‎BEZE (Théodore de)‎
‎Poemata juvenilia.‎

‎S.l.n.d. (ca 1550). 1 vol. in-16, basane granitée, dos lisse orné de fleurons et de filets dorés. Reliure moderne. Titre dans un encadrement gravé sur bois "à la tête de mort couronnée", 62 ff., (1) f. blanc. Signatures : [A-H]8. Il manque le dernier feuillet blanc (H8). Quelques mouillures marginales, trou de ver traversant la marge des feuillets du dernier cahier.‎

Reference : 16729


‎Rare contrefaçon de l'édition originale des poésies latines de jeunesse de Théodore de Bèze, imprimées pour la première fois à Paris en 1548, dont on ne connaît ni l'imprimeur ni la date précise de l'édition. Les bibliographes la datent ordinairement des années 1560 mais elle a très probablement été imprimée peu de temps après l'originale, vers 1550 : un exemplaire ayant appartenu à M. Philippe Gentilhomme était en effet revêtu de l'ex-libris manuscrit du poète et mécène Jean de Brinon, décédé en 1555. Il existe deux états de cette édition ornée d'un curieux encadrement gravé sur bois comportant une tête de mort ceinte d'une couronne royale : le premier portant comme titre Poemata, le second (comme le nôtre), Poemata juvenilia. Cette édition primitive comprend entre autres des vers amoureux parfois un peu libres qui furent supprimés dans la seconde édition revue par l'auteur, imprimée à Genève en 1569 : ces vers ne s'accordaient pas trop, il est vrai, avec la personnalité nouvelle de Théodore de Bèze, devenu, depuis sa fuite à Genève en 1548, un grave et important pasteur et professeur de théologie... Cela dit, ses poésies latines tout empreintes de la vénération que Théodore de Bèze vouait à ses modèles antiques, Catulle et Horace, étaient considérées de leur temps, comme des petits chefs d'oeuvre dignes d'admiration et, d'après les témoignages de La Croix du Maine, Pasquier ou Colomiès, Théodore de Bèze était réputé le plus excellent poète de son temps. Haag II, 272; Brunet I, 841; cat. vente Bibliothèque poétique Philippe Gentilhomme (2009), n°126 (ex. de J. de Brinon).‎

€1,000.00 (€1,000.00 )
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5 book(s) with the same title

‎NEUHUSI (Reineri ou Reinerus ou Regnerus NEUHUSIUS].‎

Reference : 19133

(1644)

‎Poemata juvenilia.‎

‎ Amstelodami [Amsterdam], apud Johannem Janssonium, 1644. Un fort vol. au format in-16 étroit (133 x 78 mm) de 1 f. bl., 1 page de titre gravée n.fol., 11 ff. n.fol., 452 pp., 1 f. n.fol. et 1 f. bl. Reliure de l'époque de plein veau marbré havane, triple filet doré encadrant les plats, dos à nerfs orné de filets gras à froid, doubles caissons d'encadrement dorés, filets verticaux en pointillés dorés, larges fleurons dorés, semis de pointillés dorés, pièce de titre de maroquin acajou, titre doré, palette dorée en tête et queue, dentelle dorée sur les coupes, toutes tranches rouges.‎


‎ L'exemplaire s'ouvre sur une jolie page de titre allégorique gravée. Angles élimés. Coiffe de queue arasée. Légers frottements affectant les plats. Petite tâche en marge du premier. Quelques rousseurs dans le texte et feuillets parfois brunis. Discrète cerne claire en tête des derniers feuillets. Du reste, bonne condition. Rare. ‎

Babel Librairie - Périgueux
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Phone number : 06.84.15.59.05

EUR150.00 (€150.00 )

‎BEZA, MURETUS, JANUS SECUNDUS ‎

Reference : 120208

‎Theodori Bezae Vezelii Poemata. (Bound with:) Marci Antonii Mureti Juvenilia. (And:) Johannis Secundi Hagiensis Juvenilia. ‎

