Firenze, Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana (IT)
: D'Elci 1114
ISTC No.ic00492000
AuthorChrysoloras, Emanuel
TitleErotemata [Greek & Latin] (in the redaction of Guarinus Veronensis)
Imprint[Venice : Adam de Ambergau, about 1471]
Format8°
Languagegrc
SubjectGrammar
Keywordseducation
Periodhumanist
Description of Copy
Copy Id02125965
Holding InstitutionFirenze, Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana (IT)
CollectionD'Elci
ShelfmarkD'Elci 1114
NoteCreated by Geri Della Rocca de Candal.
Size of leaves215 × 134 mm
Copy FeaturesComplete
No rubrication
Support material (book)Paper
Provenance
1551 -
1600
Areae-it
Time period1551 - 1600
Provenance TypeManuscript Notes
Method of acquisitionunknown
Manuscript notesFrequent marginal notes, in Latin and Greek, presumably by the same hand but in different shades of brown.
Ms. notes (frequency)Several
Location in BookThroughout
Extraction of keywordsYes
TranslationsYes
Reading marks (underlining and pointing hands)Yes
CertaintyThe recording of this evidence is considered certain
SourceBook in hand
Provenance
1792
PlaceFlorence (Geonames ID: 3176959)
Areae-it
Time period - 1792
Provenance TypeBinding
Shelfmark
Documentary Evidence
Method of acquisitionPurchase
CertaintyThe recording of this evidence is considered certain
SourceBook in hand
Provenance
1792 -
1824
Areae-au
Time period1792 - 1824
Provenance TypeBinding
Shelfmark
Documentary Evidence
Binding noteRed morocco binding, almost certainly made in Vienna by Joseph Dell, with blind and gold panel decoration on the boards, common to all of D'Elci books. The fan cornerpieces are a frequent, though not exclusive, pattern; the centrepiece varies in each binding.
Binding date19th cent.
Binding typeBoards
Board materialPaper
Cover materialLeather
FurnitureNo
Binding statusRebound
Binding Dimensions223 × 145 × 12 mm
TitlingTooled
ToolingBlind and gold
edgesGilt
writingOnEdgesd
gaufferedd
certaintya
psourcea
provenance
1824 -
placenameFirenze (Geonames ID: 3176959)
areae-it
timeperiod1824 -
provenanceType1
noteD'Elci made a provision, in 1818, to donate his books to Florence. In 1824, after his death in Vienna, the collection was moved back to Florence, and eventually, in 1841, the books entered the Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana.
methodofacqc
certaintya
psourcea
otherInformation
completeness1
Last Edit2018-07-15 16:43:38