Verlag: Creative Media Partners, LLC Aug 2018, 2018
ISBN 10: 034162019X ISBN 13: 9780341620198
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Taschenbuch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work.
Verlag: Leipzig, Michael Lantzenberger, 1590., 1590
Anbieter: Versandantiquariat Wolfgang Friebes, Graz, Österreich
Zustand: 0. Zweite Ausgabe. - Zu Beginn Wurmspur im unteren weißen Rand. Zeitgen. Unterstreichungen u. Marginalien. Etw. gebräunt. - VD16, N 373; nicht bei Adams u. im BM STC, German Books. la Gewicht in Gramm: 500 8°. Mit einer Holzschn.-Titelvignette. 351 S., Mod. marmor. Ppbd. m. dreiseitigem Rotschnitt.
Anbieter: Antiquariat Fatzer ILAB, Zug, Schweiz
Basel, o.Vlg 1564. 8°. 87 S., 527 S. (griech./latein.) Pergament d.Zt. mit gepr. Deckelornamentik. Berieben und bestossen. Stempel auf Titelblatt. Eine frühere Ausgabe erschien 1557 in Basel bei Jacob Parcus für Johannes Oporin. Vgl. Hieronymus. Griechischer Geist aus Basler Pressen Nr. 313. Gutes Exemplar.
Verlag: Basel, Oporinus, 1556, 1556
Anbieter: Bachmann & Rybicki UG haftungsbeschränkt, Dresden, Deutschland
8°(17,5x12cm), 465 S., 23 nn.S., flex. Pergamenteinband d. Zt. mit späterem RS - Neanders Sammlung bedeutender Sprüche etc. gräkolatinischer Schriftsteller. - Einband berieben und fleckig, Bindebänder erneuert. Papier altersbedingt leicht gebräunt, teils feuchtrandig, teils leicht braunfleckig Titel mit hs. Namenszug, Titel verso mit altem Bibliotheksstempel. Seltener Titel.
152 pp., (1) folded table, 87, 527 pp. Each part has its own title-page.Contemporay pigskin over wooden boards, two clasps. Binding rubbed, initials IEW, dated 1570 on upper cover; centrepiece with Justitia on upper and Lucretia on lower cover [hard to identify].Adams N-110; VD16 N-374.
2 volumes. Johannes Steinman, Leipzig 1577. 4to. 789 + 268+(16)+191 pages. Contemporary brown half-calf bindings. Name on titlepage in both volumes. Bindings with traces of age, however intact. Some marginal water stains. * Parallel text in Greek and Latin.
Verlag: per Ludovicum Lucium, 1556
Anbieter: Symonds Rare Books Ltd, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Hardcover. Zustand: Fine. PINDARUS (Michael Neander, ed.). Aristologia pindarica Graecolatina. Basel, per Ludovicum Lucium, 1556. £2500 8vo, pp. [xxxii] 434 [iv], α-β8 a-z8 A-D8 E4. Greek, Roman, and italic letter. Decorated initials, original Greek text and Latin translation, and commentary on page margins. All annotated mainly by the same hand with scholarly care for emendation and erudite observations; extensive and continuous underlining throughout and frequent strikethrough erasing lines for correction purposes. T-p with early inscription; autograph of Cambridge classical scholar James Bailey, dated "24 Dec. 1822", on recto of front endpaper (top of leaf towards hinge torn away), probably the author of most marginalia; ms. Latin note on verso with mention of Christian Gottlob Heyne's appreciation of this commentary by Neander in the second part of his work dedicated to Pindar's poems (p. 109, 1773). Ms. indexing on verso of rear flyleaf and note on rear pastedown: "collated perfect J. H. 1818", plus another crossed out note with date "1816". Margin edges slightly soiled and browned due to wearing and aging. Only flaw in the text block is at leaf a4, where a little square of paper has been cut off the central part of the margin with loss of few letters. In a remarkable yet very worn contemporary German alum-tawed pigskin over boards blind-tooled with decorative rolls, representing the personification of the seven virtues (initial F. H. readable in some sections), and central panel stamps. Front cover panel set between initials "I O A" and publication date, showing a trompe-l'oeil architectural landscape (Parnassus?) with Apollo playing the lyre at top; rear cover panel represents a scene with buildings, figures, an floral motives (image blurred and confused), and a psalm verse underneath: "voluntatem timentium se faciet" (Vulgate 144:19). Dark leather label on spine with gilt title and author. Worn spine caps and board corners. A very interesting copy in a sixteenth-century elaborate Protestant binding, overall in good condition. This work is an anthology of Pindar's best poems, a collection of the finest poetic texts of this Greek poet, which is provided with a Latin translation and commentary by the scholar Michael Neander (1529-1581), a Protestant polymath educated at Luther' and Melanchthon's University of Wittenberg. Neander included in is glosses several references to works on Pindar by other authors, such as the great humanist Desiderius Erasmus, who devoted plenty of room to Pindar's sayings and aphorisms in his Adages (1500). In the introductory letter to his work, Neander states he made use of the precious studies on Pindar by Johannes Lonicer and Philipp Melanchthon. The work is dedicated to the German classical scholar Valentin Friedland of famous Protestant School of Goldberg in Silesia. He died in 1556, the same year this book was published. At the end of the book is included a selection of short texts and mottos by the Father of the Church and pagan authors. ADCAM, P1241.
