B. G. Teubner, Leipzig. 1902. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Plats abîmés, Dos fané, Intérieur acceptable. 500 pages. Etiquette de code sur la couverture. Quelques tampons de bibliothèque.. . . . Classification Dewey : 470-Langues italiques. Latin
Reference : RO40246084
'Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum et Romanorum Teubneriana. Recensuerunt Rudolfus PEIPER et Gustavus RICHTER. Classification Dewey : 470-Langues italiques. Latin
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Delft (Delphis), Apud Adrianum Beman, 1728.
4to. (XXIV including frontispiece),(98),802,(214 index) p. Vellum 27 cm (Ref: STCN ppn 14155522X; Schweiger 2,941; Dibdin 2,399: 'a very elaborate and celebrated edition'; Fabricius/Ernesti 2,136/37; Brunet 5,286; Moss 579/80: 'its merits are highly and justly appreciated'; Graesse 6/1,359; Ebert 20942; Ter Meulen/Diermanse 540) (Details: Back with 6 raised bands. Boards with blind double fillet borders, and a blind stamped oval ornament in the center. Frontispiece designed by L.F. Dudourg and executed by F. Ottens and B. Bernarts, depicting some scenes from the tragedies. Title printed in red & black. Upper part of the page has the Latin text, the lower part the commentary) (Condition: Vellum soiled. Back cracked and damaged, partly discoloured; its head repaired with chemical glue. Both joints are split, but strong. Paper partly foxed, yellowing and browning. Bookplate on the front pastedown) (Note: There is 'widespread agreement that Seneca's tragedies are important dramas and that the question whether they were composed for recitation or for performance is largely irrelevant. (...) Modern opinion is divided over the extent of Stoic doctrine in them; the majority incline toward judging them solely as dramas. Knowledge of the tragedies was spotty in late antiquity; (...). The earliest complete manuscript is the Codex Etruscus from Italy in the 11th century. It was read by Poliziano and was the basis of the edition of J.F. Gronovius (Amsterdam 1661), the first reliable printed text. The 'editio princeps' was printed at Ferrara in 1484; the first edition with a critical text and commentary of any value was that of Jodocus Badius (Paris 1514), which included the conjectures of Erasmus. (...) Seneca was by far the most important classical model for Renaissance tragedy, at a time when Greek tragedy was hardly known. (...) There is philosophical reflection, especially in the choruses, but that is not their main purpose, and there is psychological subtlety, despite the rhetoric. (...) Julius Caesar Scaliger in his 'Poetices' maintained that Seneca surpassed the Greek tragedians in dignity ('maiestas') and had greater polish and brilliance ('cultus ac nitor') than Euripides. (The Classical Tradition, Cambridge Mass., 2010, p. 876) This 1728 edition of the tragedies of Seneca is based on the Amsterdam edition of Gronovius of 1682. It offers the entire notes of the Dutch scholar of German origin Johannes Friedrich Gronovius, 1611-1671, who was professor of Greek at the University of Leiden, and the selected notes of Lipsius and of many other scholars, among whom Hugo Grotius. Seneca owes more to Gronovius than to all the preceding editors. His edition marked the beginning of a new age in Senecan scholarship. His commentary is superb, and he greatly amended the text. This so-called 'Variorum' edition of 1728 was produced by the Dutch schoolmaster Johannes Caspar(us) Schröder(us), who was Rector of the 'Schola Latina' at Delft. He added also notes of his own, which are according to Dibdin 'frequent and judicious', but according to Schweiger 'weder zahlreich, noch besonders werthvol'. A 'Variorum' edition offers a 'textus receptus' which is widely accepted, accompanied with the commentary and the annotations of various specialists, taken, or excerpted from earlier useful, normative or renewing editions. Editions like these, 'cum notis Variorum', were useful, but never broke new ground. The production was the specialty of Dutch scholars of the 17th and 18th century.) (Provenance: Engraved bookplate on the front pastdown of 'R.N. Cresswell', above the name a squirrel cracking a nut. This might well be the member of the landed gentry and member of the English bar R.N. Cresswell, Esq. Barrister-at-Law, once, in 1844, working at the Insolvent Court, London. The squirrel figures in the coat of arms of that family. On the front flyleaf in pencil 'L.H. Cooley, from Rev. C. Dea....') (Collation: pi1, *-3*4; a-m4, n1; A-6M) (Photographs on request) (Heavy book, may require extra shipping costs)
Parisiis, apud Ioannem Libert Relié 1631 In-12 (11 x 17 cm), reliure plein parchemin, 6 feuillets non numérotés puis 525 pages ; parchemin déchiré aux coupes, petit manque à la coiffe inférieure, quelques mouillures et travail de vers à l'intérieur, en l'état. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
Amsterdami, Apud Johannem Blaeu 1645 [viii] 363pp.with engraved titlpage, 13cm., vellum (with added cartonnated cover on spine), some stains on pp.1-19 & 259-363, small wormhole in marge of pp.17-30 (with loss of few words of notes), else good copy, rare Blaeu-edition, text and notes in latin
Ex Typographia Societatis 12,5 x 20 Biponti [Les Deux-Ponts 1785 In-8, reliure demi-basane à petits coins du début XIXe siècle, dos orné de caissons et de fleurons dorés, plats marbrés, tranches rouges, XIX-[1]-460 p. Edition accurata. Vignette gravée sur la page de titre. Edition des tragédies de Sénèque (Hercules furens, Thyestes, Phoenisse, Hippolytus, Oedipus, Troades, Medea, Agamemnon, Hercules oetaeus, Octavia) , appartenant à la collection de Deux-Ponts des classiques latins et grecs publiés à partir de 1779, appelée également "éditions bipontines" ou " Zweibrücker Ausgaben ", du nom de la ville de Deux-Ponts située dans le Palatinat. Notice littéraire "Notitia literaria" et intéressant index des éditions des tragiques latins "Index editionum tragicorum latinorum emendtior et auctior Fabricio-Ernestino in quatuor aetates digestus", tirés de la "Bibliotheca latina" (1708-1721) du bibliographe Johann Albert Fabricius (1668-1736), originaire de Leipzig, texte revu et réimprimé en 1728 par Johann August Ernesti (1707- Leipzig, 1781). Bonne reliure, coins légèrement émoussés et intérieur frais. Bon exemplaire.(ThB71) PHOTOS NUMERIQUES DISPONIBLES PAR EMAIL SUR SIMPLE DEMANDE-DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPS MAY BE AVAILABLE ON REQUEST
1676 Amstelodami : Boom, 1676.1 vol. (363 p.) ; In-8 reliure pleine basane époque ,dos tres orné,piéce de titre rouge,qques pages jaunies,bon état
L. & M. Annaeus Seneca ; cum notis Th. Farnabii.Lucius Annaeus Seneca the Younger (4 BCE 65 CE) was a Roman Stoic philosopher, statesman and dramatist who reworked Euripides dramas and the works of the Greek tragic poets Aeschylus and Sophocles to create the present series of tragedies. The tragedies were rediscovered by Italian humanists in the mid-16th century and they became the model for the revival of tragedy on the Renaissance stage. Thomas Farnaby (1575 1647) was an Oxford educated schoolmaster and classical scholar, whose works chiefly consisted of elaborately annotated editions of Latin authors which enjoyed extraordinary popularity in both England and on the Continent (as evidenced by the present Dutch edition) throughout the seventeenth century. Farnaby's first annotated Seneca was published in London in 1613, and proceeded through nine further London editions during the 17th C. and two additional editions in the 18th C. Remise de 20% pour toutes commandes supérieures à 200 €