Paris (Parisiis), Ex officina Adriani Turnebi Typographi Regij, 1552.
12mo. (VIII),1-211,(1) p. 18th century calf 16.5 cm (Ref: Wartelle p. 2. Hoffmann I,32: 'Eine schöne und seltene Ausgabe'. Dibdin 1,237: 'beautifully printed'. Moss 1,7: 'a beautiful edition'. Brunet I, 77. Graesse 1,29. Ebert 180. Gruys p. 31/46; Mund-Dopchie p. 45/83) (Details: Back with 5 raised bands, the compartments with gilt floral motives. Red morocco shield in the second compartment. Triple fillet gilt borders on both boards. Gilt inside dentelles. Bookblock with gilt edges. Marbled endpapers. Woodcut printer's mark on the title) (Condition: Some wear to the extremes of the binding. Some foxing. Marginal repairs in 3 leaves) (Note: The Greek tragedian Aeschylus, 525/4-456 B.C., is the earliest of the surviving tragic playwrights. He 'can be considered the 'inventor' of tragedy as we understand it'. (The Classical Tradition, N.Y., 2010, p. 10) He became an instant classic in his time. In Byzantine times seven of his plays, the so called heptas, continued to be copied and studied, but in the West he was forgotten for almost one and a half thousand years. In the Renaissance he was revived with the arrival of Greek manuscripts in the West, and by the printing press. The oldest of the more than 100 surviving Aeschylean manuscripts dates from ca. 1000, and was written in Constantinople. It was brought to Florence by the Italian humanist G. Ausrispa. Aeschylus was published by Aldus in Venice in 1513. It was only in the late 18th century that Aeschylus was translated into French and German. 'From that time forward, interest in Aeschylus blossomed. The character of his language and thought (...) formerly a stumbling block, became a virtue for the new Romantic sensibility, aided perhaps by the fact that the Age of Revolution saw the Aeschylean Prometheus as the archetypal hero of defiance. In this regard the 'continuation' of Prometheus Bound by Herder (Der entfesselte Prometheus, 1802; choruses set to music by Liszt, 1850-1855) and Shelley (Prometheus Unbound, 1820) are of particular importance'. (Op. cit.) In the play Zeus is represented as a harsh and unjust tyrant. Aeschylus' authorship of the Prometheus is however disputed on metrical and stylistic ground, and with respect to the content. The French eminent humanist scholar Adrien Turnebus, 1512-1565, 'was a specialist in Greek textual criticism. From 1552-1556 he was Director of the Royal Press, and, in that capacity, published a series of Greek texts, including Aeschylus (1552) and Sophocles with the scholia of Triclinius (1553)'. (Sandys, 2,186) In 1547 Turnebus was appointed Professor Regius at the Collège Royal. 'Turnebus himself says the following on his sources and working method in his Greek foreword (of this Aeschylyus edition); after he had started work on this edition, he found his task more difficult than he had originally expected, on account of the excessive corruption of the text (i.e. Aldus); as a good physician he has attempted to heal the patient by both due caution and thoroughness; may the gentle reader sooner be grateful to him for his successes than blame him for his failures. Fortunately he had been given an old ms. of the triad by Aimar de Ranconet so that he had had a sound basis for its emendation, but correction of the other tragedies was extremely difficult through the lack of mss.; yet there too he had been able to emend considerably with the aid of the scholia and by conjecture'. (Gruys p. 35)) (Collation: alpha4, A-N8, O2) (Photographs on request)
1966 New York, The Heritage Press, 1966. 18.5 cm x 27.5 cm. XVIII, 161 pages. Original Hardcover with slipcase. Excellent, close to new condition with only very minor signs of external wear. Includes the following: Introduction, Aeschylus - Prometheus Bound, and Shelley - Prometheus Unbound. Shelley's text is preceded by the author's preface, and appended with a Note by Mrs Shelley. Together these form the first two parts of The Prometheia - a trilogy of plays about the titan Prometheus, attributed in Antiquity to the 5th-century BC Greek tragedian Aeschylus. The dramatis personae are Prometheus, Cratus (Power), Bia (Violence), Hephaestus, the mortal woman Io, Oceanus, Hermes and a chorus of Oceanids. The play is composed almost entirely of speeches and contains little plot since its protagonist is chained and immobile throughout. [source - wikipedia].