Lithographie b. Görges, 1843, 9 x 11,8.
Verlag: Ludovicus Lucius [Ludwig Lucius], Basel, 1556
Anbieter: Antiquariat Rolf Bulang, Dautphetal, Deutschland
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Gut. Erste Ausgabe. 16 Blatt, 434 S., 2 Blatt. Schlichter Pappband des späteren 19. Jahrhunderts. Mit Exlibris Jakob Heinrich Anderhub und kleinem Namensstempel. Der Melanchthonschüler Michael Neander (1525-1595) aus Sorau in der Niederlausitz war langjähriger Leiter der Klosterschule Ilfeld. Er gilt als einer der bedeutendsten evangelischen Pädagogen des 16. Jahrhunderts und seine Ilfelder Schule wurde von Melanchthon als das beste Seminar im Lande gerühmt. Seine hier vorliegende Auswahl von Gedichten Pindars wird von seiner lateinischen Übersetzung und Kommentierung begleitet, die noch Chr. G. Heyne sehr schätzte. Schöner Druck mit 10 illustrierten Initialen. F. Hieronymus: Griechischer Geist aus Basler Pressen, Nr. 211 (mit ausführlicher Inhaltsangabe von Neanders Einleitung); Adams P 1241; Brunet IV, 28; Graesse IV, 653; Schweiger I, 237; VD16 ZV 12485; Short-Title Catalogue of German Books in the British Museum, p. 697. Bauer: Bibliotheca librorum rariorum universalis III, 114. Der Einband an den Gelenken und den Stehkanten etwas berieben und einige wenige Seiten mit geringen Unterstreichungen von alter Hand in Tinte, insgesamt handelt es sich jedoch um ein ordentliches, gut erhaltenes Exemplar.
Verlag: Basileae, Ioannem Oporinum., 1565
Anbieter: Antiquariat Weinek, Salzburg, Österreich
340 [recte 342] + 421 S. Blindgeprägter OLd. der Zeit, ohne Schließen. In latein. Sprache. Vgl. VD16 N 379: ohne die Leerblätter. S. 3 und 4 in sauber Handschrift alt ergänzt (stockfleckig bzw. fleckig): d.h. es fehlt das Blatt mit der gedruckten Initiale. Mit einem Faltblatt im zweiten Teil (nach S. 390). - Besitzsign. u. Besitzst. a. T., hds. Notizen am rückw. V. (Spiegel). R. altgefärbt und m. Buchstaben versehen (Bibliothek?), tlw. leicht stockfleckig bzw. fleckig, leichte Gbrsp. - Neander, (1525 - 1595), studierte als Schüler Philipp Melanchthons in Wittenberg und wurde auf dessen Empfehlung 1547 Lehrer in Nordhausen. Ab 1550 unterrichtete er an der Klosterschule in Ilfeld, deren Leitung er 1559 übernahm, nachdem er 1554 den Magister in Wittenberg erworben hatte. Er veröffentlichte über 50 Lehrbücher und gab Klassikerausgaber heraus. Seine Vorrede zu den Graecae Linguae erotemata (1553) ist der Versuch einer umfassenden Literaturgeschichte. Neander gehörte zu den bedeutenen evang. Schulmännern des 16. Jh., die Frömmigkeit mit klassischer Bildung und Realwissen verbanden. (DBE). Sprache: lateinisch.
