Every item of data recorded (a certain style of decoration or binding, the date of a manuscript note, etc.) is treated as a valuable clue for provenance, therefore it can be geographically located and chronologically dated. This enables to track the movement of books across Europe and through the centuries.
mei/00202509 Auct. 5Q 5.1(2)
[00202509]
Oxford, Bodleian Library (GB)
: Auct. 5Q 5.1(2)
N° ISTCis00456000
TitreTextus sequentiarum, cum optimo commento
Adresse bibliographiqueReutlingen : Michael Greyff, 1490
PossesseurAbensberg, Bavaria, Carmelites, BVM [Ancien possesseur] (Institution religieuse, Ecclésiastique/Religieux) founded 1398; dissolved 1802; see Krämer I 6; Ambrosio, `Monasticon carmelitanum', 61; Historische Kataloge, 111-13; a manuscript catalogue of incunabula is now in Munich, Bayerische Hauptstaatsarchiv, GL Fasz. 32/70.
Provenance
PossesseurMunich, Royal Library (now Bayerische Staatsbibliothek)many Munich duplicates contained in Catalogue of a Valuable Collection of Choice, Rare, & Curious Books, Consigned from Germany (London: S. Leigh Sotheby, 27 Aug. 1841); in 1850 320 volumes of incunabula were acquired from the Royal Library in Munich for £113. 19. 6, as stated in the manuscript accounts of the year (Library Records b. 3); these were not included in Books Purchased; many Munich duplicates here stated to have been `acquired between 1847 and c.1892' would have been acquisitions of 1850; many of these books appear to have been shelfmarked from `Auct. 5Q 1. 1' to `Auct. 5Q 6.100', although several books in this range were acquired earlier or later than 1850; see also Butsch, Fidelis, Haugg, Carpar, and Quatremère de Quincy, Antoine; see also Lebendiges Büchererbe. Säkularisation, Mediatisierung und die Bayerische Staatsbibliothek (Munich, 2003), esp. at 9-53, for the acquisition of books from dissolved German monastic houses, and their removal to the Royal Library in Munich.
PossesseurAbensberg, Bavaria, Carmelites, BVM [Ancien possesseur] (Institution religieuse, Ecclésiastique/Religieux) founded 1398; dissolved 1802; see Krämer I 6; Ambrosio, `Monasticon carmelitanum', 61; Historische Kataloge, 111-13; a manuscript catalogue of incunabula is now in Munich, Bayerische Hauptstaatsarchiv, GL Fasz. 32/70.
Provenance
PossesseurMunich, Royal Library (now Bayerische Staatsbibliothek)many Munich duplicates contained in Catalogue of a Valuable Collection of Choice, Rare, & Curious Books, Consigned from Germany (London: S. Leigh Sotheby, 27 Aug. 1841); in 1850 320 volumes of incunabula were acquired from the Royal Library in Munich for £113. 19. 6, as stated in the manuscript accounts of the year (Library Records b. 3); these were not included in Books Purchased; many Munich duplicates here stated to have been `acquired between 1847 and c.1892' would have been acquisitions of 1850; many of these books appear to have been shelfmarked from `Auct. 5Q 1. 1' to `Auct. 5Q 6.100', although several books in this range were acquired earlier or later than 1850; see also Butsch, Fidelis, Haugg, Carpar, and Quatremère de Quincy, Antoine; see also Lebendiges Büchererbe. Säkularisation, Mediatisierung und die Bayerische Staatsbibliothek (Munich, 2003), esp. at 9-53, for the acquisition of books from dissolved German monastic houses, and their removal to the Royal Library in Munich.
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