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Librería: Rosemary Pugh Books, SALISBURY, WILTS, Reino Unido
Garnier Freres 1111 no pub date xxviii 1376pp printed double column per page with notes, binding shabby with little fraying to head of spine, paper discoloured but tightly bound with clean text, working copy not aesthetically pleasing Good.
Publicado por Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass, 2011
ISBN 10: 0674996682ISBN 13: 9780674996687
Librería: Rosley Books est. 2000, WIGTON, Reino Unido
Libro
Hardcover. Condición: Very Good Plus. First Thus. FIRST EDITION THUS. CAMBRIDGE : 2011. Third volume of six; Poetical Books; Job to Ecclesiasticus. Latin and English on opposite pages. Hardback. Dark-red cloth; gilt lettered black panel to spine. In gold printed dust-jacket. Bright, tight and clean. Neat owner name or internal markings. Minor wear only. VERY GOOD in like jacket; now in a clear protective sleeve. (xxxviii), 1,187 pages. 8vo. **Heavy; extra postage needed outside the UK. Will be well-packed for posting/shipping**. [ Rosley Books for Antiquarian books, CHS, Cumberland, Everyman, GKC, Inklings, Keswick, Literature, MacDonald, Rarities, Theology and History. ].
Publicado por Desclée/Société de Saint-Jean-l'Évangéliste, 1927
Librería: Librairie Pierre BRUNET, Paris, Francia
Couverture souple. Condición: Bon. Rome/Paris/Tournai, Desclée/Société de Saint-Jean-l'Évangéliste, 1927 ; in-8° reliure éditeur, 16 planches hors texte, XLI-1279-[288]-31* pp.
Publicado por Biblioteca De Autores Christianos, Madrid, 1951
Librería: Kubik Fine Books Ltd., ABAA, Dayton, OH, Estados Unidos de America
Hardcover. Condición: Good. Second Edition. 1592p + 118p appendix. Gray cloth. Hinges cracked and repaired with archival document tape. Textis clean and unmarked, tightly bound. A hardcover book in good condition. Catholic Latin Vulgate Bible. Doctrine index, word index, and maps at the back. Edited by Alberto Colunga, OP and Laurentio Turrado.
Publicado por Dublin; Published by James Duffy,, 1863
736; 211, [1] p. Additional engraved title, frontispiece. The New Testament has its own title page and separate pagination. Printed in two columns. 18cm. Bound in black calf, the front board blocked in blind with a double line panel and a large cross. The spine with raised bands. Rubbed on the edges and corners and a little surface loss on the spine. Internally clean and tight. A very good copy.
Librería: Kloof Booksellers & Scientia Verlag, Amsterdam, Holanda
Condición: very good. Auctoritate edita. Coloniæ Agrippinæ : sumpt. Hæred. Balthasaris ab Egmond, & Sociorum , 1743. Contemp. calf binding. [24], 894, [43] pp. 17x11 cm. With engraved title-page. Library stamps on free endpapers. Binding shows some wear. Very good copy. - 4 copies in NCC (Amsterdam (2), Naastricht & Nijmegen). Condition : very good copy. Keywords : , Bible.
Publicado por Gauthier frater et socii, 1837. Quarto., Parisiis, excudebant, 1837
Librería: Alec R. Allenson, Inc., Westville, FL, Estados Unidos de America
Hardcover. [3], xviii, [1], 64, 1016 p.; 30 cm. Armorial bookplate of Robert Spedding Wilson. (not in Darlow & Moule) Stately but worn full vellum. Upper joint torn but firm. Foxing.
Publicado por S. Dominic's Press, Ditchling, Sussex, England, 1919
Librería: Charles Bartman, Bookseller, ABAA, ILAB, Louisville, KY, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
Soft cover. Condición: Fine. No Jacket. Special Edition. Illustrated with a single woodcut.
