https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/browse?advanced%5B0%5D%5Belement_id%5D=44&advanced%5B0%5D%5Btype%5D=is+exactly&advanced%5B0%5D%5Bterms%5D=Latin&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CTitle&page=1&output=atom2024-03-29T08:36:32-04:00Omekahttps://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/21Illuminated manuscript on vellum.
Nuremberg, dated 3 February 1496.
Bound in c. 1500 Nuremberg binding with two clasps.
]]>2022-11-26T12:54:00-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1009In response to Luther's critique of indulgences and sacraments, King Henry VIII defended the sacraments in this work dedicated to Pope Leo X.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:16-05:00
00630. Assertio septem sacramentorum adversus Martinum Lutherum, aedita ab invictissimo Angliae et Franciae rege, et domino Hyberniae Henrico eius nominis octavo. London: Richard Pynson, 1521.
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/480In this treatise d'Ailly sought to reconcile theology and the science of astronomy, which included astrology]]>2022-11-26T12:54:08-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1877The immediate impact of Dürer’s St. Jerome frontispiece of 1492 is evident in this woodcut of St. Ambrose, printed in Basel later the same year. Similar to the St. Jerome in conception but less sophisticated in its placement of objects on the floor, this print has been attributed to Dürer himself, although most scholars now assign it to an anonymous artisan in Basel.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:28-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1316First printed edition of St. Augustine's De civitate dei. This edition has bianchi girari decoration.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:20-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/491One of the foundational texts of the Christian tradition. Printed in 1467, it is the first of seventeen Latin editions printed during the fifteenth century.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:08-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1315De civitate dei, printed by the first printer in Venice, Johannes de Spira, and completed by his brother Vindelinus when Johannes died in 1470. This edition includes white-vine decorations painted over hand-stamped woodblock patterns.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:20-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1266Sixth printing of De civitate dei. This edition was the second to be printed with the fourteenth-century commentary by Trivet and Waleys.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:19-05:00
06062. AUGUSTINUS, Aurelius, Saint (354-430 CE). De civitate dei. Commentaries by Thomas Waleys and Nicolaus Trivet. Mainz: Peter Schoeffer, 5 September 1473.
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1755Book is in complete condition which is rare but also shows the widespread and prolonged use of the item. Early missals like this one were printed without notation for the owner to fill in.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:26-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1275Latin dictionary printed by either Gutenberg or Schoeffer. This copy has the Bull's Head watermarks, datable c. 1460. The printing date of this item is contested but is likely 1460.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:19-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1335Latin dictionary printed by either Gutenberg or Schoeffer. This copy has the Bull's Head watermarks, datable c. 1460. The printing date of this item is contested but is likely 1460.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:20-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/18A 1460 Latin Dictionary printed in Mainz: [Johann Gutenberg, first impression], 1460.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:00-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1287William Caxton's earliest publishing venture, the first edition of this encyclopedic Latin treatise "on the properties of things," was printed anonymously, without location or date of publication. The longstanding uncertainty surrounding its origins is reflected by an eighteenth-century inscription at the end this copy.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:19-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/569Books Jeremiah, Lamentations, and beginning of Baruch of the Gutenberg Bible. Includes hand decoration such as rubrication in red ink.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:09-05:00
06117. [Latin Bible (the "Gutenberg Bible")]. Biblia latina (31 leaves). Fragment of thirty-one consecutive leaves. [Mainz: Johannes Gutenberg, c. 1455].
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/127931 leaves of the Latin Vulgate Bible printed by Gutenberg in his style of 42 lines of "Missal" type per column.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:19-05:00
06117. [BIBLIA LATINA (the "Gutenberg Bible," or "42-Line Bible")]. Fragment of 31 leaves. [Mainz: Johannes Gutenberg, Johannes Fust, and Peter Schoeffer, c. 1454–55].
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/133931 leaves of the Latin Vulgate Bible printed by Gutenberg in his style of 42 lines of "Missal" type per column.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:20-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/861Single leaf of the Latin Bible printed by Gutenberg in 1454–1455. The text of the present leaf, consisting of Exodus 9:12-11:1, has been rubricated in red and blue.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:13-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1337Single leaf of the Latin Bible printed by Gutenberg in 1454–1455. The text of the present leaf, consisting of Exodus 9:12-11:1, has been rubricated in red and blue.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:20-05:00
06118. [LATIN BIBLE (the Gutenberg Bible")]. Biblia latina. Single leaf, printed on paper. [Mainz: Johannes Gutenberg and Johann Fust, c. 1455]. From The Thomas J. Harrison Bible Collection.
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1272Fourth printed edition of the Latin Bible by Fust and Schoeffer. They used a small typeface for extended private reading and included printed rubrics, colored initals, chapter numerals, and paragraph marks which were usually added by rubricators.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:19-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1334Fourth printed edition of the Latin Bible by Fust and Schoeffer. They used a small typeface for extended private reading and included printed rubrics, colored initals, chapter numerals, and paragraph marks which were usually added by rubricators.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:20-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1736The first of two volumes of the Latin scriptures, bound in Bohemia, and owned by the Franciscans of Tachov. Royal folio, 413 x 288 mm. Double columns, 248 lines.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:25-05:00