Verlag: Basel, Johannes Oporinus (1564)., 1564
Anbieter: Antiquariat Burgverlag, Wien, Österreich
8°. Titel, 190 S., 1 w. Bl., Zwischentitel, S. 195-317, 1 w. Bl., Zwischentitel, S. 323-528, 16 Bll. Reich blindgeprägtes Schweinsldr. d. Zeit auf 3 Bünden mit 2 intakten Schließen. Einband berieben, an unteren beiden Bünden mit kl. Fehlstellen, einige Lagen gebräunt, Spiegel u. einige Seiten mit zeitgen. Annotationen in Latein und Altgriechisch. VD16 ZV 25122; Irena Backus, Early Christianity in Michael Neander`s Greek-Latin Edition of Luther`s Catechism, in: Ligota/Quantin, History of Scholarship, Oxford 2006; vgl. Graesse IV, 305 - Zweite Auflage der erstmals 1558 in Basel bei Johannes Oporinus (1507-1568) erschienenen griechisch-lateinischen Übersetzung von Martin Luthers (1483-1546) "Kleinem Katechismus". Die Übersetzungen stammen von Michael Neander (1525-1595) und seinem Schüler Johannes Mylius (1535-1575). Die vorliegende zweite Auflage ist stark erweitert und enthält erstmals auch die Apokryphen sowie nicht-biblische Texte zu Christus und Maria in latein und griechisch. In den Jahren zwischen der ersten und zweiten Auflage scheint sich Neanders Interessensschwerpunkt in Bezug auf die apokryphen Texte geändert zu haben: [.] at some point between 1557 and 1563 (the date of the preface) Neander`s focus had shifted from short Sapiential, pagan, and patristic pieces, to the historical and didactic value of what we call nowadays Christian Apocrypha. (Backus, S. 201-202). Eine dritte, nochmals erweiterte Ausgabe erschien 1567 ebenfalls in der Offizin Oporinus, die im 16. Jahrhundert eine der größten Basels war. Vorderer Spiegel mit zeitgenössischen Besitzvermerken und Notizen. Der Namenszug "Tobias Schultheis Werth. (unleserlich)" ist mehrmals durchgestrichen, darunter "Wendelinus Eyering Anno Domini 1628". Unten links mit zeitgen. Preisvermerk "Hic liber constat 6 gr." Gewicht in Gramm: 1000.
Verlag: Thieme, Stuttgart, 1997
ISBN 10: 3131019514 ISBN 13: 9783131019516
Anbieter: Celler Versandantiquariat, Eicklingen, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: GIAQ
Thieme, Stuttgart, 1997. 310 S. mit 82 Abbildungen und 31 Tabellen, kartoniert, (eine Seite mit kleiner Eckknickspur)---- sonst gutes Exemplar / Pflegepraxis / DBfK Deutscher Berufsverband für Pflegeberufe e. V. - 626 Gramm.
Verlag: Mecke Druck und Verlag, Duderstadt, 2000
ISBN 10: 3932752554 ISBN 13: 9783932752551
Anbieter: Das Buchregal GmbH, Ginsheim-Gustavsburg, HE, Deutschland
Zustand: Gut. Broschur 164 Seiten __Versicherter Versand mit DHL als versichertes Paket__, kleinere Gebrauchsspuren, innen sauber und ordentlich,Eintrag/Stempel im Vorsatz oder Nachsatz, ____Zustand siehe Bilder; weitere Bilder/Infos gern auf Anfrage____Die von uns Angebotenen Bücher kommen aus Nichtraucherhashalten und sind, wenn nicht anders beschrieben, mit normalen Gebrauchsspuren____ Versicherter Versand mit Sendungsnummer Ihr Buchregal Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 300.
Verlag: ,
Anbieter: Govi Rare Books LLC, Woodside, New York City, NY, USA
Zustand: Buono (Good). Three works in one volume, 8vo. I. MACROPEDIUS: (2), 123 [i.e. 125], (1) leaves. A-Q8 (Q8 is a blank). With the printer's device on the title-page. Contemporary vellum over boards, blind-stamped fillets on the panels with the lettering P.V.B 1597 on the front panel, old entries of ownership on the title-page. Ex libris Franz Pollak-Parnau. Catalogo unico, IT\ICCU\BVEE\021641. RARE EDITION. This is a literal reprint of the Birckmann edition of 1568. Macropedius' most successful textbook, dedicated to the youth of Utrecht, on the art of letter writing was first published as Epistolica at Antwerp by Hillen in 1543 and after his death under the title Methodus conscribendi epistolas in 1561 at Dillingen. Added to this edition for the first time was the tract Epitome praeceptionum de paranda copia verborum & rerum, per quaestiones, which was falsely attributed to Macropedius, and, in fact, was written by Johannes Rivius (1500-1553) and first published at Wesel in 1548. Printed at the end is also Christoph Hegendorff's (1500-1540) Modus conscribendi epistolas; this is a literal reprint of the edition that appeared in Hagenau in 1526. ?Macropedius' Epistolica is divided into two parts, the first treating the invention, the second, disposition and elocution. Although Macropedius does not acknowledge Erasmus, in the first part he draws on the Opus de conscribendis epistolis in prescribing forms of greeting, address, and farewell and in classifying letters. He names five categories; demonstrative, deliberative, judicial, didascalicum or dialecticum (Erasmus' letter of discussion), and indicativum (Erasmus' extraordinary or family class). Macropedius provides his own sample letters, and he is more rigid in applying rhetorical precepts to letter writing than Erasmus. Although he concedes that the structure of the letter varies with the type of argument, he nevertheless