farfel_n03_136_197

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Status: Needs Review

197
Feb 85
Dr. Eichenberger
Bein wil am See
Gift
Brit Museum S.T.C (French) Decretum Gratinai cum multis Noviter Additis (25.8. 1509)
Gratianus, the amoniot. Decretum bifolium
Cam. Bartholmaeus Brixiensis. Gothic L. 3 pt.
I. Sacon: in Lugduni urbe 1509. fol 5016. h. I.
ccccxxiiii [26] xlvi numb I. (42.5cm)
Sacon' sassocia en 1509 et 1510 avec Nicolas Benedetti
imprimeur a Lyon. "Margarita decreti" at end.
Ref: Baudrier XII 323, Treves 1731.
Bartholomau of Brescia was a 13th C. canon lawyer at
the schools of Bologna + is said to have been murdered
in 1258. He is well known for his gloss on the Decretum
of Gratin.
fo. XLIIII Distinctio XLIIII fiiii
Prime Pars
fo. XLV Distinctio XLV (fv)
Prima pars
Cop: Harvard Univ. - Law School Lib., B.M. 5016 h

1st known book from press of Jacobus Sacon (1472-1530) -
S. Brent, Stultifera hevis, Lyon: 28 June 1488 (ie 1498) Goff B-1093.

#16 The 1st Latin Bible with the ordinary + interliner glosses. It was printed
H.P. Kraus Cradle of Printing for A. Koberger by A. Rusch in Strass berg with Types lent to him by J.
Amerbuch in Basle. The great merits of the Rusch Bible as a work of
Gunst Z240 K9 of printing was already appreciated by contemporaries. Shortly after its
publication it was hailed as an "immersum pus" by the canon
Rudolf von Langen in Muenster, a key figure in the circle of the
early West falian humanists in a poem he addresse to Rusch. -

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