Tag: early italian book

April 7, 2012

FOLIO: PRINTED 1513: a “Sink of Lyes”

The Alcoran of the Franciscans- a Heap of Blasphemous Doctrines – a Sink of Lyes

VERY INFLUENTIAL ON THE SPANISH MISSION IN THE NEW WORLD

DEMONSTRATES THE GROWING IMPORTANCE OF ST. FRANCIS IN RENAISSANCE ART AND LITERATURE

The Book:

[Liber conformitatum vite Beati Francisci ad vitam Jesu Christi, ed. J. Mapellus.] [Bartholomeus, de Pisis]. Opus auree [et] inexplicabilis bonitatis [et] continentie, conformitatu[m] scilicet vite Beati Fra[ncisci] ad vita[m] D. N[ost]ri Iesu [Christ]i. Impressum Mediolani : In edibus Zanoti Castilionei …, 1513.  (i.e.  Zanotto da Castiglione, Milan, August 18, 1513. ) COMPLETE. [12], 229, : ill. (woodcuts) . FOLIO.  29 cm.,  Early 20th century binding of brown goatskin and boards, raised bands, lightly blindstamped, vellum tipped corners, pasted-downs and blanks renewed, gothic type, two columns, title and another page printed in red and black, printer’s device, woodcuts, woodcut initials and borders; incuding  include  a magnificent woodcut of Christ and St. Francis, each carrying a cross, a splendid full-page “tree of conformity”, a smaller woodcut of Christ’s and St. Francis’ hands, nailed to the same Cross,Some occasional age-toning, browning, and scattered light worming,  Generally, a very good and attractive copy of a Rare work.  [SOLD]

One of the first and most striking aspects of this typographically beautiful book is its very remarkable North Italian woodcut initials, which lend great insight into early 16th century Italian publishing through the re-use of various blocks that circulated amongst publishers.

The work itself can be only fairly classified as a strange and unusual. The author attempted to establish parallels of the life  Francis of Assisi with that of Jesus. There are many fantastic tales detailed, but perhaps the author went too far by reinterpreting the Holy Scripture and detailing various prophesies about St. Francis’s life. Reformers noted these egregious liberties and blasted the work as “The Alkoran”.  It appeared, in part, under similarly colorful and disparaging titles in England; in 1550, as “The alcaron of the barefote friers, that is to say, an heap or number of the blasphemous and trifling doctrines of the wounded idole Saint Frances, taken out of the boke of his rules, called in latin, Liber conformitatum.” and again in 1679 as the  “Alcoran of the Franciscans, or a Sink of Lyes and Blasphemies collected out of the “Book of the Conformities”

Perhaps though the author’s enthusiastic re-interpretation of St. Francis may be better understood in light of St. Francis’ profound veneration and his growing influence on early Renaissance art and literature.  The Liber conformitatum , originally composed 1385, would place it comfortably between Giotto’s St.Francis Frescos and Giovanni Bellini’s Ecstasy of St. Francis (1475-1480) which similarly may not have corresponded to any  specific legend of the saint’s known life and which established new iconographic motifs.  So, reinterpretation and invention may have been the norm.

It is interesting as well to note the influencet he Liber conformitatum had on the New World. Specifically, Kallendorf cites documentation on the dissemination and influence of the Liber conformitatum  on the Franciscans of Mexico.   In 1533, at the request of Hernán Cortés, Carlos V sent the first Franciscan monks with orders to establish a series of installations throughout the country and the Liber conformitatum played a “significant part in their spiritual formation”  [Ref: Kallendorf. Hilaire.  A New Companion to Hispanic Mysticism, pg. 95]

 

posted in: Rare Books

January 26, 2011

HANDSOMELY PRINTED ITALIAN MEDICAL BOTANICAL / HERBAL

68 etched and engraved plates containing 554 plans

Giambattista Morandi. Historia botanica practica; sev, Plantarum, quae ad usum medicinae pertinent, nomenclatura descriptio, et virtutes, cum ab antiquis, tum a recentibus celebrium auctorum scriptis desumptae, ac aeneis tabulis delineatae, atque ad vivum ex prototypo expressae, nec non in classes XXV. distributae. (Milan) Mediolani, Apud J. Galeatium, 1761. with engraved added title page: Historia botanico-practica stirpium, atque herbarum, quae ad usum medicinae pertinent. LARGE FOLIO. 42 cm., [12], 32, 164, [1] p. lxviii plates.; 2 initials and 68 plates, all by Morandi . Contemporary Italian mottled calf gilt, spine in seven compartments with raised bands, red morocco label, loss to one spine compartment, some toning, foxing, occasional minor dampstaining, but overall A VERY GOOD AND COMPLETE COPY.   [SOLD]

“A CHARMINGLY ILLUSTRATED WORK ON THE PLANTS THAT WERE THEN CONSIDERED TO BE OF USE IN MEDICINE. A second edition was published in 1761.” (Ref: Christies) “Morandi was a botanical artist at the Castello Valentino under Victor Amadeus II of Savoy. The Historia contains 68 etched and engraved plates on which 554 plants are figured.” [Ref: Herbals at the University of Nebraska – Lincoln]

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posted in: Uncategorized

January 26, 2011

PRINTED 1578: MAGNIFICENT AND VERY RARE 16th CENTURY ITALIAN EMBLEM BOOK


WITH TITIAN’S FAMOUS DEVICE OF A BEAR LICKING HER CUBS

SIXTY-FOUR (64) beautiful and enigmatic emblematic plates

PITTONI, BATTISTA (1520-1583) and LODOVICO DOLCE (1508-1659.) Imprese nobili et ingeniose di diversi Principi et d’ altre personaggi illustri nell’ arme et nelle lettere : con le diciarationi in versi Venetia, 1578. 4to., 27 cm., wide margined and handsome copy. 18th century Italian boards and vellum., 122 p. : ill engraved title, engraved dedication & 64 emblematic plates, 2 plates with crude early repairs touching emblems with loss, 1 plate with hairline tear with no loss in emblem, some toning throughout as usual, spotting, and minor staining. The work includes a depiction of Titian’s famous device of a bear licking her cubs (see photos below). Fine impressions of the plates. COMPLETE AND VERY RARE.  [SOLD]

These are the emblems and devices used by historical and distinguished personages in the sixteenth century, within rich ornamental borders ; all probably engraved by Girolamo Porro (c. 1520 – after 1604), the highly regarded Italian engraver. Lines of verse by Dolce are engraved at foot of each. [Ref: 1. French, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese books of devices and emblems, 1534-1827: a bibliography, by John Landwehr, Utrecht, Haentjens Dekker & Gumbert, 1976; 2. Rosand, David . “Titian and the Critical Tradition,” in Titian: His World and His Legacy, ed. pg. 16, 36; note 16; 3. Quaritch, B. A catalogue of fifteen hundred books remarkable for the beauty or the age…, 1889, item 1225]

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posted in: Uncategorized

August 22, 2010

PRINTED 1606: HIGHLY IMPORTANT ITALIAN BOTANICAL

109 BEAUTIFUL  FULL PLATE ETCHINGS

The Book:

COLONNA, Fabio (1567-?1650). Minus cognitarum stirpium aliquot ac etiam rariorum nostro coelo orientium [in Greek: Ekphrasis], Rome: Faciotti, 1606. 4to., 215 x 163mm., title in red and black with woodcut printer’s device, engraved portrait of Colonna on verso, woodcut initials, head- and tailpieces, 109 etched full-page plates of 114 of which 97 are botanical and 12 are molluscs, marine creatures and a hippopotamus set in type ornament borders. 19th century Italian boards with vellum spine,  old repair to t.p., some marginal dampstaining, some marginal tears and occasional old repair, some occasional staining, wanting signatures p4, q4 (i.e. 297-312) and 1 leaf, kkk4 of index.),  needless to say a Rare and an Attractive Copy; the etchings struck with fine plate-tone.  Ref: Brunet II, 173; Nissen BBI 385   [$6000]

The  Minus cognitarum stirpium is not only an important book in the history of botany, but also typifies the furious pace of scientific advancement in  17th century Rome, despite the historical setback of Galileo’s censorship. “Fabio Colonna, a leading botanist and botanical illustrator, was a member of the Accademia dei Lincei, founded in Rome by Prince Federico Cesi whose own botanical interest Colonna encouraged. Colonna’s interest in describing and illustrating hitherto unknown plants extended to local as well as exotic specimens.   The new scientific society Accademia dei Lincei (“academy of the lynx- eyed,” so-called from the keenness of sight of its members) gave a powerful example of collective study of scientific problems– the beginning of something like modern laboratory work.”
[Ref: http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/vatican/nature.html]

Interestingly,  it is recorded that Colonna suffered from epilepsy and his interest in botany was peaked by his desperate search for a cure, eventually discovering the therapeutic herb Valerian through Dioscorides. That pharmaceutical intent encouraged a very careful scientific approach to his undertaking, with Colonna collecting mostly wild specimens for study- a Kunst und Wunderkammer with clear scientific purpose.  A very high standard  of illustration was thus reached with this publication, depicting details of plant parts decades before their taxonomic importance was recognized.  Colonna is believed to have executed all the etchings himself;  the original drawings for which are preserved in the Biblioteca Nazionale, Naples.

Price Ref. of the 1616 2nd edition:  Christies, June 4, 1997.  $7475.00    [Ref: http://www.christies.com/LotFinder/lot_details.aspx?from=searchresults&intObjectID=228261&sid=2a257c48-0d49-4272-9e56-e59ba2148e2f]

posted in: Rare Books