Description
MARTIAL D'AUVERGNE - Aresta amorum. Cum erudita Benedicti Curtii Symphoriani explanatione. Accessit huic editioni locupletissimus rerum ac vocabulorum index. Lyon, Sébastien Gryphe, 1538. In-4, (4) ff, 309 (1) pp, (7) ff, of which Gryphe's mark on the last, several light wet spots, several old annotations and underlined passages, signature crossed out on title page, signature of François Lapeyre de St-Martin, stamp of A. Delzons avocat, bas. Delzons avocat, 17th-century bas. marble, spine ribbed and decorated. TCH IV, 588. Second edition. Fifty-one rulings composed in French and supported by Latin quotations from ancient writers. The author, also known as Martial de Paris, was a prosecutor at the Parliament of Paris under Charles VII (circa 1440-1508). The Arrêts d'Amour (circa 1460) develops the fiction of a judicial court, the parlement d'Amour, which is the final judge of all causes relating to love, and issues rulings on these matters without appeal.
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MARTIAL D'AUVERGNE - Aresta amorum. Cum erudita Benedicti Curtii Symphoriani explanatione. Accessit huic editioni locupletissimus rerum ac vocabulorum index. Lyon, Sébastien Gryphe, 1538. In-4, (4) ff, 309 (1) pp, (7) ff, of which Gryphe's mark on the last, several light wet spots, several old annotations and underlined passages, signature crossed out on title page, signature of François Lapeyre de St-Martin, stamp of A. Delzons avocat, bas. Delzons avocat, 17th-century bas. marble, spine ribbed and decorated. TCH IV, 588. Second edition. Fifty-one rulings composed in French and supported by Latin quotations from ancient writers. The author, also known as Martial de Paris, was a prosecutor at the Parliament of Paris under Charles VII (circa 1440-1508). The Arrêts d'Amour (circa 1460) develops the fiction of a judicial court, the parlement d'Amour, which is the final judge of all causes relating to love, and issues rulings on these matters without appeal.
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