farfel_n01_026_016

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cw057318 at Nov 15, 2022 08:08 PM

farfel_n01_026_016

16
Goff P2 - Brescia: Baptista Farfengus 12 Sept 1497 40 BMC VII 986
Pacificus Sommola P3 - [Venice: Joannes Baptisa de Seasa, 1498 - 1500 8"]
24 March, 1479 Pacificus. Somma pacifica conscientia
8* HC 12259 BMC 6:706
[inserted] #3445 [end inserted] Herman Mood - Incunabula in the Huntington Library - Z240 H9 (Ref.)

BMC VI p 706 Goff P-1
30 lines, 243 leaves, octavo, 138x80m Typr [inserted] in use 1479 + 80 [end inserted] 92GR
Capital spaces, guide letters, 1st letter of each paragraph
set out. A combination of roman capitals & clear
open gothic minuscules. Tail of h level & the line.

Proctor 5870 Pacifico Novarese (Revised by Gabriel Brebia) Sommola di
pacifica coscienza
Copy HEHL, PML Polain (B) 2960Milan, Philippus de Lavagnia
1492-1480 printed some 40 books
1481 -> 2; and 2 volumes from 1489 + 90.
Capitulo 22 u^2 - leaf 151

he was still alve in Oct. 1499

1st printed book connected to Lavagnia is the Cicero,
Epistolae ad familiares, compted 25 March 1472

Milan -> capital of Lombardy - Milan produced over 800 incunabola
[inserted] Z155 D 45 Rare Books Collection [end inserted]Notable Printers of Italy during the 15th C. - Theodore Low DeVinine
N.Y.: The Grolier Club, 1910.

Filippio de Lavagna [inserted] an educated + prosperous citizen of Milan [end inserted - in 1470 established a printing house in
Milan with Antonio Zarotto of Parma - the books published
by Lavagna. Lavagne's contribution to the enterprise was that
of owners of the plant, editor & publisher. Zarotto organized
his own company in 1472. He continued to print in Milan
until 1514, the date of his death. Christopher Valdarfer, a
master printer at Venice in 1471 was indiced by Lavagne to
transfer his plant to Milan in 1472, for Lavagne proposed
with other booksellers of Milan to provide Valdarfer [inserted] 1st issue in print of the Decameron [end inserted] with
work enough in 1473 to keep a presser busy.

[inserted] from Proctor [end inserted] It is a question how far Lavagnia was a printer. In 1498, certainly
he had books printed for him by Pachet & Scinzenzeler - at a later
period he was certainly more publisher than printer & possibly he had no
press at that time. - Pacificus Typo 6 2011 = 89mm.

farfel_n01_026_016

16
Goff P2 - Brescia: Baptista Farfengus 12 Sept 1497 40 BMC VII 986
Pacificus Sommola P3 - [Venice: Joannes Baptisa de Seasa, 1498 - 1500 8"]
24 March, 1479 Pacificus. Somma pacifica conscientia
8* HC 12259 BMC 6:706
[inserted] #3445 [end inserted] Herman Mood - Incunabula in the Huntington Library - Z240 H9 (Ref.)

BMC VI p 706 Goff P-1
30 lines, 243 leaves, octavo, 138x80m Typr [inserted] in use 1479 + 80 [end inserted] 92GR
Capital spaces, guide letters, 1st letter of each paragraph
set out. A combination of roman capitals & clear
open gothic minuscules. Tail of h level & the line.

Proctor 5870 Pacifico Novarese (Revised by Gabriel Brebia) Sommola di
pacifica coscienza
Copy HEHL, PML Polain (B) 2960Milan, Philippus de Lavagnia
1492-1480 printed some 40 books
1481 -> 2; and 2 volumes from 1489 + 90.
Capitulo 22 u^2 - leaf 151

he was still alve in Oct. 1499

1st printed book connected to Lavagnia is the Cicero,
Epistolae ad familiares, compted 25 March 1472

Milan -> capital of Lombardy - Milan produced over 800 incunabola
[inserted] Z155 D 45 Rare Books Collection [end inserted]Notable Printers of Italy during the 15th C. - Theodore Low DeVinine
N.Y.: The Grolier Club, 1910.

Filippio de Lavagna [inserted] an educated + prosperous citizen of Milan [end inserted - in 1470 established a printing house in
Milan with Antonio Zarotto of Parma - the books published
by Lavagna. Lavagne's contribution to the enterprise was that
of owners of the plant, editor & publisher. Zarotto organized
his own company in 1472. He continued to print in Milan
until 1514, the date of his death. Christopher Valdarfer, a
master printer at Venice in 1471 was indiced by Lavagne to
transfer his plant to Milan in 1472, for Lavagne proposed
with other booksellers of Milan to provide Valdarfer [inserted] 1st issue in print of the Decameron [end inserted] with
work enough in 1473 to keep a presser busy.

[inserted] from Proctor [end inserted] It is a question how far Lavagnia was a printer. In 1498, certainly
he had books printed for him by Pachet & Scinzenzeler - at a later
period he was certainly more publisher than printer & possibly he had no
press at that time. - Pacificus Typo 6 2011 = 89mm.