Propertius sextus c 50 (5 risultati)

- Rilegato
Da: MW Books, New York, NY, U.S.A.MW Books
Contatta il venditoreVenditore con 5 stelleCondizione: Usato
EUR 29,56
Spedizione gratuitaSpedito in U.S.A.Quantità: 1 disponibili
Very good cloth copy in a very good if slightly edge-nicked and dust-toned dust-wrapper. Some pencil annotation to pages. Foxing to top edge. Remains particularly well-preserved overall. Physical description: 101 pages. 3 Kg.

- Rilegato
Da: MW Books Ltd., Galway, , IrlandaMW Books Ltd.
Contatta il venditoreVenditore con 5 stelleCondizione: Usato
EUR 21,00
EUR 13,95 spedizioneSpedito da Irlanda a U.S.A.Quantità: 1 disponibili
Very good cloth copy in a very good if slightly edge-nicked and dust-toned dust-wrapper. Some pencil annotation to pages. Foxing to top edge. Remains particularly well-preserved overall. Physical description: 101 pages. 1 Kg.
Altre immaginiCatullus. Tibullus. Propertius
Catullus, Gaius Valerius (ca. 84- ca. 54 BCE); Tibullus (ca. 50- ca. 18 BCE); Propertius, Sextus (ca. 49- ca. 16 BCE)
Editore: In aedibus Aldi, et Andreae soceri, Venice 1515
- Rilegato
Da: Liber Antiquus Early Books & Manuscripts, Chevy Chase, MD, U.S.A.Liber Antiquus Early Books & Manuscripts
Contatta il venditoreVenditore con 5 stelleCondizione: Usato - Ottimo
EUR 10.645,98
EUR 2,58 spedizioneSpedito in U.S.A.Quantità: 1 disponibili
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. SECOND ALDINE EDITION. A lovely, unsophisticated copy in contemporary limp vellum (binding lightly soiled, remains of ties, small splits on spine). Very fresh and bright, with generous margins and only some very minor ink marks or the occasional blemish. Title lightly soiled and with early note delet…ed in ink. An early reader (possibly two) has made comments, offered alternate readings, and supplied the occasional line in the longer poems Cat. 61. (Epithalamium), Cat. 63 (Attis), Cat. 64 (the epyllion, printed here under the title "Argonautica"), and 68A. ("Quod mihi fortuna"); as well as in a few of the shorter poems. The important second Aldine edition of the poems of Catullus, Tibullus and Propertius, co-edited by Girolamo Avanzi (fl. 1500.) and Aldus. The first Aldine Catullus, one of the first of the "libri portatiles", the handy ("forma enchiridii") octavo-sized format that Aldus popularized, appeared in 1502. In his epistle to the reader, Aldus informs us that Avanzi has made further improvements upon the text for this edition. "Avantius was younger by a generation than all of his Catullan predecessors, and a more careful textual critic than any-with the obvious exception of Poliziano. He was to become a professional editor of Latin poetry, principally for the Venetian printers Johannes Tacuinus and Aldo Manuzio, preparing, inter alia, editions of Catullus, Tibullus, and Propertius (Tacuino, 1500), Lucretius (Aldine, 1500), and the first and second Aldine editions of Catullus (1502; 1515). "Because Avanzi was more systematic, thorough, and knowledgeable than his predecessors -and because he had the whole printed tradition to work with- he was able to make an enormous contribution to the text of Catullus in the 'Emendationes'. In addition to a large number of emendations, he made dozens of corrections both to the printed tradition as a whole and to the recent base text of Calfurnio and Partenio. He also made some improvements in the 'dispositio carminum', although this was becoming increasingly difficult, since the easy corrections had already been made." (Gaisser, Catullus and His Renaissance Readers. p.52 ff. ) "Avantius is principally interested in textual and metrical problems and only occasionally in interpretation. His emendations are based on the collation of his texts, the work of other scholars, and his own observations of Catullus' stylistic and metrical practice. He depends much less on parallels from other Latin and Greek authors, which he cites sparingly and selectively "The 'Emendationes' were [first] published without a text of Catullus, but the second edition, published in 1500, appeared in a volume that included not only Catullus but also Tibullus and Propertius. [.] Avantius used this edition as the basis for his important first Aldine edition of Catullus (1502), and its influence is apparent in his second Aldine (1515)." (Gaisser, 'Catullus' in 'Catalogus Translationum et Commentariorum' Vol. VII) Catullus: "Catullus' name and poetry are traditionally associated with the 'neoteric revolution'; indeed, they are the most important document of it. It is a revolution in literary taste but also a revolution in ethics. While at a time of acute crisis for the Republic the old moral and political values of the 'civitas' are crumbling, personal 'otium' becomes the attractive alternative to communal life, the space in which to devote oneself to culture, poetry, friendship, and love. The small universe of the individual, with its joys and dramas, is identified with the very horizon of existence, and literary activity no longer turns towards epic and tragedy, the genres that speak for the state and its values, but rather toward lyric, towards personal poetry, which is introverted and suitable for embracing and expressing the small events of private life." "[Catullus' poetry] achieved a vast and immediate success among cultivated Latin readers. In particular, it exercised a profound influence upon the Augustan poets (with the exception.
