Leiden (Lugduni Batavorum), Ex officina Ludovici Elzevirii, 1599.
Reference : 151893
8vo. (XX),167,(23)(1 blank) 18th century half calf 17.3 cm (Ref: STCN ppn 119504200; Dibdin 1,215: 'an indispensable work to peruse, for those who are curious in the learning of the author'. Willems 44; Rahir 26; Berghman 1283; Schoenemann 1,166/67) (Details: Back gilt and with 5 raised bands. Red shield in second compartment. Colophon at the end: 'Lugduni Batavorum, Excudebat Ioannes Balduini. Anno 1599, mense Julio') (Condition: Binding worn at the extremes. Joints split, but still tight. Small piece at the head of the spine gone. Ownership inscription on the front flyleaf. Stamp on the title. Foxed) (Note: Arnobius, a teacher of rhetoric at Sicca Veneria in Numidia 'was suddenly converted to Christianity (ca. A.D. 295) and a year or 2 later, at the instance of his bishop, wrote seven books 'Adversus Nationes', Against the Pagans. His work throws light on the Christian-pagan debate immediately before the Great Persecution, while the venom of his attack on traditional Roman paganism shows that this was by no means dead'. (OCD 2nd edition p. 122) His style is easy-flowing. Arnobius makes little use of the New, and none of the Old Testament. His view of God is platonic. The unintended side effect of the efforts Arnobius and other Church Fathers to ridicule or crush paganism, was that their writings form an archive which preserves knowledge and practices of polytheism in the years of its decline in late antiquity. Just as the early christians bolstered their piety by contrasting it with the demonic foulness of pagan religion, so the protestants of the 16th century used their knowledge of pagan idolatry to scourge their catholic adversaries. Critics of Catholicism, like Calvin, compared catholic mass e.g. with the bloody rituals of the pagans, and used the sacrifices of the ancients to score theological points against their opponents. 'Protestants detected in the Catholic cult of images, the pagan idols so well described by late antique critics like Arnobius'. (The Classical Tradition, Cambr. Mass., 2010, p. 678, s.v. Paganism) The work of Arnobius was first published in Rome in1542 (although the preface is dated 1543), containing as Book Eight the 'Octavius' of Minucius Felix. Other editions followed in 1546, 1560, 1580, 1582, 1583 & 1586. Joannes Meursius, or in Dutch 'Jan de Meurs', 1579-1639, was only 19 years old when he published the first edition of this celebrated 'Criticus Arnobianus' in Leyden in 1598. He was a pupil of the genius J.J. Scaliger, who helped him to publish it. It was a work of philology and not of theology, and it enjoyed a mixed reception. Schoeneman observes that the book showed indeed the 'acumen' of the author's genius, but that it is more on others classical authors than on Arnobius and Minucius Felix. Meursius offers for the greater part animadversions, critical notes, conjectures and emendations. He did not consult manuscripts, but used his 'ingenium'. The next year, 1599, Elsevier published this second improved edition of the 'Criticus Arnobianus'. It was not 'augmented', as is usual with second editions, on the contrary, Meursius wisely cut a number of his rash suggestions. In 1610 Meursius became professor of Greek in his own university. There, in Leyden, he produced the 'editiones principes' of a number of Byzantine authors, the 'editio princeps' of the 'Elementa Harmonica' of Aristoxenus (1616), and edited the 'Timaeus' of Plato with the commentary and translation of Chalcidius (1617). He wrote much on the antiquities of Athens and Attica. (J.E. Sandys, 'A history of classical scholarship', 1964, p. 311)) (Provenance: In ink on the front flyleaf: 'Robinson Ellis from I. Bywater, Oct. 1887'. Robinson Ellis, 1834-1913, is a crucial figure in the history of textual and literary criticism of Catullus. He was elected to a fellowship at Trinity College, Oxford, in 1858, appointed professor of Latin at Univerisity College London (1870-1876). In 1893 he succeeded Henry Nettleship as Corpus Professor of Latin. (DBC 1,285) See for a charming portrait of Ellis his Wikipedia lemma. Ingram Bywater, 1840-1914, succeeded in Oxford Benjamin Jowett as Regius professor of Greek in 1893. He was a noted bibliophile whose collection now rests in the Bodleian Library. He 'occupies an important place in the modern history of ancient philosophy in Britain. (...) He is best known for his contribution to Aristotelian studies. His text of the Nicomachean Ethics (1890) was used as a model for the series, Oxford Classical Texts, inaugurated in 1898'. (DBC 1.145) On the front flyleaf also in ink: 'Ex libris Gal. Barrovi, 18o mensis Iunii 1948'. This is probably Walter Barrow, 1867-1954, Pro-chancellor, 1933-1939, of the University of Birmingham) (Collation: +10, A-M8 (leaf M8 verso blank)) (Photographs on request)
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