Halbleinen. 8° XV + 353 Seiten davon bis Seite 240e jeweils doppelt [links lateinisch, rechts deutsch mit gleicher Seitenzahl]. Halbleinenband. Klosterstempel auf Titelblatt, sehr gutes Exemplar: außen wie innen sauber und sehr schön 730 Gramm.
Halbleder. kl. 8° 443 Seiten, Sprache: Latein, OHalbledereinband, 920 Gramm.
Halbleinen. 8° XV + 353 Seiten und beigebunden: 50 Seiten, [jeweils doppelt, links lateinisch, rechts deutsch mit gleicher Seitenzahl]. Halbleinenband der Zeit. Buchrücken aufgehellt und leicht gebrauchsspurig, Schnitt und deshalb auch Seitenränder nachgedunkelt, Name auf Vorsatz und auf fliegendem Blatt, Vorsatz altersfleckig, innen sauber und gut 750 Gramm.
Sprache: mehrsprachig
Verlag: Regensburg: Manz, 1903
Anbieter: Antiquariat Axel Kurta, Berlin, Deutschland
Zustand: Gut. 8°. XV, 209 (eig. 418 S., doppelt pag.) Seiten, Seiten 210-224, 2 225-240e (40 S., doppelt pag.), Seiten 241-353. Halblleinen der Zeit. Der Einband berieben, das Papier gebräunt und etwas brüchig. Der deutsch Text in Frakturschrift. Der Text überwiegend parallel in Latein und Deutsch. Sprache: Deutsch / Latein.
Halbleder. 8° Acta: CXVIII+462 pp, Appendix: 799 pp. marmorierte Halbledereinbände auf 4 Bünden. Sprache: Latein, Bibl.-rückenschilder, Schnitt leicht fleckig, Klosterstempel auf Vorsatz und Titelblatt, selten am Rand schwach fleckig, sonst gut erhaltenes Exemplar 2150 Gramm.
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Brinkman, since 1954 / ILAB, Amsterdam, Niederlande
Gestel St.Michaëlis z.j. 4to. liii,338,172 pp. Halfmarokijn (st.op titel).
Liège 1850. vii,319 p. or.halfmorocco. (stamp on title) - The decrees of the congregation, created by pope Sixtus V, for the investigation of the cases of the saints. The congregaton was charged with eliminating abuses of the past and to remove doubt, by standardized legal procedure.
`Parisiis 1878, 569 pp. w57.
Verlag: Apud Francisc. Ferdinan. a Corduba, 1564
Anbieter: Blackwell's Rare Books ABA ILAB BA, Oxford, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 2.508,67
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den Warenkorblarge woodcut pair of coats of arms on title (Papal, and Philip II of Spain), woodcut printer's device at end (before Index), woodcut initials, first 50 pages badly water-stained, diminishing, or occasionally flaring, thereafter, two holes in the title-page with the loss of a corner of the king's arms, and 4 letters in the last line (which specifies the price: 4 reales in paper), some browning, pp. 311, [1, device], [20, Index, last leaf blank; MS on verso crossed out], 8vo, [bound with:] Generale Concilium Tridentinum. Continens omnia quae ab eius reductione per Iulium Tertium. vsq[ue] ad finem in eo gesta sunt. Compluti [Alcalá de Henares]: Juan de Brocar, 1554, woodcut device on title, woodcut initials, ff. 50, the last blank (but see below), contemporary annotations in Spanish, [and:] 4 leaves from another edition of the Canones & Decreta, 18th-century quasi catspaw calf, wide richly gilt borders on sides, rebacked somewhat crudely, newish labels, corners worn, old inscriptions on title, title inked on fore-edges. Second Valladolid edition, same year as the first, rare. The text appeared, hastily, more or less simultaneously in Alcalá de Henares (according to Palu, this is the first edition in Spain), Barcelona, Granada, Salamanca, Valencia, Valladolid, and Zaragoza, and elsewhere, similarly, throughout Catholic Europe. Evidence of haste (or at any rate speed) is apparent from the fact that Pius IV had only 'signed off' the text on 26 January 1564. The decrees of the council were acknowledged in Italy, Portugal, Poland and by the Catholic princes of Germany at the Diet of Augsburg in 1566. Philip II of Spain accepted them for Spain, the Netherlands and Sicily inasmuch as they did not infringe the royal prerogative. In France they were officially recognised by the king only in their doctrinal parts. 'The Council of Trent, the turning-point in the Counter-Reformation, created the modern Catholic Church. It represents not merely one of the decisive moments of the sixteenth century, but a moment whose influence is still felt all over Europe' (PMM, à propos Sarpi's history of the Council). Together with an interim report, which presents a bibliographical curiosity. The last leaf is blank on the recto, but on the verso is an impression of f. 41v.: this has been crossed out by the annotator. The succeeding leaves are Licences and Privileges form another edition of the Canones & Decreta, the text of the Privilege being the same as that of our Canones & Decreta, but a different setting. Finally, there are 2 leaves, being segments of a large Vulgate New Testament (featuring Christ's walking on the water). The binding, which is presumably Spanish, but feels Italian, seems to preserve the original grouping of the texts, and the extras. (Palau 42396 for the first edition).