Publicado por New York, Sadlier, n.d. (1870ies)., 1870
Librería: Manfred Nosbuesch, Kuchenheim, Alemania
4to. 93, 16, 793, 228pp. With numerous full-page and text-illustrations. Contemp. full black calf with panelled covers, richly gilt, embossed and gilt edges, with 2 metall clasps. Family register and marriage certificate with contemp. handwritten entries. - 2 of the chromolithogr. plates with copyright imprint 1874 resp. 1876. - Four plates with a few marginal small tears, one plate with small missing corner piece otherwise a very good copy.
Librería: Kloof Booksellers & Scientia Verlag, Amsterdam, Holanda
Original o primera edición
Condición: very good. Lovanii (Louvain): Martinus van Overbeke, 1740; Complete in 2 volumes: I: (24), xxi, (1), 520 pp.; II: 506, 44 (index geographicus; tabulae chronologiae sacrae) pp. Contemporary calf with raised bands and gilt decorated spine, edges red, marbled endpapers. Folio 29x48 cm. Margins wide. Our copy lacks the plate with biblical scenes but has in volume I: full page frontispiece portrait of the dedicatee Thomas-Philippe de Hennin-Liétard Archbishop of Malines after Ae. J. Smeyers by Pieter Tanjé, printer's mark on titlepage, 1 smaller engraving after L.F.D.B. also by Tanjé, 2 folding maps (totius orbis; terra promissa), 1 map on 2 pages (Terre Saint O.T.); In Volume II: printer's mark on titlepage, 1 map (Terre comme lorsque l'Évangile fut publié). 2 Maps after Nicolas Sanson d' Abbeville. The pp. of volume I 499-506 contain an "index epistolarum et evangeliorum quae e veteri et novo testamento excerpta", "index testimoniorum a christo", "Hebraicorum, chaldaeorum, graecorumque nominum interpretatio". Text in Latin. Very good copy of this second Belgian printing of the Vulgate edition of the Bible commentated by J.B. Duhamel (1624-1706). The first edition had appeared in Paris 1705. With all maps and engraved full page frontispiece but lacking 1 plate. Bindings with moderate worn, mainly at edges and corners, small hole in 1 label at spine; small library stamp on first fly leaves; some occasional browning else very good, solid and clean. Brunet, c. 880 ("notes estimées"); Renier, La Bible imprimée dans les collections de l'Université de Mons-Hainaut XVe-XXe siècle. 1995, n° 50-51; Not in Bibliotheca Belgica. Not in Darlow-Moule. Condition : very good copy. Keywords : ,
Publicado por Sumptibus Balthasaris ab Egmond & Sociorum, Coloniæ Agrippinæ [Cologne, Germany], 1670
Librería: Antiquarian Bookshop, Washington, DC, Estados Unidos de America
Hardcover. Condición: Very Good+. 81, [119] pages; Contemporary full polished tan calf, with five raised bands on the spine, there is a red morocco label lettered in gilt "BIBLIA SACR" in the second panel. The central panel directly under the label has gilt tooling directly stamped, reading: "T. 5." (sic, for "6"). The other panels have elaborate gilt floral tooling, the covers are framed with a single rule fin gilt, marbled endpapers, edges decoratively stained red. With a superb engraved armorial bookplate mounted to the front free endpaper -- (a nine-point coronet surmounting a pear-shaped shield which contains a loop of rope surrounded by three stars and a crescent moon at the top. This excellent plate has no name, no date, and no identification of engraver). The binding is entirely consistent with the period of this 1670 book. The fine bookplate is in the Rococo style often denoted Louis XIV, with no straight lines, an elegantly curved pear-form to the heraldic shield, and even the coronet atop the shield is at a slightly jaunty angle. This plate, while unidentified, is worth further study. In all, a wonderful copy beautifullly preserved, of the final volume of a miniature edition of the Sixto-Clementine Vulgate Latin version of the Bible ('Biblia Sacra Vulgatæ Editionis Sixti Quinti Pontificis Maximi iussu recognita atque edita' . This edition resembles, but is