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Verlag: New York, Harper & Row, Harper Torchbooks, 1964, 1964
Anbieter: Steven Wolfe Books, Newton Centre, MA, USA
, Hutten, Ulrich von, 1488-1523. On the eve of the Reformation. Letters of obscure men. Translated by Francis Griffin Stokes. New introduction by Hajo Holborn. New York, Harper & Row, Harper Torchbooks, 1964, 'First Harper Torchbook edition published 1964', xiv, 262pp., PAPERBACK, original price $1.75, good lightly used copy, cover scuffed, stain on rear cover, previous owner's name. Cover design by Margo Herr. Includes 8-page introduction to the Torchbooks edition by Hajo Holborn, dated Yale, 1 December 1963. - Harper torchbooks; Academy library, TB1124.
Verlag: Legare Street Press 9/10/2021, 2021
ISBN 10: 101495018XISBN 13: 9781014950185
Anbieter: BargainBookStores, Grand Rapids, MI, USA
Buch
Paperback or Softback. Zustand: New. De Morbo Gallico: a Treatise of the French Disease, Publish'd Above 200 Years Past 0.43. Book.
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Neu ab EUR 19,88
Verlag: Pranava Books, 2020
Anbieter: S N Books World, Delhi, Indien
Buch Print-on-Demand
Leatherbound. Zustand: NEW. Leatherbound edition. Condition: New. Language: ger Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden leaf printing on spine. Reprinted from BK edition. 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. 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. IF YOU WISH TO ORDER PARTICULAR VOLUME OR ALL THE VOLUMES YOU CAN CONTACT US. 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. THERE MIGHT BE DELAY THAN THE ESTIMATED DELIVERY DATE DUE TO COVID-19. Pages: 80 Pages: 80.
Verlag: Legare Street Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 1013768833ISBN 13: 9781013768835
Anbieter: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, USA
Buch
Zustand: New.
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Neu ab EUR 29,80
Anbieter: Kunsthandel & Antiquariat Magister Ruß, Lechbruck, Deutschland
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
Anbieter: Antiquariat Clemens Paulusch GmbH, Berlin, Deutschland
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
Stahlstich v. Payne n. Jäger b. Payne, 1850, 14 x 13,7 (H).
Anbieter: Antiquariat Michael Eschmann, Griesheim, Deutschland
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
0. Sprache: Deutschu.
Anbieter: Altstadt Antiquariat M. Weiers, Freiburg, Deutschland
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
Hardcover. 8409 [L] Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 100.
Anbieter: PORCHEROT Gilles -SP.Rance, BREST, FR, Frankreich
Buch
PARIS, La connaissance, "Les textes" n° 6, 1924 - In-12, broché - XVIII-295 pages - bon exemplaire - envoi rapide et soigné ., 1924 Livres.
Anbieter: Antiquariat Michael Eschmann, Griesheim, Deutschland
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
0. Außerhalb der Bilddarstellung gebräunt. Sprache: Deutschu.
Anbieter: Antiquariat Michael Eschmann, Griesheim, Deutschland
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
0. Sprache: Deutschu.
Anbieter: PORCHEROT Gilles -SP.Rance, BREST, FR, Frankreich
Buch
A. Puyplat ( (illustrator). PARIS, A l'Enseigne du Pot Cassé - 1933. Coll. "Lumen Animi" - In-8 - Broché - Couverture ill. en gris et noir- Avant-propos de J. Priel. Traduit du latin par J. Priel et illustré par A. Puyplat (qq. ill. en couleurs), dont frontispice. E. O. de la première traduction française intégrale de ce livre 209 & 238 pages - Le tome II est non coupé -Très bon état.- Envoi rapide et soigné von HUTTEN, Ulrich - (1488-1523) - Polémiste , Humaniste, Mena, avec talent, une lutte violente contre l'Église Romaine Traduction de J. PRIEL - Illustrations de A. PUYPLAT Livres.
Verlag: Inktank-Publishing, 2019
ISBN 10: 3747761151ISBN 13: 9783747761151
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch Print-on-Demand
Kartoniert / Broschiert. Zustand: New. Dieser Artikel ist ein Print on Demand Artikel und wird nach Ihrer Bestellung fuer Sie gedruckt. Buecher zaehlen bis heute zu den wichtigsten kulturellen Errungenschaften der Menschheit. Ihre Erfindung war mit der Einfuehrung des Buchdrucks aehnlich bedeuts.
Anbieter: Antiquariat Clemens Paulusch GmbH, Berlin, Deutschland
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
Kupferstich v. Gottschick n. A.W. Küßner, 1819, 14,5 x 9 (H).
Anbieter: Antiquariat Johannes Müller, Salzburg, Österreich
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
Egid Verhelst der Jüngere (* 25. August 1733 in Ettal; ? 13. Januar 1804 in Mannheim) war Hofkupferstecher in Mannheim. Hier begründete Verhelst seine eigene, von ihm geprägte Stecherschule.- Links oben geglätteter Eckknick.
