Published by Jacob Stoer, Frankfurt am Main, 1589
Seller: El Sabio Books, Calgary, AB, Canada
Important Frankfurt printing (1589) of Wà lfflinâs Institutionum Imperialium Succincta Erotemata, a Renaissance-era legal manual designed to teach and interpret the Roman Institutes within the framework of the Holy Roman Empire. This third edition, âquasi nova,â presents the text in question-and-answer (erotemata) format, a pedagogical method central to late 16th-century legal education. The printer, Jacob Stoer, was a prominent Frankfurt publisher of scholarly and legal works, also active in Geneva, and known for his role in disseminating Protestant humanist texts across Europe. Provenance: Early handwritten inscriptions on title-page and endleaves, including ownership signatures and a long French manuscript poem/meditation bound in at rear, referencing themes of divine protection and mortality (âla Cour de Gloire⦠la belle patrieâ¦â). Such manuscript additions enrich the volume, offering a tangible link to its scholarly and devotional use in the early modern period. Marginalia also present throughout, with legal notes and references. Despite its worn state, the copy has strong character: unsophisticated, in its original limp vellum binding with evidence of use by multiple owners. For collectors, this is a prime example of a working Renaissance law book, valued not for pristine presentation but for its historical depth, provenance, and survival. Of special interest to collectors and institutions in Roman law, Holy Roman Empire jurisprudence, Frankfurt printing, and annotated Renaissance legal manuals. Third edition of Wà lfflinâs Renaissance legal digest (Frankfurt, 1589), in contemporary limp vellum, with extensive manuscript ownership inscriptions and devotional notes. A genuine working copy of a sixteenth-century Roman law manual. Fair. Limp vellum binding heavily worn, detached in places, with vellum losses and crude repairs. Spine partially perished. Text block intact; paper toned but strong, with scattered marginalia. Extensive manuscript ownership inscriptions and a bound-in French devotional poem at rear. Complete. Contemporary limp vellum, worn and heavily soiled, with losses to spine covering and portions of vellum detached. Evidence of early manuscript binderâs waste beneath. Text block complete and holding Editio tertia, ita aucta et locupletata, emendataque, ut quasi nova appareat.