reigns. The illustrations are as notable as the typography for quaint charm.
Speed (1552–1629), a cartographer and historian, published the Historie as a continuation of his Theatre of Great Britaine, both works being listed in the table of contents of this work, which explains the volume's peculiar pagination and arrangement.
An epitome of the “antiquarian” both in form and content, this is a marvelous compendium of royal history and lore.
ESTC S997; STC (rev. ed.) 23049; Graesse 462–63; Lowndes 2471–72. Period-style calf framed, panelled, and stamped in gilt; spine gilt extra with gilt-stamped leather title and author labels; signed by Starr Bookworks. Light to moderate waterstaining, with traces of now-arrested mildew in the form of intermittent and usually faint pink staining/spotting. Frontispiece lacking; title-page partially mounted; dedication page and first few leaves of contents with inner margins reinforced. Pp. 41/42 with tear from lower margin extending into text, lower edge of tear repaired; pp. 125/26 with lower outer corner torn away and replaced, without loss of text; pp. 271/72 with lower portion replaced, with loss of several paragraphs and the lower half of one image; pp. 449/50 with lower outer corner replaced, with loss of lower portion of one decorated capital, about three lines of text, and small portion of tailpiece; pp. 597/98 with small portion of outer margin repaired, with loss of one shouldernote; pp. 1005/06 with portion of outer margin torn away, with partial loss of one shouldernote; pp. 1041/42 with lower and outer margins partially cut away along frame of text block, without loss. Pp. 1087/88 with lower portion excised, text replaced in an early inked hand; pp. 1237/38 mounted, with loss of an image and two paragraphs of text. One index leaf with lower outer portion excised, with loss of about 15 lines of text; final index leaf with lower outer corner torn away and repaired, text partially reconstructed in an early inked hand. One coat of arms drawn in by hand where the shield had been left blank. Definitely an imperfect copy; yet, in fact, definitely not a devastated one. (24405)
[Sprat, Thomas]. The plague of Athens, which hapned [sic] in the second year of the Peloponnesian War. First described in Greek by Thucydides; then in Latin by Lucretius.... London: Charles Brome, 1703. 8vo (18.3 cm, 7.2"). A–B8C4; [3] ff., 34 pp.
$225.00

English verse rendition of the second book of Thucydides, based
on the translation by Thomas Hobbes; the
plague’s
symptoms are poetically described in all their horrific agony.
This is a later edition, with the first having been printed in 1659; several
issues appeared over the years under various Brome imprints (including
Henry Brome and Joanna Brome). Sprat, bishop of Rochester and dean of Westminster,
now retains more of a reputation for his prose than for his poetry, but
Dryden thought enough of the present piece to include it in his miscellany.
ESTC N11495; Foxon S663; NCBEL, II, 485. On Sprat,
see: The Dictionary of National Biography, LIII, 419–23. Uncut
copy. Removed from a nonce volume, with sewing mostly gone, now in a Mylar
folder. Some age-toning and spotting ranging from mild to moderate.

Suetonius Tranquillus, Caius. [Opera] C. Suetonius Tranquillus, cum notis integris Jo. Bapt. Egnatii, Henrici Glareani, Laevini Torrentii, Fulvii Ursini, Isacii Casauboni, Jani Gruteri, Theod. Marcilii, Joannis Georgii Graevii, Caroli Patini, (qui ex numismatibus illustravit) & selectis aliorum. Amstelaedami: Apud Janssonio-Waesbergios, 1736. 4to (26 cm; 10.25"). 2 vols. I: Engr. title-page, [11] ff., 808 pp. II: 420 pp., [1] f., 202 pp., [3] f., pp. 421–92, [102] ff., 34 eng. fold. plts.
[SOLD]
Click
the image above for an enlargement.
Burman’s edition of Suetonius’s famous work on the twelve Caesars includes the scholarship of Giovanni Battista Egnazio (ca. 1478–1553), Henricus Glareanus (1488–1563), Laevinus Torrentius (1525–95), Fulvio Orsini (1529–1600), Isaac Casaubon (1559–1614), Janus Gruterus (1560–1627), Théodore Marcile (1548–1617), Joannes Georgius Graevius (1632–1703), Charles Patin (1633–93), Matthias Bernegger (1582–1640), and Burman (1668–1741) himself, which helps explain why this edition is so famous and sought after.
The text is supplemented by
34 engraved folding plates and seemingly endless footnotes on the most minute points in the text. It begins with a handsome engraved title-page, and the main title printed in blacks and red. The text is unadorned but the footnotes occasionally contain engravings of coins or other matter. The 34 plates are totally devoted to numismatics—which is to say, most generally, portraiture.
Schweiger, II, 979; Dibdin, Greek and Latin Classics, 442–43. Publisher’s vellum, creamy white; tooled in blind with concentric frames on covers and large blind-stamped lozenge on each cover. Old pencilling on title-page. An attractive set of this impressive production.
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