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Verlag: New York: Charles Scribner's Sons [Scribner], [May] 1964., 1964
Anbieter: David Hallinan, Bookseller, Columbus, MS, USA
Second printing (per Scribner's " B-5.64[H]" code upon copyright page). [12], 211 pages. Hardcover: H 21.25cm x L 14.25cm. Dust jacket rubbed with some scuffs, nicks, and short tears at edges; soiling and foxing to white rear panel; light foxing to flaps; front flap is not price-clipped. Reddish-brown cloth spine with gilt stamping; bluish-gray patterned boards. Dark gray top edge; some foxing to fore-edge and bottom edge. Dark olive endpapers; ink ownership inscription on front free endpaper; strong foxing at tops of pages 180-181 which are adjacent to book's b/w plate section; some other scattered foxing to interior pages which, overall, remain clean. Binding is firm. A very good copy in a very good- dust jacket. {Lit_Shelf#2}.
Anbieter: ASHER Rare Books, T Goy Houten, Niederlande
[20], CCX, [10] ll.The most popular German prayerbook in the early years of the 16th century, here in the first edition with the woodcut illustrations by the Nürnberg engravers Hans Springinklee and Erhard Schön, made for this edition. The Hortulus animae (also called Seelengärtlein in German) was a collection of prayers, often richly illustrated with beautiful woodcuts. It became extremely popular after its first edition, dated 13 March 1498, printed in Strasbourg by William Schaffener of Rappeltsweiler. The present edition, the fourth printed by Johannes Clein in Lyon for the Nürnberg publisher Johannes Koberger, is important in the history of the Hortulus, because it is the first to use a new series of woodcuts made for this edition by Springinklee and Schön. All 18 editions, whether in German or Latin, published between 1516 and 1521, printed variously in Lyon (by Clein) and Nürnberg (by Stüchs or Pepyus) for Anton or Johannes Koberger, have illustrations from the present Springinklee and Schön blocks. With the introduction of these series of woodcuts in the present Clein-Koberger edition, the Hortulus animae became a high point of German book illustration, even in its Latin editions, while the three earlier editions (issued in 1511 and twice in 1513) show miscellaneous woodcuts of uneven quality.The Hortulus animae contains a collection of prayers - resembling the French Horae B.M.V. and the English primers, such as the Little office of Our Lady - and occupies a great place of honour in these forms of prayer books. Nevertheless, the Hortulus shows a greater variety of popular prayers, including prayers of individual saints. Its collection of prayers, issued for private devotion, is preceded by a calendar of saints' days and other feasts, an astrological calendar and a section on solar and lunar phases, the latter including two woodcuts of the sun and moon. The prayers include the Office of the Virgin, Penitential Psalms and other traditional components, but also more popular prayers and a number of "probably spurious indulgences" (Catholic encyclopedia), altogether making it a unique German variation on the more common books of hours or prayer books. The present fourth Clein-Koberger edition is beautifully illustrated with 90 woodcuts from 87 blocks (block of the enthroned Virgin with Child is repeated twice with a different text; the one showing Saint Birgitta is repeated once). The new woodcut series by Springinklee and Schön, commissioned by Johannes Koberger, depict events from Christ's life and various saints with their attributes, sometimes depicted in rural mountainous landscapes in a German style. Most of the woodcuts and some of the borders are coloured by a contemporary hand.With 16th-century owners' inscriptions in three different hands: one on the first few leaves and the front paste-down; the second appearing on the front paste-down (but faded) and the back paste-down ("Dominicus Gordel"); the third appearing on A3r-v and the back paste-down. Part of the title has been cut out and a slip of blank paper mounted on the back as "restoration" (not affecting the calendar on the verso), the last leaf F4 (the recto with only Clein's device and the verso blank) has most of the foot margin (containing a manuscript inscription, probably naming an owner) torn off and the leaf is mounted on a blank leaf, a few leaves a little chipped, some small marginal tears repaired (n7, o1), a few upper fore-edge corners folded in, edges of some leaves a little browned or slightly stained. The boards rubbed (worse on the front, with 3 gaps in the calf), spine slightly worn, front hinge a little cracked, small piece of the back paste-down lost, but overall still in good condition. A rare Clein-Koberger edition showing the first use of an important series of woodcuts, in this copy party hand-coloured.l BM STC French, p. 232; Baudrier Fairfax Murray, German 209; Mortimer, French, 320; Oldenbourg, Hortulus animae, L 62; USTC 144588 (7 copies), 664199 (3 copies); VD16 ZV 26581; this edition not in Adams.