Posts tagged Rare books

uispeccoll:

A patron was using this wonderful book one day, and it is a good thing to as I might never have come across it! Check out this 1668 copy of German Almanac Alt und neuer Schreib- Haus- und Kunst-Kalender… which is full of doodles, notes, and other marginalia. 

xAY851 F8 1669

-Lindsay M.

smithsonianlibraries:
“ To the chronicle of false chronicles we can add The Amber Witch. In the mid 1800s, Author Wilhelm Meinhold claimed to have discovered a 17th century manuscript written by a minister during the Thirty Years’ War. In it, the...
smithsonianlibraries:
“ To the chronicle of false chronicles we can add The Amber Witch. In the mid 1800s, Author Wilhelm Meinhold claimed to have discovered a 17th century manuscript written by a minister during the Thirty Years’ War. In it, the...

smithsonianlibraries:

To the chronicle of false chronicles we can add The Amber Witch. In the mid 1800s, Author Wilhelm Meinhold claimed to have discovered a 17th century manuscript written by a minister during the Thirty Years’ War. In it, the minister recounts the accusation of witchcraft levied against his daughter by a scorned suitor. Meinhold later revealed it had been an elaborate literary hoax. His skills in forgery and attention to historic detail was so good that many still did not believe it was fictitious.

Speaking of skills, the image of a book cover for The Amber Witch comes via Examples of Bookbinding executed by Robt.Rivière & Son (1920), an exhibition catalog from the Leipzig Exhibition in 1914, just weeks before the outbreak of WWI. The Riviere Bindery (now subsumed into Bayntun-Riviere) was a productive and well known bindery in London for almost a century and works from the bindery can be found in many rare book libraries today. The introduction amounts to a footnote in WWI history, describing the fortunate turn of events that saved the books from destruction.

uispeccoll:

uispeccoll:

Miniature Monday!  Large and small!  This 1904 set of William Shakespeare’s Complete Works, comes with its own miniature sized shelves, and is hanging out with it much older and larger relative (and our most frequently requested book for class sessions here at Iowa), our copy of Shakespeare’s second folio.

David Bryce and Son, Glasgow, 1904. 

Just bringing back one of our favorite Shakespeare posts to celebrate Shakespeare’s birthday week.    

Trafficking in cultural property, including rare books and manuscripts, is a six-billion-dollar-a-year industry, second only to arms and drugs, according to estimates often cited in international conferences.

uispeccoll:

For pesquetet by request who wanted medieval animals, especially if not quite realistic.  (Sorry not perfectly in focus).

This is post medieval, somewhere around 1500-1515, but I present you some lions. 

Enjoy.

Sancti Bonave[n]ture, doctoris seraphici Breviloquiu[m] theologie quo omnis laus. magistro Iohanne Gerson teste: longe inferior est.  [Paris] Iehan Petit, ca 1515.  See it in the catalog.

theartofgooglebooks:

Marginalia, in the truest sense; annotation in the margin.

From various pages of Sacrosancti et Oecumenici Concilii Tridentini (1557). [Here]