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.
NoteProvenance: Hall in Tyrol, Jesuits; on a1v: 'Societ. Jesu Halæ', on a2r: 'Coll. Soc. Jesu Halæ'.
provenance
1701 -
1800
timeperiod1701 - 1800
ownerPinelli, Maffeo (1735-1785), 1735 - 1785 conte, state printer of Venice; see Frati 462-3; Parenti II 85; Clarke, Repertorium, 498-504; the Pinelli books carry no specific marks of ownership (though bound and lettered in a small number of distinctive styles), but, inside the front cover, in the same place in the top inner corner, about an inch from the hinge and half an inch from the top edge, are written in ink in a single hand the sale lot number and a number referring to the catalogue of the Pinelli library compiled by the librarian of the Biblioteca Marciana, Jacopo Morelli, Bibliotheca Maphaei Pinellii Veneti magno jam studio collecta (Venice, 1787); the whole library was bought by the London bookseller, James Edwards, for £600, and auctioned by him: Bibliotheca Pinelliana. A Catalogue of the Magnificent and Celebrated Library of Maffei Pinelli, Late of Venice (London: James Edwards, 2 Mar. 1789); the Bodleian has two copies, Mus. Bibl. III 8° 117, which wants the Appendix, but is fully priced; and Douce PP 82, which contains the Appendix, and in which Douce has noted his purchases and those of certain others; Peter Elmsley, bookseller, The Strand, London, acted for the Bodleian Library.
noteMaffeo Pinelli (1735-1785); see Morelli I, no. 131 and sale (1789), lot 5040.
noteProvenance: Hall in Tyrol, Jesuits; on a1v: 'Societ. Jesu Halæ', on a2r: 'Coll. Soc. Jesu Halæ'.
provenance
1701 -
1800
timeperiod1701 - 1800
ownerPinelli, Maffeo (1735-1785), 1735 - 1785 conte, state printer of Venice; see Frati 462-3; Parenti II 85; Clarke, Repertorium, 498-504; the Pinelli books carry no specific marks of ownership (though bound and lettered in a small number of distinctive styles), but, inside the front cover, in the same place in the top inner corner, about an inch from the hinge and half an inch from the top edge, are written in ink in a single hand the sale lot number and a number referring to the catalogue of the Pinelli library compiled by the librarian of the Biblioteca Marciana, Jacopo Morelli, Bibliotheca Maphaei Pinellii Veneti magno jam studio collecta (Venice, 1787); the whole library was bought by the London bookseller, James Edwards, for £600, and auctioned by him: Bibliotheca Pinelliana. A Catalogue of the Magnificent and Celebrated Library of Maffei Pinelli, Late of Venice (London: James Edwards, 2 Mar. 1789); the Bodleian has two copies, Mus. Bibl. III 8° 117, which wants the Appendix, but is fully priced; and Douce PP 82, which contains the Appendix, and in which Douce has noted his purchases and those of certain others; Peter Elmsley, bookseller, The Strand, London, acted for the Bodleian Library.
noteMaffeo Pinelli (1735-1785); see Morelli I, no. 131 and sale (1789), lot 5040.