‎Leiden (Lugduni Batavorum), 1757. ‎


‎12mo in 8 & 4 sheets. 3 volumes in 1: (IV),IV,124 p., a portrait of Beza; X,106 p., a portrait of Muretus; IV,3-156 p. Green morocco 16 cm (Ref: Brunet 1,239; Graesse cf 1,359, where we find the imprint Paris 1757) (Details: Green morocco; red morocco shield on the back; gilt floral decoration on the back; boards with gilt triple fillet borders; inside dentelles gilt; marbled endpapers; edges of the bookblock gilt; woodcut printers' mark of Joseph Gérard Barbou on all three titles, depicting an old man who stands in the shade of a vine-entwined elmtree. The motto is 'Non solus'. The 2 portraits have been etched by Fiquet) (Condition: Some wear to the extremes. A small bump in the bottom edge of the front board. Two tiny and almost invisible wormholes in the front joint) (Note: All three titles in this book have a false imprint, 'Lugduni Batavorum', i.e. Leiden, in the Dutch Republic. It was according to Brunet actually published in Paris by Barbou. He does not explain, but the printer's mark, paper, printing and layout looks indeed very Barbou. The Short Title Catalogue Netherlands (STCN) is not sure either about Leiden, it adds 'printed in France?' In Latin elegiac and epigrammatic poetry, from Roman times to the Renaissance, there is constant reference to the 'poetry of youth', as 'standing in contrast to a kind of poetry suitable to be written in old age. The poets characterize the latter poetry as serious, moral, and austere, touching on wars and politics and patriotism. The former is filled with passion and exuberance, concerned not with weighty national issues, but with jokes and laughter and erotic affaires'. (K.M. Summers, 'The Iuvenilia of Marc-Antoine Muret', Columbus, 2006, p. XXV-XXVI) The first edition of 'poemata juvenilia' of the young Calvinist theologian Theodore de Bèze, or Theodorus Beza, 1519-1605, was published in Paris in 1548. 'It had certain rather free pieces printed, which were afterwards made a matter of bitter reproach against him. He therefore suppresed them in the following editions'. (Ebert) This first edition, including the erotic love poems which Beza later regretted having ever published, was clandestinely reprinted. Beza was considered to be among the best Neo-Latin poets of his time. He is however best known for his Latin translation of the New Testament, his critical Greek edition of the New Testament, and for being the founder of the University of Geneva. The Frenchman Marc Antoine Muret, latinized as Marcus Antonius Muretus, 1526-1585, 'exemplifies the essence of French Renaissance humanism. A master of Latin and student of Classical Antiquity, he not only engaged in the recovery and exposition of ancient texts, he also actively employed the old genres and skills in the contemporary ecclesiastical and public spheres. He wrote Latin poetry, both sacred and profane, delivered public orations in Latin and lectured in various schools throughout France and Italy on authors as diverse as Catullus and Tacitus and on topics as varied as Greek philosophy and Roman law'. (K.M. Summers, 'The Iuvenilia of Marc-Antoine Muret', Columbus, 2006, p. XIII) His 'Iuveninlia' were first published in 1552. The Dutch neolatin poet Janus Secundus Nicolai Hagiensis, was born on the 15th of november 1511, the day of the martyr Secundus, in The Hague. He died very young in 1536. In 1528 he moved to Mechelen, the residence of the Austrian vicequeen Margaretha of Parma. The southern part of the Netherlands was in this time the center of a florishing urban civilization. In May 1530 Secundus met a young prostitute from Mechelen, called Julia, and fell in love with her. Julia became the subject of his first book of elegies, his 'Julia Monobiblos', in which he tells how he won and lost his love. During his studies in Bourges under the famous jurist Alciati he wrote his first 'Basia'. Alciati introduced Secundus there also to the newest Italian poetry. A humanist poet often started his career with erotic poetry, like Piccolomini and Beza. Secundus' 'kiss-poems' are a variation on two 'kiss-poems' of the Latin poet Catullus (ca. 84-54 B.C), who became during the Renaissance a model for love-poetry. Secundus wrote in his short life 6835 lines of poetry, of which only 425 lines were printed during his lifetime. He wrote 'with equal fluency all kinds of lyrical, heroic, and elegiac verse. Down to the present day Secundus lives in literary history as the kissing poet' (...) 'Until far in the 18th century Secundus is mentioned as one of the classics of love poetry' (IJsewijn, Companion to Neo-Latin studies I, Leuven, 1990, p. 152) The first edition of his collected works was posthumely published in 1541 in Utrecht, and was edited by Secundus brother Marius. After the poems of Janus Secundus we find 46 pages with the 'Pancharis Joan. Bonefonii Averni ad Jacobum Guellium (p. 111-156)) (Provenance: On the verso of the front flyleaf: 'John Wordsworth, Edinburgh, 1827'. This is the English classical scholar John Wordsworth, 1805-1839, nephew of the Romantic poet William Wordsworth. 'In October 1824 he entered Trinity College, Cambridge. His university career was distinguished. In 1825 he obtained the Bell scholarship, in 1826 a scholarship at his own college, and was second for the Porson prize; in 1827 he obtained it. In 1828 he proceeded to the B.A. degree, but was disqualified for classical honours through distaste for mathematics. In 1830 he was elected fellow of his college. (...) In 1834 he was appointed a classical lecturer in Trinity College, and undertook to edit Richard Bentley's Correspondence (afterwards completed by his brother Christopher Wordsworth'. (Source Wikipedia)) (Collation: pi4 (plus portrait); A8, B4, C8, D4 etc., K4, L2; Portrait, A8 B4, etc. X8, Y4) (Photographs on request) ‎

