Jo-Wilfried TSONGA
Tennis
Pair of T 48 shoes owned by Jo-Wilfried Tsonga
One sig…
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Jo-Wilfried TSONGA Tennis Pair of T 48 shoes owned by Jo-Wilfried Tsonga One signed by the player Provenance: Vassy Jalenques sale, October 10, 2019

234 

Jo-Wilfried TSONGA Tennis Pair of T 48 shoes owned by Jo-Wilfried Tsonga One signed by the player Provenance: Vassy Jalenques sale, October 10, 2019

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*NEVIZZANO (Giovanni). Clarissimi jurisconsulti d. Jo. de Nevizanis, civis Asten., Silva nuptialis, in qua ex dictis moder. per regulam et fallentias plurime questiones quottidie in practica occurrentes nondum per quempiam redacte in materia matrimonii, dotium, filiationis, adulterii, originis, successionis et monitorialium, una cum remediis ad sedandum factiones de Guelfis et Gibellinis [....] Sumpte ex quaestione an sit utile nubere [...] Lyon, Jean Moulin, alias de Cambray, 1524. In-4 gothic, 174 ff., 2 columns, black and red framed title, letterpress mark. Havana half calf, ornate ribbed spine, black marbled title page (19th c. binding). Old foxing, a few marginal holes or wormholes, restored loss on last leaf with loss of text. "This edition and that of Paris, Vidoue pour Kerver 1521, in-8 goth. are preferred to the various reprints that were made in Lyon, 1545, 1556 and 1572, in-8, and also in Venice, in 1570 and 1573, because it is claimed that the text of the latter has been altered, and that the passages against women have been softened [...]" Brunet. "A bizarre book, in which the author unfolds a facetious erudition with sustained seriousness. The coarsest sarcasms against women are sprinkled throughout. This is where we find that "God, having formed man, postponed the creation of woman, in order to deal with her at the same time as with the animals, and that he limited himself to shaping her body; as for the head, he didn't want to interfere and left its organization to the devil."" Gay. Handwritten bookplate De Grosieux le fils (Brunet IV, 47; Gay III, 1162).

CICERONIS, M. T. Rhetoricorum ad Herennium libri quatuor. M. T. Ciceronis De inventione libri duo. Lugduni, Apud Antonium Gryphium, 1585. 2 parts in one volume in 8vo. 122x74 mm. Coeval binding to arms in red calfskin on cardboard, plates with double fillet border enclosing elaborate design of curved fillets and ornaments, roundels, crescents, stars, eagles, four-compartment spine with raised bands, geometric motifs of floral friezes and foliage, faceted cuts with colored floral motifs on gilt ground. At center of front plate the coat of arms surrounded by the owner's name "IO. BAP CRESCEN"; on the back plate another coat of arms surrounded by the name of another owner "TORQUAT CUPIUS." On the counterplate signature of former owner "Cte Alphonse de La Guère." Pages 340, [12], SIGN: a-y⁸. Blank last 3; 631, including Frontispiece, 1 blank, [40], 2 blank. Branding on title pages, Ornate initials, Silographic friezes. Fine copy. Beautiful edition edited by Paolo Manuzio. Work in magnificent coeval binding to the Arms. This important treatise, the oldest surviving book on rhetoric, was formerly attributed to Cicero, then to Quintus Cornificius, but both attributions are now considered spurious and authorship remains unknown. Nevertheless, it is a fundamental reference text on the structure and uses of rhetoric. The second part begins with its own Frontispiece "Rhetoricorum Posterior." Prestigious specimen of prestigious provenance, belonging to: Giovanni Battista Crescenzi, 1577-1635, painter and architect of the early Baroque period; Torquatus De Cupis, or de Cuppis, 1577-1637, Roman nobleman and Jesuit who taught at the Roman College;Count Alphonse Pantin De La Guère, 1846-1899, archaeologist.Other bindings are recorded with both de Cupis's and Crescenzi's coat of arms.Baudrier VIII, 395. Two parts in a volume in 8vo. 122x74 mm. Contemporary red calf binding with coat of arms, covers with double rules frame that englobe an elaborate drawing of curved rules and ornaments, rounds, crescents, stars, eagles, back with four sections with embossed bands, geometric motifs of floral ornaments and foliage, edges with colored floral motifs on a gilt background. On the anterior cover the coat of arms surrounded by the name of the owner "IO. BAP CRESCEN"; on the posterior cover another coat of arms surrounded by the name of another owner: "TORQUAT CUPIUS." On the inside cover, the signature of the former owner "Cte Alphonse de La Guère." Pages 340, [12, Blank last 3 pages]; 631, including Titlepage, 1 blank, [40], 2 blank. Printer's device on titlepages, woodcut adorned initials and ornaments. Good copy. Beautiful edition edited by Paolo Manuzio. Work in magnificent contemporary armorial binding. This important treatise, the oldest surviving book of rhetoric, was formerly attributed to Cicero, then to Quintus Cornificius, but both attributions are now considered spurious and authorship remains unknown. However, it is a fundamental reference text on the structure and uses of rhetoric. The second part begins with its own title page "Rhetoricorum Posterior".Copy of prestigious provenance, which belonged to: Giovanni Battista Crescenzi, 1577-1635, painter and architect of the early Baroque period; Torquatus De Cupis, or de Cuppis, 1577-1637, Roman nobleman and Jesuit who taught at the Roman College. Count Alphonse Pantin De La Guère, 1846-1899, archaeologist.There are other bindings both with the de Cupis coat of arms and with that of Crescenzi.Baudrier VIII, 395.