defines for each type except the familiar or formal structure based on the divisions of the oration. This is a procedure that Erasmus had criticized in Francesco Negro's De modo epistolandi. Macropedius emphasizes art much more, individual judgment and the demands of decorum much less, than Erasmus? (J. Rice Henderson, Humanism and the Humanities. Erasmus's ?Opus de conscribendis epistolis' in Sixteenth Century Schools, in: ?Letter-Writing Manuals and Instruction from Antiquity to the Present?, C. Poster & L.C. Mitchell, eds., Columbia, SC, 2007, p. 158). Georgius Macropedius was born as Joris van Langhvelt in Gemert (North Brabant, the Netherlands). Little is known about his boyhood. After having attended the parish school he moved to s'-Hertogenbosch. Here, he attended the local grammar school and lived in one of the boarding-houses of the Brothers of the Common Life. In 1502, at the age of fifteen, he became a member of the fraternity and prepared for a career in teaching. About ten years later he was ordained and started teaching Latin at the municipal grammar school. In the years 1506?1510 he had already started writing Latin plays for his students. The first drafts of his drama Asotus (The Prodigal Son) date from this period. He took on a classic name, as was the custom among sixteenth century humanists: Joris became Georgius and Van Langhvelt was translated into Macropedius. In 1524 he was appointed headmaster of St. Jerome's in Liège. In 1527 Macropedius returned to 's-Hertogenbosch and by the end of 1530 he had already moved to Utrecht, and, reputed to be a loyal Roman Catholic, was appointed headmaster. He transformed St. Jerome's in Utrecht into the most famous school of the country. He taught Latin, Greek, poetry, rhetoric, and possibly Hebrew, mathematics, rhetoric, and theory of music too. Every year he composed both text and music of a lengthy Latin school song. At St. Jerome's he wrote most of his Latin textbooks and plays, which were published not only in Utrecht, but also in Antwerp, Basel, Cologne, Frankfurt, 's-Hertogenbosch, Paris, and in London. In the years 1552?1554 his collected works were revised and edited in two volumes in Utrecht: Omnes Georgii Macropedii Fabulae Comicae. The songs were now printed together with their music. Afterwards, he only wrote one more play: Jesus Scholasticus. In 1557 or 1558 he resigned as headmaster of the school, and left Utrecht to return to his native soil, Brabant. Here he lived for another year in the House of Brothers of the Common Life in 's-Hertogenbosch. He died at the age of 71 in this town during a period of plague in July 1558, and was buried in the Brothers' church. After his death his grateful former students erected a monumental tomb there, with an epitaph. They had a portrait painted of their beloved master, which was hung over the tomb. Both tomb and painting have disappeared and so has the church. His schoolbooks proved Macropedius to be a man of great humanist culture and a follower of Erasmus. He knew all about the seven Free Arts and the Three Languages Latin, Greek and Hebrew. He was very familiar with the classic Greek and Roman literature, with the Bible and the writings of the Fathers of the Church as well. Many reprints of his textbooks in the Netherlands, in Germany, in France, and in England prove that Macropedius' activities were highly esteemed by his contemporaries and by the next generation of humanists as well. By writing his books and his teachings, Macropedius contributed very much to the successful humanist educational reform in the first part of the sixteenth century. He indefatigably promoted Greek, not only the reading of the New Testament but also the study of the works of the classic Greek authors. Macropedius, however, owes his greatest fame to his twelve plays. In the Netherlands and in Germany he was the first, the most productive, and the best Latin playwright (cf. H. Giebels & F. Slits, Georgius Macropedius 1487?1558. Leven en Werken van een Brabantse humanist, Tilburg, 2005, passim). II. NEANDER: (16), 141, (2) pp. )(8, A-K8 (K8 i.
Verlag: Francofurti (Frankfurt) 1631 bei Drucker: Fitzer, William und Hoffmann, Wolfgang / Leipzig, Steinmann, Hans (Erben), 1588., 1631
Anbieter: Antiquariat Carl Wegner, Berlin, B, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: GIAQ
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. 16,0 : 9,5 cm. Pergamentband der Zeit auf 5 durchgezogenen Bünden und mit spanischen Kanten. Dreiseitenrotschnitt. Das Pergament gering fleckig und angestaubt. Privater Vorbesitzerstempel und Namenszug auf dem Innendeckel. Der Lucretius in Latein, Neander in altgriechisch. Mit einigen gestochenen Vignetten. Sauber, fest im Block. Gut erhalten. -- Bitte Portokosten außerhalb EU erfragen! / Please ask for postage costs outside EU! / S ' il vous plait demander des frais de port en dehors de l ' UE! -- Genießen Sie den Sommer und bestellen Sie was zum Lesen! M13813.