John Price Antiquarian Books: Antiquities
found: 4 books

 
CARACCIOLI (Charles):
The Antiquities of Arundel; The Peculiar Privilege of its Castle and Lordship; With an Abstract of the Lives of the Earls of Arundel, From the Conquest to this Time. By the Master of the Grammar-School at Arundel. By the Master of the Gramar-School at Arundel.
London: Printed for the Author; and sold by G. Robinson and T. Robets...[inter alia] 1766. FIRST EDITION. 8vo, 205 x 123 mms., pp. [vi], 276 [277 - 280 list of subscribers, including Richard Nash], with two dedication leaves, one to the Duke of Norfolk and a second to Edward Howard, the heir apparent to the Duke of Norfolk. Bound in later calf, rebacked, red morocco label; ex-library with East Sussex Count Library stamp in blind on rear cover, A good to very good copyl. The topographer Charles Caraccioli (1722 - ?1783), though born in Le Mans, moved to England in the 1750s and published a number of books thereafter. Since there was no grammar school at Arundel in 1766, his self-description is a bit dubious. The work was reviewed in The Monthly Review for 1766: "The antiquities of Arundel employ but few pages of this volume; which is chiefly filled with Memoirs of the Earls of Arundel.... With respect to the work before us, however, it may afford amusements to those, who having some acquaintance with the town and castle of Arundel, in their present state, may be desirous of improving that acquaintance with an intimacy with the history and antiquities of the place: especially the history of those great men who have borne the title of Earls of Arundel; in which there are some entertaining anecdotes."
John Price Antiquarian BooksProfessional seller
Book number: 10017
GBP 385.00 [Appr.: EURO 452.75 US$ 522.95 | JP¥ 75359]
Catalogue: Antiquities
Keywords: antiquities topography prose

 
[GROAT (Alexander)]
Thoughts on Orkney and Zetland, Their Antiquities and Capabilities of Improvement: with Hints towards the Formation of a Local Society for the Investigation and Promotion of These Objects: to which are annexed Extracts from Curious Manuscripts, Together with Useful Lists. Not Printed for Sale.
Edinburgh: Printed by Neill & Co. MDCCCXXI, 1831. FIRST AND ONLY EDITION. 8vo, 210 x 128 mms., pp. [7] 8 - 47 [48 blank], including half-title, recently rebound in maroon cloth. A very good copy. The young gentlemen who met in 1831 to boost awareness of the importance of Orkney and Shetland waxed enthusiastically about the islands: "These island, though now in a state of great obscurity, were formerly the seat to many gallant exploits." "It [the islands] may be considered as a part of the nortHern order of the kinggom, affording, perhaps, in its tales of the days or youe, legends as interesting as some of those on which the minstrelsy of the southern border of Scotland has been famed." Uncommon. Copies locaed in Society of Antiquaries of London Library, Aberdeen, National Museums Scotland Library, and NLS.
John Price Antiquarian BooksProfessional seller
Book number: 10484
GBP 275.00 [Appr.: EURO 323.5 US$ 373.54 | JP¥ 53828]
Catalogue: Antiquities
Keywords: antiquities archeology Scottish

 
ROSINUS (Joannes):
Antiquitatum Romanarum Corpus Absolutissimum, in quo praeter ea quae Ioannes Rosinus delineaverat, infinitia supplentur, mutantur, adduntur: ex Criticis, et Omnibus utriusque linguae auctoribus collectum: Poetis, Oratoribus, Historicis, Jurisconsultiis, qui laudati, explicate, correctiq: Thoma Dempstero... Edition Postrema, emendatior.
Genevae. Apud Petrum & Jacobum Chouet, 1632. 4to, 211 x 151 mms., pp. [xxxii], 1063 [1064 blank, 1065 - 1202 index], title-page printed in red and black with engraved vignette, 2 folding engraved maps, one of early Rome, another of the Forum (short tear in one fold), engraved woodcuts on pp. 778, 121, 125, 130, 143, 151, 169, 125, 130, 143, 151, 169, 170, 174, 176, 177, 198, 199, 203, 230, 2237, 281, 285, 292, 297, 298, 304, 319, 320, 359, 509, 569, 579, 748, 110, and 1007, including several almost full-page ones, contemporary vellum, red morocco label; some lower margins closely trimmed but with no loss, occasional ink stain, but a very good copy, with the following ownership inscriptions on the top margin of the recto of the front free end-paper: "J. T. Coleridge/ C. C. C./ Oxford/ Given him by Boileau Merton Coll./ May 20th 1812/ Given by him to John Duke Coleridge/ July 6th 1837." Sir John Taylor Coleridge (1790 - 1876) was a nephew of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772 - 1834). Boileau is almost certain Sir John Peter Boileau (1794 - 1869), a graduate of Merton College, Oxford; and John Duke Coleridge (1820 - 1894) was the son of John Taylor Coleridge. A very attractive provenance. The precocious Scottish scholar Thomas Dempster (1579 - 1629) had an eventful life, leaving home for Cambridge sometime after his elder brother married his father's mistress. He attended Pembroke College for a while, then went to Paris for further education and was robbed of his money and clothes on his way. He was affected by the outbreak of Plague in Paris, but recovered, and pursued his studies in Louvain. In 1613, he published this edition of Rosinus and dedicated it to James VI and I of Scotland and England. Rosinus (1550 - 1626) published this work on Roman antiquities in 1585. This is the first posthumous publication of Demptster's edition.
John Price Antiquarian BooksProfessional seller
Book number: 7296
GBP 1045.00 [Appr.: EURO 1229 US$ 1419.44 | JP¥ 204546]
Catalogue: Antiquities
Keywords: antiquities provenance prose

 
TURNOR (Edmond):
Description of an Ancient Castle at Rouen in Normandy, Built by Henry V. King of England, &c. &c. Read at the Society of Antiquaries of London, April 1,1784. And published in the Seventh Volumes of the Archaeologia, or Miscellaneous Tracts relating to Antiquity.
London: Printed by J. Nichols, Printer to the Society, 1785. 4to, 258 x 200 mms., pp. [ii], 5 [6 blank], folding engraved plate, 450 x 320 mms., recently recased in quarter calf, marbled boards. A very good copy. The antiquary Edmond Turnor (1755?-1829), was born into a family with a large estate in Lincolnshire, which enabled him to pursue his interests in antiquities, publishing an account of sculptures and paintings in Guildhall in London, even before he went to university. After finishing a B. A. and an M. S. at Trinity College, Cambridge, he embarked upon the "Grand Tour," when he saw, among other ruins, the castle at Rouen, called Le Château du Vieux Palais. After presenting this paper at a meeting of the Society of Antiquaries in 1784, He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1786 and continued for the rest of his life to indulge his passion for antiquarian pursuits. ESTC T109986 locates copies in BL and Ripley Castle Library. OCLC adds a copy in NLS. I was unable to find a library in North America or the UK which had a copy of volume 7 of Archaeologia, or Miscellaneous Tracts relating to Antiquity in which the description was first published. There is one, however, in the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek in München.
John Price Antiquarian BooksProfessional seller
Book number: 7767
GBP 495.00 [Appr.: EURO 582.25 US$ 672.37 | JP¥ 96890]
Catalogue: Antiquities
Keywords: antiquities architecture prose

| Pages: 1 |