Anbieter: Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 17,76
Anzahl: Mehr als 20 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: New. In.
Anbieter: Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 31,26
Anzahl: Mehr als 20 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: New. In.
Sprache: Englisch
Erscheinungsdatum: 1876
Anbieter: K Books Ltd ABA ILAB, York, YORKS, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 29,83
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbNo Binding. Zustand: Very Good. A fine, scarce engraved portrait. Mounted/matted and ready to frame. Attractive, decorative and unusual. Portrait of Sir John Cheke, Canon of King Henry VIII's College, Oxford. Impressed library stamp to top corner of portrait - print was part of a collection legally disposed of by the library in question.
Verlag: Typis T. H[arper] & R. H[odgkinson] impensis Danielis Frere habitantis in parva Britannia, ad insigne Tauri rubri, London, 1640
Anbieter: ERIC CHAIM KLINE, BOOKSELLER (ABAA ILAB), Santa Monica, CA, USA
Second edition. Small quarto (8" x 6"). (16), 303, (1)pp. Text in Latin. Rebound in modern half calf, gilt, over marbled paper covered boards. Woodcut decoration on title page. Text decorated with woodcut head & tail pieces and large woodcut initials. Title page lightly foxed and there is occasional light browning. Verso of title has 2 contemporary hand-drawn genealogical tables. STC 6008 This book was drawn up under the direction of Thomas Cranmer as an intended code of canon law, but never enacted. Cranmer was excommunicated, deprived of his bishopric and burned at the stake, March 21, 1556, under Queen Mary, primarily because of his support for Lady Jane Grey as Protestant Queen of England. This is the 2nd edition of Cranmer's revision of the canon law, 1st published in 1571. It was translated into Latin from the English manuscript copy by Walter Haddon and Sir John Cheke. Edited by John Foxe, whose initials appear on A2r. "Hodgkinson pr[inted]. quires A-S, T*; Harper the rest"-- (OCLC).
Verlag: Basel, Nikolaus Episcopius the younger, 1555., 1555
Anbieter: Bernard Quaritch Ltd ABA ILAB, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 1.133,44
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den Warenkorb8vo, pp.[xii], [4, blank], '349' (recte351), [1, blank]; woodcut printer's device to title, woodcut initials, a very good copy; bound in late eighteenth-century English polished calf, spine gilt in compartments with gilt red morocco lettering-piece, edges stained red, marbled endpapers, blue ribbon place-marker; extremities very slightly rubbed, corners a little worn; inscription dated 1830 erased from front flyleaf.First edition of this collection of letters between John Cheke and Stephen Gardiner debating the correct pronunciation of classical Greek, printed in Basel, where Cheke was in exile during the reign of Queen Mary. Sir John Cheke (15141557) was appointed the first Regius professor of Greek at Cambridge in 1540, later becoming tutor to EdwardVI. He was one of the most significant promoters of humanist learning in England, teaching all manner of notable men of the Tudor age, from Roger Ascham to William Cecil. As a committed Protestant connected to the Lords Protector Somerset and Northumberland, he was also heavily involved with religious reform. His involvement with Lady Jane Grey led to his imprisonment in the Tower and his exile to the Continent, where, shortly after this publication, he was apprehended in Antwerp and returned to the Tower. He was forced to recant his Protestantism to avoid being burnt at the stake, but died shortly after being freed. The pronunciation of Greek was a matter of great interest to humanist scholars of the late fifteenth century, and in 1528 Erasmus composed a treatise to explain that it should not be spoken in the manner of modern (Byzantine) Greek, but closer to the patterns of speaking recorded in classical texts. In the 1530s John Cheke and his colleague Thomas Smith also investigated problems of pronunciation, but following Cheke's lectures on this, the new Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, Stephen Gardiner, Bishop of Winchester and later Lord Chancellor under QueenMary, issued a decree in 1542 to prevent this teaching. Gardiner, while acknowledging the justification for the change, considered that it would cause problems with those used to the established pronunciation. The outcome of the dispute reflected the idea that English and Greek did not need the intermediary presence of Latin, with its association with the Roman Church, and Gardiner's reaction has also been attributed to a desire to prevent the challenge to authority made by the change in pronunciation. The printing of this work in Basel was arranged by the Italian scholar Celio Secundo Curione, apparently without Cheke's knowledge. The laudatory preface is addressed to SirAnthony Cooke, another tutor of the late EdwardVI, also in exile on the Continent. USTC 667485; VD16 C 2144; Adams C1432. Language: Latin.