Book includes Heritage Press "Sandglass" pamphlet. Remise de 20% pour toutes commandes supérieures à 200 €
London etc., OUP, n.d. (after 1906)
XXII,278 p. Cloth 15.5 cm (The World's Classics 117)(Back gilt; bookplate on front pastedown) (Wartelle p. 259)
Uppsala, Copenhagen, 1954.
15 p. Wrappers. 23 cm (Offprint Eranos 52, p. 61/75)
Nieuwkoop, de Graaf, 1981.
(VIII),359 p. Wrappers. 24 cm (Dissertation) (Spine slightly bent)
Amst., Paris, 1940.
XI,122 p. Wrs. 24 cm (Diss.)
Amst., Paris, 1940.
XI,122 p. Wrappers. 24 cm (Dissertation)
Amst., Paris, 1940.
XI,122 p. Cloth 25 cm (Diss., Groningen)
Ldn., Faber & Faber, 1970.
VIII,67 p. Cl. 21 cm (A play; includ. dustjacket; inscription on front flyleaf)
Leiden, Brill, 1982.
X,162 p. Cl. 24 cm
Oxf., Clarendon Press, 1940.
XII,242 p. Cl. 22 cm (Name on title)
Oxf., Clarendon Press, 1962.
XII,242 p. Pb. 20 cm (Cover worn; inside good)
Groningen, Batavia, Wolters, 1938.
(IV),86 p. Wrs. 23 cm (Diss.)
Leiden, Brill, 1961.
81 p. Wrappers 27 cm (Diss., Leiden)(Cover used)
Short description: In Russian. Aeschylus,. Tragedies. Moscow Leningrad: Academia, 1937. The image is provided for reference only. It may reflect condition of one of the available copies or only help in identifying the edition. Please feel free to contact us for a detailed description of the copies available. SKU5181964
Short description: In Russian. Aeschylus,. Chained to Prometheus. Moscow: Academia, 1935: The Creed of the Proletarian. The image is provided for reference only. It may reflect condition of one of the available copies or only help in identifying the edition. Please feel free to contact us for a detailed description of the copies available. SKU5318277
Faber & faber 1979 129 pages 16x2x22 4cm. 1979. Cartonné jaquette. 129 pages.
Très bon état rousseurs en tête intérieur propre jaquette défraîchie
Leiden, Brill, 1961 in-4to, 81 p. Original-Broschüre.
Phone number : 41 (0)26 3223808
Edward Arnold. 1920. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 111 pages. Text in Greek and in English.. . . . Classification Dewey : 480-Langues helléniques. Grec
Represented in English and explained by Edward George Harman. Classification Dewey : 480-Langues helléniques. Grec
George Routledge & Sons, Ltd. 1886. In-12. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 288 pages. Text in English. Reliure d'éditeur bleue et noire. Etiquettes de code sur le dos et le 1er plat. Tampons de bibliothèque en page de titre.. . . . Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
'Morley's Universal Library', 41. Trans. into English verse by Robert POTTER. Intro. by Henry MORLEY. Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
Theodor Bläsing, Erlangen. 1863. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Quelques rousseurs. 216 pages. Texte en grec ancien et en allemand. Etiquette de code sur la couverture. Quelques tampons de bibliothèque. Annotations au crayon dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 430-Langues germaniques. Allemand
Mit Einleitung, Uebersetzung und Erklärung aus dem Nachlass Carl Friedrich von Nägelsbach's, herausg. von Friedrich List. Classification Dewey : 430-Langues germaniques. Allemand
Lefevre, Paris. 1825. In-24. Broché. Etat d'usage, Plats abîmés, Dos fané, Non coupé. 303 pages. Texte en grec ancien. Couverture muette. Dos consolidé. Etiquette de code sur la couverture. Quelques tampons de bibliothèque. Manque sur le 2e plat. Annotations en page de faux-titre (ex-libris).. . . . Classification Dewey : 480-Langues helléniques. Grec
Curante Jo. Fr. Boissonade. Classification Dewey : 480-Langues helléniques. Grec
Faber and Faber Ltd. 1951. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 71 pages. Texte en anglais (English). Jaquette manquante.. . . . Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
Translated by Louis MacNEICE. Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
Oxf., Ldn., 1898 - 1907.
6 vols. in 1. together 378 p. Cl. 18 cm (Cover worn at the extremes; contents inscribed on front flyleaf; name cut from first French title; name on some titles; the 4 last leaves of the Choephoroi transl. loose; title of the Aristophanes translation gone)
London, New York, Dent/Dutton, (1914).
Sm.8vo. (VIII),437 p. Cloth