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Antiquitates Danicae. Literatura Runica. Lexicon Runicum. Monumenta Runica. Additamenta. Fast Danici. Regum Danicae. [Copenhagen: 1642-1651].
細節
WORM, Ole (1588-1654)
Antiquitates Danicae. Literatura Runica. Lexicon Runicum. Monumenta Runica. Additamenta. Fast Danici. Regum Danicae. [Copenhagen: 1642-1651].
Very rare collected edition of the principal works of the great Danish antiquary, Ole Worm, presented to the pioneering librarian Gabriel Naudé. Among his many interests, Worm collected early Scandinavian literature, and this led to his pioneering publications on runic lore. Worm's largest work, Danicorum Monumentorum (first ed. 1643), is the first published study of runestones, some of which are now lost. It includes a revised version of his Cornu aureum Danicum (originally published 1641), describing a golden horn discovered in 1639 buried in southern Jutland in 1639, illustrated with a 4-panel folding woodcut plate. This collected edition of Worm's works was presented by the author to the great librarian Gabriel Naudé, probably when Naudé was at Stockholm, in the service of Queen Christina of Sweden. Brunet V, 1477-1478, noting the texts could be bought separately or with several works collected in single volumes.
6 works in 2 volumes, quarto (270 x 175mm), comprising: Vol. I. Runir seu Danica literatura antiquissima. Copenhagen: 1651. Second edition, enlarged, general title as given above printed on a1, title on a2 printed in red and black and folded at fore-edge to preserve authorial presentation inscription, woodcuts in the text; Specimen Lexici Runici. Copenhagen: 1650. First edition; Vol. II. Danicorum monumentorum libri sex. Copenhagen: 1643. First edition, with blank 3Y4, engraved title, folding woodcut plate of the Golden Horn, woodcuts in the text (tiny marginal hole to 3O4); Additamenta ad Monumenta Danica. Copenhagen: 1651. First edition; Fasti Danica. Copenhagen: 1643. Third edition, enlarged, engraved title, woodcuts in the text, several gatherings with text and woodcuts printed in red and black; Regum Daniae series duplex. Copenhagen: 1642. First edition, leaf A1 printed in red and black. (Some light variable browning, but overall a clean copy.) Later French polished calf, gilt turn-ins and edges (rebacked, extremities lightly rubbed). Provenance: authorial presentation inscription on first title to: – Gabriel Naudé (1600-1653; French scholar, librarian to Mazarin, responsible for assembling the collection known as the Bibliothèque Mazarine, later librarian to Queen Christina of Sweden, probably the presentation inscription dating from his time in Stockholm) – Thore Virgin (1886-1957; Swedish book collector, ownership inscription and bookplate dated 1910 and 1911 respectively, stamp of his library Biblioteca Qvarnforsiana).
Antiquitates Danicae. Literatura Runica. Lexicon Runicum. Monumenta Runica. Additamenta. Fast Danici. Regum Danicae. [Copenhagen: 1642-1651].
Very rare collected edition of the principal works of the great Danish antiquary, Ole Worm, presented to the pioneering librarian Gabriel Naudé. Among his many interests, Worm collected early Scandinavian literature, and this led to his pioneering publications on runic lore. Worm's largest work, Danicorum Monumentorum (first ed. 1643), is the first published study of runestones, some of which are now lost. It includes a revised version of his Cornu aureum Danicum (originally published 1641), describing a golden horn discovered in 1639 buried in southern Jutland in 1639, illustrated with a 4-panel folding woodcut plate. This collected edition of Worm's works was presented by the author to the great librarian Gabriel Naudé, probably when Naudé was at Stockholm, in the service of Queen Christina of Sweden. Brunet V, 1477-1478, noting the texts could be bought separately or with several works collected in single volumes.
6 works in 2 volumes, quarto (270 x 175mm), comprising: Vol. I. Runir seu Danica literatura antiquissima. Copenhagen: 1651. Second edition, enlarged, general title as given above printed on a1, title on a2 printed in red and black and folded at fore-edge to preserve authorial presentation inscription, woodcuts in the text; Specimen Lexici Runici. Copenhagen: 1650. First edition; Vol. II. Danicorum monumentorum libri sex. Copenhagen: 1643. First edition, with blank 3Y4, engraved title, folding woodcut plate of the Golden Horn, woodcuts in the text (tiny marginal hole to 3O4); Additamenta ad Monumenta Danica. Copenhagen: 1651. First edition; Fasti Danica. Copenhagen: 1643. Third edition, enlarged, engraved title, woodcuts in the text, several gatherings with text and woodcuts printed in red and black; Regum Daniae series duplex. Copenhagen: 1642. First edition, leaf A1 printed in red and black. (Some light variable browning, but overall a clean copy.) Later French polished calf, gilt turn-ins and edges (rebacked, extremities lightly rubbed). Provenance: authorial presentation inscription on first title to: – Gabriel Naudé (1600-1653; French scholar, librarian to Mazarin, responsible for assembling the collection known as the Bibliothèque Mazarine, later librarian to Queen Christina of Sweden, probably the presentation inscription dating from his time in Stockholm) – Thore Virgin (1886-1957; Swedish book collector, ownership inscription and bookplate dated 1910 and 1911 respectively, stamp of his library Biblioteca Qvarnforsiana).
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