[OVIDE]. Ovidius de fastis per Faustum recognitus... - Lot 42 - Ader

Lot 42
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[OVIDE]. Ovidius de fastis per Faustum recognitus... - Lot 42 - Ader
[OVIDE]. Ovidius de fastis per Faustum recognitus annotatusque. Paris, Jean de Gourmont for Marnef, [1513] [place and printer according to the mark on f. 1 and according to the colophon]. Printed on paper, work annotated by several 16th-century hands; notes also taken on loose leaves and inserted bills; mark of the Marnef Brothers (Jean de Marnef and Engilbert de Marnef) on title. 110 ff [collation: a8, b4, c8, d4, e8, f4, g8, h4, i8, k4, l8, m4, n8, o4, p8, q4, r8, s6]; colophon: " Publii Ovidii Nasonis Sulmonensis Poete clarissimi Fastorum Libri Sexti & ultimi Finis. Parisiis M. CCCCC. XIII. Impensis Iohannis Gourmont ". Antique binding of the 16th century, but heavily restored. Full brown calf, cold-stamped with roulettes, strong restorations (half of the binding is redone), spine with 3 nerves also partly redone, back covers with annotations from a 16th century hand. Condition: heavily restored but work stabilized. Staining at the end of the book and traces of moisture. Title page soiled with a small hole. Dimensions : 137 x 200 mmSchool edition printed by Jean de Gourmont for the Brothers of Marnef. It was clearly used in a school environment with the typical type of notes: the first leaves are copiously annotated and sometimes even interleaved with notes. Provenance: Pen essays, some giving the name "Haquartz"; on the verso of the last leaf of the first work one reads: "Hacquartz bonus puer Matisconensis. 1646" [Mâcon, 1646]. Bound in the following: [MANUEL CHRYSOLORAS (1350?-1415)]. [Erōtēmata tou Chrysolōra (Questions of Chrysoloras). Grammatica Chrysolore] [Paris: Gilles de Gourmont, 1516?] (colophon in Greek: "Etypōthē en Leukotokia ētoi Parisiois etei apo theogonias chiliostō pentakosios tō hekkaidekatō. Elaphēboliōnos isamenou pemptē") [missing title page and certainly some introductory leaves]. Greek printing, annotated and commented work (marginal annotations present on the first 18 leaves), marginal and interlinear annotations. 66 ff, title missing, dedication incomplete. Edition established by François Vatable. The first edition of this grammar of Chrysoloras was published in Venice (partial) by Adam de Ambergau, 1471; then Florence, Lorenzo de Alopa, 1496.
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