Published by Ex Officina Hackiana, Ludg. Batav. et Roterod [Leiden and Rotterdam], 1665
Seller: Dark and Stormy Night Books, Newburyport, MA, U.S.A.
Hard Cover. Condition: Very Good. Ranier van Persyn, fecit. (illustrator). Hard cover, two volume set, complete, 8vo., in full calf binding, the boards framed in blind with double rules and small fleur-de-lis motifs stamped to the corners, the spines with four raised bands, double rules, including diagonal scoring at lowest compartment, all tooled in blind. Board edges rolled in small blind dots. Each volume has a separate full page illustrated engraved title page, with the motto "Ludg. Batav./Et/Roterod."Ex Officiana Hackiana. 1665. Vol. I's engraved illustrated title page shows a half man/half lion loosely chained through the tongue to a group of five men: a cardinal, perhaps, a scholar, a king or other coroneted figure, a soldier and a printer or other workman carrying a measuring tool, all in front of a carved monument statue bearing the title of the book. The chain through the tongue has been interpreted as referring to this glorification of oratory, which literally is seen holding the Dutch Republic together, where the "lion rampant" is a symbol of the Republic. The engraved title page in Vol. II likewise illustrates a Roman school of oratory, with Quintilian teaching. (ref. Simon Schama) The secondary title pages of both volumes feature the Officiana Hackiana printer's device of an eagle in flight over water with the motto "MOVENDO" (moving) in Latin, set within an architectural cartouche with Tudor style roses and other flowers. **Dutch PRINTERS Officiana Hackiana, refers to publisher, printer and bookseller Jacobus Hackius (active 1663-1698),who along with two brothers operated locations in both Leiden and Rotterdam. The engraved notation on the bottom left of the two pictorial title pages refers to this: "Ludg. Batav. et Roterod" being an abbreviated motto for "Lugdunam Bavorum;" Latin for Leiden, and Rotorrod for Rotterdam. (Royal Library of Belgium, General Catalogue). **CONDITION: Very Good antiquarian condition. Rubbing to edges and corners with some small cracks/loss to head of spines. Slight wear to joints, but holding firm. Endpapers have some wear and creasing, with two original owners' names in old ink, dated 1673 and later (undated--see below) Prelims show some wear and minor losses. Interior text is quite clean.***Roman Author QUINTILIAN (c.35 AD - c.100 AD) was a rhetorician whose most famous work is this book, the "Institutio Oratoria" (c. 95 AD). In this twelve-book guide to rhetoric, Quintilian harks back to the glory days of Cicero, and tries to establish a means by which those high standards could be regained. He describes the ideal education of an orator, and explores the different kinds of oratory. There is an entire book given over to laughter, and another to the career of an orator. COLLATION: Vol I: [34], 916, [34] pp; [], *8, **8, A-I8, K-T8, V8, X-Z8, Aa-Ii8, Kk-Tt8, Vv8, Xx-Zz8, Aaa-Iii8, Kkk-Nnn8, Ooo2, []. Vol II: [6], 784, [8] pp.; []3, A-I8, K-T8, V8, X-Z8, Aaa-Ii8, Kk-Tt8, Vv8, Xx-Zz8, Aaa-Ccc8, Ddd4. PROVENANCE: The books bear two signatures in old ink. The earliest is of Guliemi Dod, Oxon. 1673, probably William, a forefather of the second signatory: Thomas Crewe Dod (1754-1827)., Dod the younger was a Cheshire, England -born cavalry officer of the 16th Army Light Dragoons who first served in America under Gen. John Burgoyne in 1776. After returning to England, he then departed for service in India, serving thirty years with the first group of British cavalry, the 23rd Light Dragoon, to do so in that country. After 1785 he returned to England to run his estate from Edge Hall, and served other roles in Cheshire yeomanry. (L.E. Buckell) **REFS: Rijksmuseum OCLC 644683242. Appears to be the 1665 edition "Variorum" p. 368 of Dibdin Vol. II, with notes for the "Declamations" by Frederick Gronovius. See L.E. Buckell, "The 23rd Light Dragoons and Col. Thomas Crewe Dod," in Journal of the Soc. for Army Historical Research, Vol. 26, No. 107 (Autumn, 1948). Also, S. Schama, "The Embarrassment of Riches: An Interpretation of Dutch Culture in the Golden Age," (New York: Random House, 1988). (AJ and AMJ). Book.
Published by Lugd. Batav. Leiden: Apud/Ex officina Elzevirios, 1649
Seller: Unsworth's Antiquarian Booksellers, ILAB, ABA, PBFA., London, United Kingdom
Art / Print / Poster
US$ 829.13
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketFour vols., 12mo., pp. [xlviii], 552; 718; 442, 154; [xxiv], 429, [xxvii]. Engraved title-page to vol. I, woodcut headpieces and initials, some full-page illustrations. Illustration opposite p.1, vol. I annotated in the margins in an old hand. Lightly toned, occasional tiny marks. Contemporary vellum, titles inked to spines, board edges slightly overlapped, edges of vols. I-III sprinkled red and IV blue and red. Vol. I front pastedown lifted, showing fragments of ms binder's waste. Spines a bit greyed, a few small spots and stains, very good. Ownership inscription of John Venables, in an old hand, to head of title-page vols. I and III. The second Elzevier edition of Seneca, complete with the separately-issued volume of notes by Gronovius, in a contemporary binding. The text volumes in this edition are largely reimpressions of the 1640 printing, but the volume of notes had not appeared before. Described by Willems as 'very beautiful'. Dibdin (4th edn.) II 397. Willems 672; 664. Schweiger II 912.
Publication Date: 2025
Seller: True World of Books, Delhi, India
LeatherBound. Condition: New. BOOKS ARE EXEMPT FROM IMPORT DUTIES AND TARIFFS; NO EXTRA CHARGES APPLY. LeatherBound edition. Condition: New. Reprinted from 1762 edition. Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden leaf printing on spine. NO changes have been made to the original text. This is NOT a retyped or an ocr'd reprint. Illustrations, Index, if any, are included in black and white. Each page is checked manually before printing. Pages: 210 As this print on demand book is reprinted from a very old book, there could be some missing or flawed pages, but we always try to make the book as complete as possible. Fold-outs, if any, are not part of the book. If the original book was published in multiple volumes then this reprint is of only one volume, not the whole set. Sewing binding for longer life, where the book block is actually sewn (smythe sewn/section sewn) with thread before binding which results in a more durable type of binding. Pages: 210 Volume c. 4 Language: Latin.