Altre immaginiTibulli Elegiae cum comm. Bernardini Veronensi. Catulli Carmina cum comm. Antonini Partheni. Propertii Elegiae cum comm. Philippi Beroladi
Catullus, Gaius Valerius (ca. 84- ca.54 B.C.); Tibullus (ca. 50- ca.18 B.C.); Propertius, Sextus (ca. 49- ca. 16 B.C.)
Editore: Bonetus Locatellus, per Octavianus Scotus, 9 December, Venice 1491
- Rilegato
Da: Liber Antiquus Early Books & Manuscripts, Chevy Chase, MD, U.S.A.Liber Antiquus Early Books & Manuscripts
Contatta il venditoreVenditore con 5 stelleCondizione: Usato - Ottimo
EUR 17.743,29
EUR 2,58 spedizioneSpedito in U.S.A.Quantità: 1 disponibili
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. [Bound with]: Statius, Publius Papinius (b. ca. 45-50 ? d. ca. 96) Statii Achilleida cum comm. Ioannis Britannici Brescia: per Iacobum Brtitannicum, 21 May 1485 Folio: 29 x 19.6 cm. Two works bound as one. I. [158] lvs. (the last leaf blank). Collation: a-c8, d-e6, f-s8, t-x6. II. [28] lvs. (the firs…t leaf blank). Collation: A4, a-d6. Bound in attractive 18th c. blonde calf, spine richly gilt with floral tools and morocco label; board edges also gilt (light wear, corners bumped). Fine, crisp copies with minor blemishes as follows: I. Title lightly soiled, marginal dampstain to the first three lvs., leaf l1, leaf g6, and a few lvs. in gathering h; 4 lvs. in gathering e and bifolium f1/8 lightly browned (f1/8 with light ink stain). II. Light dampstain blank margin. Both books with woodcut initials. First work with Octavian Scotus? printer?s device on the final leaf. From the library of the French poet and journalist Frédéric Plessis (1851-1942), with his label ?ex-libris Fridericus Plessis? on the front fly-leaf. This volume comprises two incunabula. The first is the 1491 edition of the Roman elegiac poets, Catullus, Propertius and Tibullus, with the commentaries of (respectively) Antonio Partenio (1456-1506), Filippo Beroaldo the Elder (1453-1505) and Berardino Cillenio (b. ca. 1450) of Verona. The second is the 1485 Brescia edition of Statius?s ?Achilleid?, an unfinished epic poem on the life of Achilles, with the commentary of the humanist Giovanni Britannico (fl. 1470-1518). Catullus and Parthenius: The commentary of Parthenius on Catullus is particularly important. His work was ?not only the first but also the most important of the fifteenth-century commentaries on Catullus. He made significant improvements to the text and explained Catullan style and usage with parallels from a wide range of ancient authors, both Greek and Latin, including among others, Cicero, Vergil, Martial, Pliny Ovid, Lucretius, Donatus, Homer, and Sappho. He was also interested in interpreting the poems and successfully emended and explained several that had previously seemed pointless. The commentary was hailed in verse by several of Parthenius? fellow citizens and other contemporaries, including Iacobus Iuliarius and Hieronymus Bononius.? (Gaiser) Statius? Interrupted Epic: ?Any judgment upon [the ?Achilleid?] is difficult, since the text we have (interrupted by the author's death) deals only with episodes of the young Achilles on Scyros. The plan of narrating all of Achilles' life (1.4 ff.) suggests large literary ambitions. Statius, had he been able to continue, would have found himself facing Homer. And beginning with its title the work seems, even more than Statius? ?Thebaid?, to be heading towards a perilous confrontation with the ghost of its father Virgil.?(Conte).
Altre immaginiC. Valerii Catulli.Liber I. Alb. Tibulli Equitis Romani libri IIII. Sex Aurelii Propertii umbri libri IIII. C N. Cornelii Galli fragmenta. Basel: Henricus Petri, 1530 b/w Martialis, Marcus Valerius (40- ca. 100) Epigrammaton Libri XIIII Basel: Henricus Petri, 1530
Catullus, Gaius Valerius (Ca. 84-Ca.54 B.C.); Tibullus (Ca. 50-Ca.18 B.C.); Propertius, Sextus. (Ca. 49-Ca. 16 B.C.)
Editore: Henricus Petri, Basel 1530
- Rilegato
- Firmato
Da: Liber Antiquus Early Books & Manuscripts, Chevy Chase, MD, U.S.A.Liber Antiquus Early Books & Manuscripts
Contatta il venditoreVenditore con 5 stelleCondizione: Usato - Ottimo
EUR 2484,06
EUR 2,58 spedizioneSpedito in U.S.A.Quantità: 1 disponibili
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. TWO SEPARATE PUBLICATIONS. Bound in contemporary alum-tawed pigskin over wooden boards, lacking clasps but with the brass catches, with acorn tools and rolls of 3 of the Muses: Terpsichore, Euterpe (signed N.C.), and Calliope (signed M.A.). First title dusty, damp-stain in the first part of the Marti…al. Intermittent annotations in the margins of both works and some underscoring in the Tibullus. The three most famous Roman elegiac poets together with the great Roman satirist.