Anbieter: Antiquariat Johannes Müller, Salzburg, Österreich
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
Ulrich von Hutten (* 21. April 1488 auf Burg Steckelberg in Schlüchtern; ? 29. August 1523 auf der Ufenau im Zürichsee) war ein deutscher Renaissance-Humanist, Dichter und Publizist. Er wird auch als erster Reichsritter bezeichnet.- Breitrandiges Exemplar.
Anbieter: PORCHEROT Gilles -SP.Rance, BREST, FR, Frankreich
Buch
A. PUYPLAT (illustrator). PARIS, A l'enseigne du Pot cassé -,1932 - Edition numérotée - Complet en 2volumes in 8° - Broché - Couverture illustrée - Gravures sur bois In et H.T. - 209 & 238 pages - T. II, non coupé - Bel exemplaire Livres.
Verlag: WENTWORTH PR, 2016
ISBN 10: 1360716173ISBN 13: 9781360716176
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Gebunden. Zustand: New.
Anbieter: Antiquariat Michael Eschmann, Griesheim, Deutschland
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
0. *** Selten. *** Blatt ohne Texteindruck "Hutten". *** Referenz: Hollstein 4 (Mostaert), British Museum Nr. 1850, 1012.114. *** Blatt mit breitem Rand, gute Erhaltung. Sprache: Deutschu.
Verlag: Johann Schöffer, Mainz, 1520
Anbieter: Liber Antiquus Early Books & Manuscripts, Chevy Chase, MD, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Fine. Bound in 17th c. calfskin, spine tooled in gold (discreet repairs to joints, corners, and top compartment of spine; slim crack at head of rear joint, minor wear to the gilding.) A nice copy with minor soiling to title and final leaf, and a few instances of light marginal foxing. With a title page allegorical woodcut of Fortuna (Fairfax Murray 215) and three attractive woodcut initials on a black ground. First edition of this important collection. Only the first "Fever" poem had appeared previously (in 1519). The anonymous German satire "Trias Romana"(1519) is a different work than Hutten's satire of the same name. The title woodcut illustrates the second (and lightest) of the five satirical dialogues, in which Hutten implores Fortune to grant him a pretty wife, a nice house with a library, children, and a reasonable income so that he can study and write. "Fever" I & II "The picture of Hutten handed down to us by history is that of the militant knight and poeta laureatus mentioned earlier. Yet in his dialogues, Hutten's positioning of his own persona is more complex and characterized by one development : the one-sided emphasis on militancy is attributed to the escalation of the Reformation controversy (evident in the Dialogi novi), whereas in the earlier dialogues deviations from this positioning are quite clear. "In the two Latin Fever dialogues (Febris prima and Febris secunda) of 1518/1519, the first dialogues in which Hutten himself appears, the author positions his own persona quite differently from his stance in the later works. In both dialogues the personified Fever attempts to invade the persona of the author in extolling to Hutten his own merits. Hutten tries to divert Fever's attention to other targets, in particular the clerics, who do not take poverty and chastity very seriously. Hutten does not limit himself to a harmless form of clerical satire; he recommends to Fever the figure of Cardinal Cajetan as a very worthwhile target. During his attendance at the Diet of Augsburg of 1518, the conduct and lifestyle of the Cardinal had offered more than enough material for satirical criticism. This polemical trait is not, however, the sole characteristic of this dialogue, which Hutten conceives in the tradition of a paradoxical encomium with his own figure being subjected to irony. "Fever tries to convince Hutten of his merits: a person beset with fever is industrious and sharp-witted and after the fever has abated, the health of the patient improves. Hutten as author can refute these claims from his own experience: when he was writing the Fever dialogues, he was undergoing the cure with Guaiacum that he had publicized in 1519 in the monograph written in that year. When the persona of Hutten declares in the dialogue that he has suffered from the aftermath of this and other diseases for many years after the fever has subsided, the author and the persona are correspondingly close. "Hutten continues with the ironic treatment of his own persona right at the beginning of the second Fever dialogue, as Fever, who was only temporarily repelled at the end of the first dialogue, now seeks even more intensive contact with Hutten. Hutten, aided by his squire, tries once again to shake Fever off. As the conversation progresses, Hutten is able to convince Fever that it is desperately needed to clean up the situation in Rome, and Fever finally leaves Hutten in peace. "The Observers" "As part of his criticism of the Church, Hutten's satire made a special target of Cardinal Cajetan, the Curia's envoy to the Diet of Augsburg in 1518. In his dialogue Inspicientes (The Observers), which appeared in 1520, Hutten has the sun god Sol and his son Phaethon observe and discuss the events in the northern hemisphere from the heavens. The two divine observers keep a careful eye on the Diet of Augsburg. At the end of the dialogue, Hutten has Cardinal Cajetan appear as the third participant in the dialogue. "In this dialogue's frenzied finale, Cardinal Cajetan vents his fury and arrogance at the sun god in the heavens and complains about the prolonged period of bad weather in Germany that is taking place contrary to his specific orders. The Cardinal threatens Sol with a ban since the god is not adhering to Cajetan's instructions and is questioning the authority of the pope. Thus, the Cardinal positions himself as being beyond the divine and human spheres and unmasks his hubris. His