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Publicado por J.R. van Rossum
Librería: ANTIQUARIAAT DE MINSTREEL, KAMPEN, Holanda
Partitura
Overall condition: Good / Zustand: Gut. Sheetmusic / Noten.
Publicado por J.R. van Rossum
Librería: ANTIQUARIAAT DE MINSTREEL, KAMPEN, Holanda
Partitura
Overall condition: Average / Zustand: Durchschnitt. Sheetmusic / Noten.
Publicado por Venedig, sumptibus Angelus Geremia u.a.,, 1744
Librería: Vico Verlag und Antiquariat Dr. Otto, Frankfurt am Main, Alemania
Libro
Hardcover. Condición: Befriedigend. Groß-Folio. 3 Bde. (I: 1744) Ganzseitiges Protrait von Papst Gregor I., Titelblatt mit Druckersignet in r/s Druck, XXIII, (1), 1.664 Spalten, 48ungezählte Bll. Indices; (III,1: 1744) Titelblatt mit Vignette, XVI, 884 Spalten, 12ungez. Bll.; (III,2:) Deckblatt, VIII, 578 Spalten, 21ungez. Bll. Indices; (IV: 1744) Titelblatt mit Vignette, VIII, 964 Spalten. 3 zeitgenössische Pergamentbände.
Publicado por Parisiis : sumptibus Claudii Rigaud ., Paris, 1705
Librería: Stony Hill Books, Madison, WI, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
Full-Leather. Condición: Very Good. Four large folio volumes measuring approx. 17x11 inches, bound in full leather of the period, spines in 7 compartments each volume with 2 spine labels in dark red leather lettered in gilt; edges and corners rubbed, most outer joints cracked but all covers holding firmly with the cords and inner joints, all text blocks firm and square, texts clean and unmarked; front pastedowns bear early ownership bookplates; the engraved frontispiece of Pope Gregory is present in volume I, all volumes complete.
Publicado por Parisiis: Sumptibus Claudii Rigaud, via Citharaea, 1705
Librería: Sequitur Books, Boonsboro, MD, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
Libro
Hardcover. Condición: Very Good. Folio. 4 Volumes. Bound in contemporary full blind-stamped pigskin vellum. Black title on spine. Brass clasps to each volume. Original vellum tags on each title page for quick reference. Good bindings and covers with only minor Wear to extremities. Soiling to boards. Library markings on spine in contemporary gray, black and red paint. Library bookplate of the Neander Library on inside boards. Owners inscriptions on inside boards, detailing the set as a gift from Countess Marie-Margarite Waldstein upon her death in 1725. Presentation inscription on FEP to Dr. August Neander dated 1830 by Carl Hubner, Carl Ferdinand Gustav Muller and Ludwig Wienfreiht Bath. Owners name of the Capuchin Monastery in Hradsite and date of 1725 on title page of each volume of Capuchin monastery in Hradiste. Lacking frontis of Pope Gregory I. Contemporary notation in ink and pencil on last blanks. Clean, unmarked pages with minor tanning to extremities. Brunet II 1723/24. Contents of each Volume are: Tomus primus. Libri moralium in Job XXXV. Libri duo in Ezechielem. Libri duo in Evangelia --Tomus secundus. Liber regulae pastoralis. Dialogorum libri IV. Registrum epistolarum. Epistolarum ordo restitutus. Index geographicus, & varii alii indices --Tomus tertius. Liber sacramentorum S. Gregorii Papae, ex editione D. Hugonis Menardi. Notae & observationes ejusdem D. Hugonis Menardi in Librum sacramentorum. Benedictiones quae in Libro sacramentorum desiderantur, ex Lambecio. Benedictionum episcopalium aliud supplementum, ex ms. Theodericensi. Liber antophonarius S. Gregorii Papae. Liber responsalis, seu, Antophonarius, ex ms. Compendiensi. Variae expositiones in Librum I. Regum, lib. VI. Expositio super Cantica canticorum. Expositio in septem psalmos poenitentiales. Concordia quorumdam testimoniorum sacrae scripturae --Tomos quartus. Vita S. Gregorii Papae, auctore Paulo Diacono. Eadem, auctore Johanne Diacono. Eadem, ex ejusdem S. Gregorii Papae scriptis potissimum recens adornata. Sancti Paterii Liber de expositione Veteris & Novi Testamenti. Alulfi De expositione Novi Testamenti libe Countess Mary Margaret Waldstein (1689-1725), was the wife of Prince Franz Josef of Waldstein (1680-1722), was an early supporter of the Capuchin Order and their monastery in Hradiste, present-day Czechoslovakia. She is called the "mother of the Capuchins." The House of Waldstein is a Czech noble family, that received prominent state and civil positions beginning in the 17th century. It was one of the first among the Bohemian nobility to be promoted to Graf (count) in 1628, and two years later to the imperial court. Its most famous members include General Albrecht von Wallenstein and statesman Ferdinand Gabriel von Waldstein, the patron of Ludwig van Beethoven. The Order of the Capuchin Friars Minor, is an Order of friars in the Catholic Church, one of the chief offshoots of the Franciscan Order. The Order began in 1520 when Matteo da Bascio, an Observant Franciscan friar, said he had been inspired by God with the idea of that the manner of life led by the Franciscans, at the time, was not in keeping with their found, St. Francis of Assisi had envisioned. He created the Capuchin Order to return to the primitive way of life solitude and penance as practiced by St. Francis. The name of their order comes from the Cappuccio, a hood worn by the Camaldolese monks, in gratitude for refuge given by the monks in the initial years of the order. Dr. Johann August Wilhelm Neander (1789-1850) was a German theologian and church historian. Originally born into a Jewish family, he changed his name to Neander when he became a Christian in 1806. A German Lutheran, he studied with F D. Schleiermacher (1768-1834) in Berlin, but soon switched his interest from speculative theology to church history. His General History of the Christian Religion and Church (Allgemeine Geschichte der christlichen Religion und Kirche) remains the greatest monument of his genius. In this Neander's chief aim was everywhere to understand what was individual in history. In the principal figures of ecclesiastical history he tried to depict the representative tendencies of each age, and also the types of the essential tendencies of human nature generally. His guiding principle in dealing both with the history and with the present condition of the church was "that Christianity has room for the various tendencies of human nature, and aims at permeating and glorifying them all; that according to the divine plan these various tendencies are to occur successively and simultaneously and to counterbalance each other, so that the freedom and variety of the development of the spiritual life ought not to be forced into a single dogmatic form" (Otto Pfleiderer). Neander had considerable influence not only in his own church and country but also further afield through the combination of scholarly excellence and personal interest that he achieved in his teaching and writing. Neander believed that church history is not just an academic pursuit but part of the mission and ministry of the church. The Congregation of St. Maur, often known as the Maurists, were a congregation of French Benedictines, established in 1621, and known for their high level of scholarship. The congregation and its members were called after Saint Maurus (died 565), a disciple of Saint Benedict credited with introducing the Benedictine rule and life into Gaul. The primary idea of the movement was not the undertaking of literary and historical work, but the return to a strict monastic regime and the faithful carrying out of Benedictine life. Their historical and critical school produced a number of works of scholarship which still are of permanent value. The foundations of this school were laid by Dom Tarisse, the first superior-general, who in 1632 issued instructions to the superiors of the monasteries to train the young monks in the habits of research and of organized work. The output was prodigious, coming from a single s.