Details
MEDIAVILLA, Richardus de (fl. 1280). Commentum super quarto Sententiarum. Edited by Franciscus Gregorius. Venice: Dionysius Bertochus, 10 November 1489.
Chancery 2o (295 x 205 mm). Collation: 2s8 3s6 ( blank, r table, 3r quire register); a-o8 p-q6 r-y8.6 z 8 6 (a1r text, 5v colophon, 6 blank). 218 leaves. 64 lines and headline, double column. Types: 6:114G (headlines and first words of chapters), 5:67G. 2- and 4-line initials with printed guide letters. Initials supplied in red. (Blank a1 with loss at lower fore corner, first leaf soiled, marginal repairs to last 4 leaves, occasional mostly marginal worming, approximately 15 leaves browned, 3-4 with marginal paper repairs). Modern library leather, contemporary manuscript title on lower edges.
Provenance: Reichenhall (near Munich), Augustinians of St. Zeno (?17th-century inscription on first page) -- Munich, Royal Library (duplicate inscription on r).
Third edition of this commentary on Peter Lombard's Sentences by the English Franciscan Richard Middleton, a theologian and scholar of canon law who may have taught Duns Scotus. Dionysius Bertochus, a native of Bologna, printed in six different Italian cities from 1481 to the end of the century. His first signed book was a Vicenza edition of Catullus shared with Johannes de Reno in 1481. After brief stints at Treviso in 1482 and at Vicenza in 1483, he moved to Venice, where he shared the press of Peregrinus de Pasqualibus for two years, before moving to Bologna in 1486-87. Bertochus returned to Venice by 1489, spending there the longest and most productive period of his career, working mainly on his own until 1494. His last years were spent in Reggio Emilia and Modena.
HC 10986*; BMC V, 488 (IB. 23584); CIBN M-268; Harvard/Walsh 2435A; IGI 8365; Pr 5274; Goff M-425.
Chancery 2
Provenance: Reichenhall (near Munich), Augustinians of St. Zeno (?17th-century inscription on first page) -- Munich, Royal Library (duplicate inscription on r).
Third edition of this commentary on Peter Lombard's Sentences by the English Franciscan Richard Middleton, a theologian and scholar of canon law who may have taught Duns Scotus. Dionysius Bertochus, a native of Bologna, printed in six different Italian cities from 1481 to the end of the century. His first signed book was a Vicenza edition of Catullus shared with Johannes de Reno in 1481. After brief stints at Treviso in 1482 and at Vicenza in 1483, he moved to Venice, where he shared the press of Peregrinus de Pasqualibus for two years, before moving to Bologna in 1486-87. Bertochus returned to Venice by 1489, spending there the longest and most productive period of his career, working mainly on his own until 1494. His last years were spent in Reggio Emilia and Modena.
HC 10986*; BMC V, 488 (IB. 23584); CIBN M-268; Harvard/Walsh 2435A; IGI 8365; Pr 5274; Goff M-425.