Phone number : +31 20 418 55 65

EUR280.00 (€280.00 )

‎Bèze, Théodore De / Muret, Marc-Antoine / Second, Jean / Bonnefons, Jean]‎

Reference : 3591

(1757)

‎Theodori Bezae Vezelii Poemata / Marci Antonii Mureti Juvenilia / Joannis Secundi Hagiensis Juvenilia / Pancharis Joan. Bonefonii Arverni‎

‎ 10 x 16 Lugduni Batavorum 1757 Un volume in-12, reliure d'époque plein veau glacé, dos lisse orné de motifs floraux dorés, pièce de titre fauve, titre doré, plats entourés d'un triple filet doré, filet doré sur les coupes, tranches dorées, armes dorées de Max Comte de Preysing au centre du plat supérieur, 124, X-106 et IV-156 p., avec deux portraits gravés de Bèze et de Muret en frontispice. Edition dans la "Collection Barbou" à la manière des Elzévier, des oeuvres poétiques de jeunesse en latin, de quatre poètes de la génération de la Pléiade, qui étaient parues dans les années 1550 . On y retrouve entre autres les "Epigrammata ad Candidam", poèmes érotiques de Bèze à sa chère Candida, ceux de Muret qui firent scandale, et de la "Pancharis" de Jean Bonnefons...Les "Juvenilia" de Muret sont précédés de la préface de l'édition de 1552, beau manifeste de ralliement à la nouvelle école poétique de Ronsard, de du Bellay, de Baïf...Petites traces de vers au mors, accros au dos, coiffe en queue absente, très lègères petites épidermures sur les plats, coins à peine émoussés, armes de Max Graf von Preysing, vieille famille de Bavière, alliée aux Wittelsbach, avec la croix de l'ordre bavarois de Saint-Georges.(ALBbis2) PHOTOS NUMERIQUES DISPONIBLES PAR EMAIL SUR SIMPLE DEMANDE-DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPS MAY BE AVAILABLE ON REQUEST Livre ‎


Phone number : 06 23 64 99 61

EUR190.00 (€190.00 )

‎Theodori Bezae Vezellii - Mureti - Hagiensis‎

Reference : 5157

(1757)

‎Poemata. Suivi de: Juvenilia. Et de: Juvenilia‎

‎Lugduni Batavorum, 1757, 1757, in-12, 3 vol en un, in-12, 124, 106 & 156pp, reliure plein veau, Superbe exemplaire! 3 vol en un, in-12, 124, 106 ‎


Phone number : 06 60 05 09 80

EUR120.00 (€120.00 )

‎ BEZE Théodore de , MURET Marc-Antoine , SECOND Jean, BONNEFONS Jean ‎

Reference : 1657

(1757)

‎ Theodori Bezae Vezelii poemata, suivi de: Marci Antonii Mureti Juvenilia, suivi de: Joannis Secundi Hagiensis juvenilia, suivi de: Pancharis Joan. Bonefonii arverni‎

‎ 1757 Lugduni Batavorum, sans éditeur (J. Barbou), 1757, 3 tomes en 1 volume petit in-12 relié plein veau marbré de l'époque, 4(non paginées)-IV-124, 106 et 156 pages, dos lisse orné de caissons dorés à motifs floraux, pièce de titre rouge, triple filets dorés encadrant les plats, tranches dorées, 2 portraits gravés hors texte (Beze et Muret), très bon état‎


Phone number : 04 70 97 40 16

EUR150.00 (€150.00 )
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