In hoc uolumine sunt Tractatus siue epistole numero centum et uiginti una non omnes tame[n] Sancti Hieronymi ...
Jerome, Saint, -419 or 420. author.; Bussi, Giovanni Andrea, 1417-1475.; Smedley, William T. (William Thomas), 1851-1934, former owner.; Sweynheim, Konrad, -1477, printer.; Pannartz, Arnold, -approximately 1476, printer.; Folger, Henry Clay, 1857-1930, former owner.; Folger, Emily C. J. (Emily Clara Jordan), 1858-1936, former owner.
1468
Items
Details
Title
In hoc uolumine sunt Tractatus siue epistole numero centum et uiginti una non omnes tame[n] Sancti Hieronymi ...
Uniform title
Correspondence
Created/published
Rome ... : [Konrad Sweynheim and Arnold Pannartz], anno Christi 1468 indictione prima, die uero xiii. mensis Decembris ...
Description
2 v. ; 40 cm (fol.)
Associated name
Jerome, Saint, -419 or 420. author.
Bussi, Giovanni Andrea, 1417-1475.
Smedley, William T. (William Thomas), 1851-1934, former owner.
Sweynheim, Konrad, -1477, printer.
Pannartz, Arnold, -approximately 1476, printer.
Folger, Henry Clay, 1857-1930, former owner.
Folger, Emily C. J. (Emily Clara Jordan), 1858-1936, former owner.
Bussi, Giovanni Andrea, 1417-1475.
Smedley, William T. (William Thomas), 1851-1934, former owner.
Sweynheim, Konrad, -1477, printer.
Pannartz, Arnold, -approximately 1476, printer.
Folger, Henry Clay, 1857-1930, former owner.
Folger, Emily C. J. (Emily Clara Jordan), 1858-1936, former owner.
Note
Title extracted from table (leaf *3r).
Edited by Giovanni Andrea Bussi.
This fragment is identifiable as the 1468 rather than 1470 ed. because the headings are not printed, but rather left to the rubricator.
Type corresponds to 115R, employed by Sweynheim and Pannartz at Rome, as described in BM 15th cent., IV, p. 4. It is not the 115R used by Arnold Pannartz for his 1476 first pt. of the Epistolae, which is distinguishable from the earlier type by a different "a", and the addition of "ČŠ", alternative "i" (dotted), and of final "s" of the usual rounded kind (Cf. BM 15th cent., IV, p. 60). These characteristics are not present; moreover, the "r" has the straight shank without serif at base which did not change until the middle of 1470.
Edited by Giovanni Andrea Bussi.
This fragment is identifiable as the 1468 rather than 1470 ed. because the headings are not printed, but rather left to the rubricator.
Type corresponds to 115R, employed by Sweynheim and Pannartz at Rome, as described in BM 15th cent., IV, p. 4. It is not the 115R used by Arnold Pannartz for his 1476 first pt. of the Epistolae, which is distinguishable from the earlier type by a different "a", and the addition of "ČŠ", alternative "i" (dotted), and of final "s" of the usual rounded kind (Cf. BM 15th cent., IV, p. 60). These characteristics are not present; moreover, the "r" has the straight shank without serif at base which did not change until the middle of 1470.
Folger-specific note
Folger copy: fragment of vol. 1 only, totalling 70 leaves (description provided from BM 15th cent.).
Cited/described in
Goff, F.R. Incunabula in American libraries, H-161
BM 15th cent., IV, p. 5 (IC.17108)
Hain-Copinger-Reichling, 8551
BM 15th cent., IV, p. 5 (IC.17108)
Hain-Copinger-Reichling, 8551
Place of creation/publication
Italy -- Rome.
Item Details
Call number
INC H148 Bd.w. INC H155
Folger-specific note
Fragment contains (identified through comparison with the Venice 1488 ed. of the Epistolae): pt. of letter 6; letters 7-8; Treatise against Jovinianus, chapters 1-28, pt. of 29, pt. of 31, 32-37, pt. of 38 and 39, chapter 40, pt. of 41; pt. of letter 11; Dialogue against the Luciferians; pt. of the Dialogue against the Pelagians; pt. of letter 18 (2 leaves); letters 23-36; pt. of letter 37; pt. of letter 86; letters 87-96; pt. of letter 97. A few manuscript indications of interruptions in text; manuscript numbering at head of 1st leaf of each gathering. Bookplate of W.T. Smedley; purchased in 1924. With: Jerome, Saint. Epistolarum Beati Hieronymi pars secunda. Impressa Rome : Per ... Georgiu[m] Laur de Herbipoli, sub anno D[omi]ni 1479 die uero Lune, q[ui]nta me[n]sis Aprilis ...