De laniis et phitonicis mulieribus
MOLITOR, Ulricus
Verkäufer Sokol Books Ltd. ABA ILAB, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Verkäuferbewertung 4 von 5 Sternen
AbeBooks-Verkäufer seit 8. März 2005
Verkäufer Sokol Books Ltd. ABA ILAB, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Verkäuferbewertung 4 von 5 Sternen
AbeBooks-Verkäufer seit 8. März 2005
Beschreibung
[THE FOUNDATION IMAGERY OF WITCHCRAFT] 4to. 30 unnumbered leaves. a c , d . Gothic letter. Capital spaces, seven fine full page woodcut illustrations within double ruled border, manuscript medical? recipe in early C16th hand on blank verso of last, another note in the same hand on recto of c8, Millot de Sombernon in near contemporary hand at head of blank verso of last, vendu 21 r mac-carthy at head of front fly, C19th printed shelf label on pastedown, Guy Bechtel s bookplate below with his motto in carcere meo liber. Very light age yellowing, the very rare minor spot or mark. A fine well margined copy, crisp and clean in lovely C18th French green morocco, in the style of Derome, covers bordered with a triple gilt rule, fleurons gilt to corners, flat spine with repeated gilt fleurons within double gilt border, red morocco label gilt, edges and inner dentelles gilt, all edges gilt, joints very expertly (invisibly) restored. A beautiful copy of this exceptionally rare and important text, the first and most important illustrated work on witches and a work that has defined the image of witches to this day. The De Lamiis, was first published in 1489 with the same series of iconic woodcuts. It is one of the earliest printed works on witchcraft, and contains the first ever illustrations of witches. This, probably the first Basel edition, is beautifully printed in a fine gothic letter in thirty-two lines and very finely illustrated with seven stunning woodcuts depicting witches and their activities. The first depicts two witches around a large pot, one throwing in a cockerel the other preparing to throw in a snake, the resulting brew creating a storm. The other blocks represent a lycanthropic scene of a wizard mounted on a wolf, the devil disguised as a bourgeois man corrupting a woman, the ensorcellment of a man by a witch firing a spell, witches transformed into animals flying on brooms, and a group of three witches around a table. The book is written in the form of a dialogue between the author and the dedicatee, the Archduke Sigismund of Austria, who doubts the existence of witches. At a time when complete theories about witchcraft were yet to be established, the author defended belief in the powers of the Devil and his ability to trick the human mind. The woodcut depicting three witches together, eating and drinking beneath a tree, is typical of the format of the work. The title on the previous page to this woodcut reads An super lupum vel baculum unctum ad convivia veniant et mutuo comedant et bibant et sibi mutuo loquantur ac se invicem agnoscant. Can [witches] come to feasts on a wolf or an anointed stick, eat drink, speak together and recognize one another? The women are not doing anything other than eating but the image has become deeply anchored in the popular imagination, as it was used and referred to again and again in imagery and literature throughout the centuries, not least in Shakespeare s Macbeth. The first tract on witches to be illustrated, 1489 94, was written by the lawyer Ulrich Molitor from Constance in 1484. He actually argues against the persecution of witches because he was sceptical of the value of confessions under torture. He did, however, believe that they were heretics and should be punished with death. In the illustrations, the witches are not characterised by any special dress or undress, implying that all women were capable of being witches. They look like ordinary housewives except in the Flight to the witches Sabbath, when they are changed into animal shapes. Although the text speaks of the witches evil activities being a figment of their imagination, delusions inspired by the devil, the illustrations portray the effects of their malignant and harmful magical spells as real enough, e.g. a witch shooting at a man who tries to jump away, or witches making a brew, using a rooster and a serpent as ingredients, whilst hailstones come crashing down from the sky. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers K29
Bibliografische Details
Titel: De laniis et phitonicis mulieribus
Verlag: Constance [Basel], [Michael Furter], 1489 [i.e. ca. 1495]
Erscheinungsdatum: 1489
Einband: Hardcover
Zustand: Fine
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