Navicula siue speculu[m] fatuor[um] prestantissimi sacrarum literarum doctoris Joannis Geyler Keysersbergii concionatoris Argentinensis in sermones.
Navicula siue speculu[m] fatuor[um] prestantissimi sacrarum literarum doctoris Joannis Geyler Keysersbergii concionatoris Argentinensis in sermones.
Metodi di Pagamento
- PayPal
- Carta di Credito
- Bonifico Bancario
- Pubblica amministrazione
- Carta del Docente
Dettagli
- Anno di pubblicazione
- 1511
- Luogo di stampa
- Argentorati (Strasbourg), Johann Prüss
- Autore
- Johann Geiler von Kaisersberg, Beatus Rhenanus, Jacob Otther
- Formato
- Quarto (20x14cm)
- Illustratore
- Albrecht Dürer, Gnad-Her-Meister, Haintz-Nar-Meister
- Stato di conservazione
- Molto buono
- Condizioni
- Usato
- Prima edizione
- True
Descrizione
In 4to (20 x 14.4 cm). 280 ff. Title-page woodcut of the ship of fools, 112 large woodcuts in the text, all enclosed within a decorative border on both sides, some colored in red by a contemporary hand. Some light browning and minor soiling, occasional small dampstain in upper margins, small marginal repairs. Contemporary (with 1509 printed on fore board) German blind-tooled pigskin over wooden boards, tooled with the series of the seven capital virtues and two different floral rolls, two fore-edge catchplates and remains of clasps.
First illustrated edition (first in 1510, again in Strassburg), with at least 73 woodcuts attributed to Albrecht Dürer, of the series of sermons by the learned Alsatian preacher Johann Geiler Von Kaisersberg, delivered in Strassburg in 1501-1502 and written as a commentary on Sebastian Brant's "Ship of Fools", where the woodcuts were first published in 1494. The illustrations are in fact printed from the blocks of the first edition of the Narrenschiff (Basel: 1494).
Great example of the early German Renaissance art the woodcuts represent 110 different types of fools emblematic of specific vices (injustice, avarice, indecency, infidelity, gluttony), each accompanied by a sermon. Six woodcuts appear twice and 2 appear three times.
Geiler (1445-1510), a respected theology professor in Basel and Freiburg, became very popular for his vehemence against Church abuses and corruption, here through the allegory of a ship led by fools to Narragonia, the paradise of fools. His powerful and unconventional sermons, boldly delivered in the vernacular language of everyday life, were famed for capturing and retaining the public's interest as he endeavored to divert them from lives steeped in vice, sin, and moral decline.
Precious copy in contemporary binding and hand-coloring.
Reference: VD 16, G 778; Adams G-316; BMC STC German, p. 335; Chrisman C3.2.5b; Proctor 9995; Ritter, Catalog 1084; Brunet, II, 1575-76