presumption stands in stark contrast to the positioning of Sol and Phaethon, who refer to him merely as a 'homuncio'. "Fortune" In a letter to Pirckheimer, Hutten wrote that some things are achieved on by fortune and not by virtue. "In those cases, I look for the turning of the wheel, to the blind goddess, the mad ruler, the queen of all vicissitudes. I look for a lucky turn of the wheel to bring me prosperity." In the dialogue "Fortuna", Hutten asks the goddess to grant him the means to lead a comfortable life, with leisure to study and write. "How much would be enough?" she asks. Well, Hutten answers, if he were to marry he would want a house with a garden, some land with a few fish ponds, dogs for hunting, a few riding horses, servants, herdsmen, cattle. The house must be outfitted with galleries, a library, dining rooms, baths, etc. He will also need money so that his wife can dress respectably and money to put aside for children. So, about 100,000 gulden. When Fortune advises to work instead, Hutten laments that he has worked and studied for years, wandering in exile, struggling with poverty and disease. He has tried to enrich himself at court, like other people, but has had no luck. Fortune tells him that if he wants to live a life of leisure and study, he should be content to live in poverty. After all, successful people don't have much leisure. "Do you know any?", she asks. "Priests", replies Hutten. As Fortuna casts fortune down upon the people of Earth, Hutten looks down on the scene from above and sees a mass of people scramb.
Verlag: Johann Schöffer, Mainz, 1524
Anbieter: Liber Antiquus Early Books & Manuscripts, Chevy Chase, MD, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Fine. FOURTH EDITION (1st ed. 1519). Bound in 20th c. green morocco with gilt turn-ins. A fine copy, a.e.g., with a fine woodcut title border, woodcut initials, and occ. contemporary annotations. The title border incorporates Schöffer's coat of arms (see Johnson no. 62 and Pflugk-Harttung no. 52). Ulrich von Hutten's famous work on the treatment of syphilis, one of the earliest and most important books on the topic. Hutten, who had himself suffered from syphilis since 1508 (and would die of the disease in 1519), describes in detail a therapy using an extract from Guaiacum wood, which is native to the West Indies. It became one of the earliest New World medicinal treatments to be used in Europe. In addition to describing the Guaiacum therapy, Hutten also discusses the transmission of the disease, its symptoms, and other therapies used to treat it, such as the use of mercury (a practice that continued until the early 20th century.) Hutten notes that the disease is spread sexually, with the result that very few children or elderly people become infected; celibate or monogamous people almost never contract the disease. Hutten describes his own symptoms in gruesome detail, including the classic efflorescences on his face and body, and describes for the first time an apparently new syndrome (later identified syphilitic osteomyelitis) that affects the bones. This was confirmed when Hutten's skeleton was exhumed in the 1968. "In the years following Columbus's return from the New World, European physicians identified a new "pox" and assigned it various names, including the Spanish pox, the French disease, and the literary "syphilis," alluding to a popular poem by Girolamo Fracastoro. An old principle held that a disease's place of origin must also harbor its cure. So it was that the woody part of the guaiacum plant was identified early in the sixteenth century as a source of medication and cure for those suffering from the "new" disease." (Dennis Landis, "Drugs from the Colonies") Hutten "states that guaiacum was brought to Europe from Hispaniola where, he says, all the inhabitants of the island suffer from time to time with the Gallic sickness, and where they use against it no treatment other than guaiacum. He relates that a certain Spanish nobleman, when he was governor in the province and very ill of this disease was shown the remedy by the natives". (Munger 199) Guaiacum had been recommended to Hutten by his friend, the doctor Heinrich Stromer but it was the physician Paulus Ricius (d. 1541) who, in 1518 administered the medicine to Hutten. Ricius had obtained the bark on an earlier mission to Spain, where it had been imported from Hispaniola. At the conclusion of the treatise are two letters between Hutten and the Ricius. Syphilis, called the Morbus Gallicus ('French Disease') or the grande verole (the great pox) swept across Europe in the late 15th c., was at the time believed to have originated in the New World (there had been a violent outbreak at the end of the 15th century during the siege of Naples by the mercenary troops of Charles VIII, who numbered among their ranks Spanish soldiers who had returned from the New World.) "The origins and antiquity of syphilis have long been controversial, resulting in a debated and unresolved problem for the history of medicine. Traditionally, two main hypotheses are accepted: the "Columbian theory," which asserts that the treponemal infection originated in the New World and was transmitted to Europe by the returning of Columbus from America, and the "pre-Columbian theory," which claims that the disease was already present in the Old World and evolved into a more virulent form in the 15th century. The book proved to be one of Hutten's most popular writings. It was translated into several languages ;;and achieved numerous editions, of which this is the third. Hutten dedicated the work to his patron, the Mainz Elector and Archbishop Albert von Brandenburg. The closing note is by the proofreader Wolfgang Angst.