“The most spectacular contribution of the book-maker’s art to sixteenth-century science”
Astronomicum Caesareum.
Ingolstadt,
Peter Apian,
1540
Folio (463 by 315mm). [60] ll., COMPLETE with the cancelled G3 bound at the end. Title-page framed by a woodcut border, on verso of the same leaf woodcut coat of arms of joint the dedicatees Charles V and his brother Ferdinand of Spain. 53 eleven-line and 39 six-line historiated woodcut initials by Hans Brosamer. 36 full-page woodcut astronomical figures coloured by a contemporary hand, of which 21 have a total of 83 volvelles [complete]. 39 [of 44] silk threads; and 8 [of 12] pearls. Full-page woodcut arms of the author by Michael Ostendorfer on fol. O6. The leaf G3 is repeated, printed in black with variants, at the end of the volume. A small letterpress cancel slip on recto of fol. K1 correcting the text. Contemporary Venetian polished fawn calf on pasteboards, covers decorated with frames in gilt and blind, outer gilt frame with floral tools at corners, inner gilt frame with quadrilobes and small aldine leaf tools at corner, remains of clasps. An extraordinary copy in its unusual original binding. A minor repair on fol. G3.
2837
notes:
First edition of "the most luxurious and intrinsically beautiful scientific book that has ever been produced" (D.J. de Solla Price, Science since Babylon, p. 104), in an extraordinary hand coloured copy in first issue, as attested by the repeated fol. G3 and by the letterpress cancel slip on fol. K1r, preserved in a beautiful contemporary Venetian binding.
The author of this popular texbook in astronomy is Petrus Apianus, astronomer and professor of mathematics ...
The author of this popular texbook in astronomy is Petrus Apianus, astronomer and professor of mathematics ...
bibliography:
Adams A, 1277; Schottenloher, Landshuter Buchdrucker, 42; Benezit II, 332; VIII, 49; Campbell Dodgson II, 242; DSB I, pp. 178-179; Lalande, p. 60; Gingerich, Rara Astronomica, 14; Stillwell, The Awakening Interest in Science during the First Century of Printing, 19; Van Ortroy, 112; Zinner 1734; D. J. de Solla Price, Science since Babylon, New Haven 1975, p. 104O. Gingerich, Apianus's Astronomicum Caesareum, «Journal for the History of Astronomy», 2 (1971), pp. 168-177; E. Poulle, Les instruments de la théorie des planètes selon Ptolémée, Genève 1980, 1.83; O. Gingerich, A Survey of Apian's Astronomicum Caesareum, in Peter Apian, ed. by Karl Röttel, Buxheim1995, p. 113.
provenance: