Material Evidence
in Incunabula

mei/00203241 Arch. G d.4. [00203241]

Oxford, Bodleian Library (GB) : Arch. G d.4.

N° ISTCij00150000
AuteurJacobus de Voragine
TitreLegenda aurea sanctorum, sive Lombardica historia [English] The Golden Legend. Tr.: William Caxton
Adresse bibliographique[Westminster : Wynkyn de Worde], 20 May 1493
Format
Langueeng
SujetHagiographie
Mots clésliterature devotional; liturgy; translation
Périodemedieval

Description de l’exemplaire

ID de l’exemplaire00203241
Institution de conservationOxford, Bodleian Library (GB)
CoteArch. G d.4.
NoteBodInc-Id: J-069(1)
Autre identifianttij00150000 (TextInc)

Provenance 1601 - 1800

Période1601 - 1800
PossesseurBagford, John (1650-1716), 1650 - 1716 see DNB; T. A. Birrell, `Anthony Wood, John Bagford and Thomas Hearne as Bibliographers', in Pioneers in Bibliography, ed. Robin Myers and Michael Harris (Winchester, 1988), 29-32; M. M. Gatch, `John Bagford, Bookseller and Antiquary', British Library Journal, 12 (1986), 150-71; Theodor Harmsen, Antiquarianism in the Augustan Age: Thomas Hearne 1678-1735 (Oxford, 2000), esp. 122-5; Gatch, 'John Bagford as a Collector and Disseminator of Manuscript Fragments', British Library Journal, 6 (1985), 95-171; W. Y. Fletcher, 'John Bagford and his Collections', Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 4 (1896-7), 185-201; A. W. Pollard, 'A Rough List of the Contents of the Bagford Collection', Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 7 (1902-4), 143-59.
NoteProvenance: John Bagford (1650-1716).

Provenance 1601 - 1800

Période1601 - 1800
PossesseurHearne, Thomas (1678-1735), 1678 - 1735 sale 1736; left his manuscripts and printed books with manuscript notes to William Bedford (d.1747), at whose death these were listed by John Whiston, q.v., the London bookseller (the list now being MS. Rawl. D. 1167), and sold to Richard Rawlinson, q.v.; his other printed books, which Hearne had wished should be divided among his relatives, were sold in 1736 by the bookseller Thomas Osborne, q.v. (A Catalogue of the Valuable Library of that Great Antiquarian Mr Tho. Hearne and of another gentleman of note... Gray's Inn, Monday, 16th Feb. 1735-6); his books are often signed with his motto `suum cuique. Tho: Hearne'; see DNB; Stanley Gillam `Thomas Hearne's Library', BLR 12 (1985), 52-64; T. A. Birrell, `Anthony Wood, John Bagford and Thomas Hearne as Bibliographers', in Pioneers in Bibliography, ed. Robin Myers and Michael Harris (Winchester, 1988), esp. 32-6; SC III 181; Frans Korsten, `Thomas Hearne: The Man and his Library', in Order and Connexion: Studies in Bibliography and Book History, ed. R. C. Alston (Cambridge, 1997), 49-61; Clare A. Simmons, `Thomas Hearne (1678?–1735)', in Pre-Nineteenth-century British Book-collectors and Bibliographers, ed. William Baker and Kenneth Womack, DLB 213 (Detroit, Washington DC, and London, 1999), 147-54. Theodor Harmsen, Antiquarianism in the Augustan Age: Thomas Hearne 1678-1735 (Oxford, 2000), esp. chapter 3 on Hearne's work at the Bodleian and on his book-collecting.
NoteThomas Hearne (1678-1735); inscription on the remains of an old endleaf, now attached to the front pastedown: 'Suum cuique Thomas Hearne. This old imperfect book was given me by Mr. John Bagford. It was printed by William Caxton and is a great curiosity'; see MS. Rawl. D. 1167, fol. 5r, no. 59.

Provenance 1601 - 1800

Période1601 - 1800
PossesseurRawlinson, Richard (1690-1755), 1690 - 1755 nonjuring bishop; made numerous donations in his lifetime and bequeathed to the Bodleian Library his manuscripts and those printed books which contained manuscript notes; Rawlinson's books include some owned by Thomas Hearne, who bequeathed all his manuscripts and printed books with manuscript notes to William Bedford, from whose widow Rawlinson bought them; see Macray 231-51, Stanley Gillam, `Thomas Hearne's Library', BLR 12 (1985), 52-64, at 60-1; William Younger Fletcher, `The Rawlinsons and their Collections', Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 5 (1899), 67-86; Georgian Rawlinson Tashjian, David R. Tashjian, and Brian J. Enright, Richard Rawlinson: A Tercentenary Memorial (Kalamazoo, Mich., 1990); DNB; B. J. Enright `Rawlinson and the Chandlers', BLR 4 (1953), 216-17, repr. with modifications in Tashjian, Tashjian, and Enright, 121-32; idem, `Richard Rawlinson Collector, Antiquary, and Topographer', unpublished D.Phil. thesis, University of Oxford, 1956; idem, `“I Collect and I Preserve”: Richard Rawlinson 1690-1755 and Eighteenth-century Book Collecting. Portrait of a Bibliophile XXVIII', Book Collector, 39 (1990), 27-54, repr. in The Pleasures of Bibliophily: Fifty Years of `The Book Collector' (London, 2003), 205-23; Robert A. Shaddy, `Thomas Rawlinson (1681-1725) and Richard Rawlinson (1690-1755)', in Pre-Nineteenth-century British Book- collectors and Bibliographers, ed. William Baker and Kenneth Womack, DLB 213 (Detroit, Washington DC, and London, 1999), 288-96; SC III 177-8.
NoteRichard Rawlinson (1690-1755).

Provenance 1602 -

LieuOxford (Geonames ID: 2640729)
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Dernière modification2019-04-10 18:00:00

Tous les exemplaires

  00203241

OxfordBodley : Arch. G d.4.

hostItemIdij00150000
imprint : ,

copy

copyId00203241
holdingInstitutionIdOxfordBodley
shelfmarkArch. G d.4.
noteBodInc-Id: J-069(1)
otherIdentifiertij00150000 ()

provenance 1601 - 1800

timeperiod1601 - 1800
ownerBagford, John (1650-1716), 1650 - 1716 see DNB; T. A. Birrell, `Anthony Wood, John Bagford and Thomas Hearne as Bibliographers', in Pioneers in Bibliography, ed. Robin Myers and Michael Harris (Winchester, 1988), 29-32; M. M. Gatch, `John Bagford, Bookseller and Antiquary', British Library Journal, 12 (1986), 150-71; Theodor Harmsen, Antiquarianism in the Augustan Age: Thomas Hearne 1678-1735 (Oxford, 2000), esp. 122-5; Gatch, 'John Bagford as a Collector and Disseminator of Manuscript Fragments', British Library Journal, 6 (1985), 95-171; W. Y. Fletcher, 'John Bagford and his Collections', Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 4 (1896-7), 185-201; A. W. Pollard, 'A Rough List of the Contents of the Bagford Collection', Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 7 (1902-4), 143-59.
noteProvenance: John Bagford (1650-1716).

Provenance 1601 - 1800

Période1601 - 1800
PossesseurHearne, Thomas (1678-1735), 1678 - 1735 sale 1736; left his manuscripts and printed books with manuscript notes to William Bedford (d.1747), at whose death these were listed by John Whiston, q.v., the London bookseller (the list now being MS. Rawl. D. 1167), and sold to Richard Rawlinson, q.v.; his other printed books, which Hearne had wished should be divided among his relatives, were sold in 1736 by the bookseller Thomas Osborne, q.v. (A Catalogue of the Valuable Library of that Great Antiquarian Mr Tho. Hearne and of another gentleman of note... Gray's Inn, Monday, 16th Feb. 1735-6); his books are often signed with his motto `suum cuique. Tho: Hearne'; see DNB; Stanley Gillam `Thomas Hearne's Library', BLR 12 (1985), 52-64; T. A. Birrell, `Anthony Wood, John Bagford and Thomas Hearne as Bibliographers', in Pioneers in Bibliography, ed. Robin Myers and Michael Harris (Winchester, 1988), esp. 32-6; SC III 181; Frans Korsten, `Thomas Hearne: The Man and his Library', in Order and Connexion: Studies in Bibliography and Book History, ed. R. C. Alston (Cambridge, 1997), 49-61; Clare A. Simmons, `Thomas Hearne (1678?–1735)', in Pre-Nineteenth-century British Book-collectors and Bibliographers, ed. William Baker and Kenneth Womack, DLB 213 (Detroit, Washington DC, and London, 1999), 147-54. Theodor Harmsen, Antiquarianism in the Augustan Age: Thomas Hearne 1678-1735 (Oxford, 2000), esp. chapter 3 on Hearne's work at the Bodleian and on his book-collecting.
NoteThomas Hearne (1678-1735); inscription on the remains of an old endleaf, now attached to the front pastedown: 'Suum cuique Thomas Hearne. This old imperfect book was given me by Mr. John Bagford. It was printed by William Caxton and is a great curiosity'; see MS. Rawl. D. 1167, fol. 5r, no. 59.

Provenance 1601 - 1800

Période1601 - 1800
PossesseurRawlinson, Richard (1690-1755), 1690 - 1755 nonjuring bishop; made numerous donations in his lifetime and bequeathed to the Bodleian Library his manuscripts and those printed books which contained manuscript notes; Rawlinson's books include some owned by Thomas Hearne, who bequeathed all his manuscripts and printed books with manuscript notes to William Bedford, from whose widow Rawlinson bought them; see Macray 231-51, Stanley Gillam, `Thomas Hearne's Library', BLR 12 (1985), 52-64, at 60-1; William Younger Fletcher, `The Rawlinsons and their Collections', Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 5 (1899), 67-86; Georgian Rawlinson Tashjian, David R. Tashjian, and Brian J. Enright, Richard Rawlinson: A Tercentenary Memorial (Kalamazoo, Mich., 1990); DNB; B. J. Enright `Rawlinson and the Chandlers', BLR 4 (1953), 216-17, repr. with modifications in Tashjian, Tashjian, and Enright, 121-32; idem, `Richard Rawlinson Collector, Antiquary, and Topographer', unpublished D.Phil. thesis, University of Oxford, 1956; idem, `“I Collect and I Preserve”: Richard Rawlinson 1690-1755 and Eighteenth-century Book Collecting. Portrait of a Bibliophile XXVIII', Book Collector, 39 (1990), 27-54, repr. in The Pleasures of Bibliophily: Fifty Years of `The Book Collector' (London, 2003), 205-23; Robert A. Shaddy, `Thomas Rawlinson (1681-1725) and Richard Rawlinson (1690-1755)', in Pre-Nineteenth-century British Book- collectors and Bibliographers, ed. William Baker and Kenneth Womack, DLB 213 (Detroit, Washington DC, and London, 1999), 288-96; SC III 177-8.
NoteRichard Rawlinson (1690-1755).

Provenance

LieuOxford (Geonames ID: 2640729)
Aire géographiquee-uk

otherInformation

Dernière modification2019-04-10 18:00:00