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Erodoto di Alicarnasso

Herodotus of Halicarnassus - Historiae. Tr: Laurentius Valla. Ed: Antonius Mancinellus Venice, Johannes and Gregorius de Gregoriis, de Forlivio, Mar. 8. [after 30 Mar.] 1494. 2nd ed. Nice frontispiece within xylographic frame, Roman typeface, a few rare manuscript notes, restorations, woodworm hole at outer margin of first papers, papers Aiiii and AV of tabula appended at end of volume are missing and replaced by reproduction, later half-leather binding, title in gold within green gusset at 4-nerved spine, yellowed boards, slight defects. Modern ownership stamp to the guard paper and title page.

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Erodoto di Alicarnasso

Estimate 900 - 1 200 EUR
Starting price 900 EUR

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For sale on Thursday 04 Jul : 10:30 (CEST) , resuming at 15:00
rome, Italy
Finarte Casa d'Aste
+39023363801
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Incunabulum - ABSTEMIUS (Laurentius) & ESOPE. [Fabulae] Fabule per latinissimum virum Laurentium Abstemium nuper composite. Fabulae ex graeco in latinum per Laurentium Vallam virum clarissimum versae. Outinam fese posset spectare latinum nobis qui grecae tradidit ista prior. Diceret is credas hinc graeca thalia valete Cultius haec quoniam musa latinat canit. Impressum Venetiis [Venice], per Joannem de Cereto de Tridino [known as Tacuinus], 1499 (June 1st). Small in-4 of 28 ff. (sign. a8 b-f4), 30 lines, in Roman characters, woodcut initials, printer's mark on colophon. Modern vellum. Complete, good condition. Reprint of the 1495 edition, also by Tacuinus, of the fables of the learned Astemio (c. 1435-1508) librarian to the Duke of Urbino, edited by Domicus Palladius Soranus, and of Aesop's fables in the translation of Laurentius Valla. "A presence in Venice since the late sixties of the 15th century, with the establishment of the workshop of John of Speyer, printing developed rapidly in this city, where manuscript production was already particularly flourishing, due to the importance of books for a ruling class devoted to international trade and business, as well as to the art of printing. business, culture and learning. [...] At the beginning of the 16th century, with over 150 companies, the city of the Doges was considered the book capital of Europe. This widespread dissemination of humanist culture, leveraged by an abundant and varied book production, was accompanied by a highly efficient educational system, based not only on the presence of preceptors and teachers in charge of educating the young, but also on the fame of the public schools, instituted from 1403 onwards. We could not have been more fertile ground for the early dissemination of the Aesopian collections with which the Italian humanists were the first to renew the "generic and stylistic paradigm of the fable" through the rediscovery of the Greek Aesop; in fact, in 1495, the famous printer Giovanni de Cereto de Tridino, alias Tacuinus, brought out an incunabula edition that brought together the little fablier that Lorenzo Valla had translated from a lost Greek manuscript around 1438-144013 and the first Hecatomythium by Laurentius Abstemius (Lorenzo Bevilacqua), a collection of one hundred apologues that share with Valla's fablier the hybridization of the fable with the entertaining funny story. Two reprints of this edition appeared in Venice in 1499 from the same publisher, who also published the Hecatomythium secundum in 1513, eight years after the first edition appeared in Fano from Soncino [...]. Fano [...]". Paola Cifarelli, L'imprimerie vénitienne et les recueils ésopiques en italien (1502-1550), in Le Fablier. Revue des Amis de Jean de La Fontaine, Year 2018, n°29, pp. 87-99. Expert : Madame Elvire POULAIN