slightly larger than, the miniature edition published at Cologne in 1638-1639. Our volume is the final volume in the 1670 miniature set; these three Biblical texts form an appropriate end to the set, as Clement VIII removed 3 and 4 Esdras and the Prayer of Manasses from the Old Testament and placed them as Apocrypha into an appendix following the New Testament -- "ne prorsus interirent" ("lest they utterly perish"). The first text, the "Prayer of Manasses" is brief -- 15 verses of the penitential prayer of king Manasseh of Judah; (occupying page 3 and half of page 4, only). "3 Esdras" -- (called 1 Esdras in the King James Bible) was extensively quoted by early Christian authors and it ws given a place in Origen's Hexapla. While it was not included in early canons of the Western Church, it remains part of the Eastern Orthodox canon. "4 Esdras" is considered one of the gems of Jewish apocalyptic literature. It is canonical only in the Orthodox Slavonic Bible, (and a portion is part of the canon of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church). Like 3 Esdras, it is widely cited by early church Fathers, particularly Ambrose of Milan. Its verses provided sources for several liturgical prayers, and may have suggested the text of the Introitus of the traditional Catholic Requiem Mass -- "Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them." These three texts, preserved by Clement VIII are followed by an unpaginated index to the Biblical texts ("cum indice Bibliorum triplici" -- specifically, "Index Testimoniorvm a Christo et Apostolis in novo Testamento"; "Hebraicorvm, Chaldæorvm, Græcorvmqve Nominum interpretatio"; and "Index Biblicvs."). See Darlow & Moule, no. 6239. Indeed, the Bible Society copy deposited in Cambridge University is the only complete set I can find recorded of the full six volumes of this 1670 set. The Cambridge/Bible Society set is carefully described by an excellent catalogue entry (available online with a Newton search) which makes clear that our volume VI is the only one of the set not to have an additional, engraved title-page before the text, (running title: "Pentateuchum Moysi"). The other distinction is that this final volume is the only one to omit the Parisian portion of the imprint found in the other volumes ("Parisiis : Væneunt apud Fr. Leonard"). [See OCLC Number: 265388382; Univ. Cambridge, & Catholic Univ. of America (but note that Catholic Univ. has only volume one). There are copies of volume VI (like ours, unaccompanied by others of the set of six) at: Cleveland Public Library; Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen; Biblioteca Diocesana Tridentina "A. Rosmini" [Trento, Italy]; and the Bibliothèque Mazarine, Paris. A rare and fascinating appendix to the fine miniature set of the Sixtus-Clementine Vulgate -- which has elegantly encouraged owners for three and a half centuries to fulfill Clement VIII's wish that these books not "utterly perish.".
Publicado por A Mons: chez Gaspard Migeot 1673., [i.e Amst: Daniel Elzevier], 1673
Librería: Alec R. Allenson, Inc., Westville, FL, Estados Unidos de America
Hardcover. Champagne, Van-schuppen 1666 Ilustrador. Nouvelle ed. Vol. I [of II]: Mt.-Acts. xx, [4], 525, [6] p.: frontis.; 19.5 cm. (Reuss 200) -- 'Ex Bibliotheca D holbach Anno 1740' on fpd. Fair rubbed sheep, upper joint cracked. Covers holding by cords.
Publicado por Typographia Balleoniana, Venice, 1765
Librería: Kubik Fine Books Ltd., ABAA, Dayton, OH, Estados Unidos de America
Leather bound. 18th century printing of the Catholic Vulgate Bible in the original Latin. Bound in full leather, worn and chipped with large peices missing from the spine. 904p, lacking the final four pages of the index but otherwise complete. Pages show some scattered browing and minor wear. Overall this book is in more than presentable condition. A very scarce example of a Vulgate Bible of the 18th century.
Publicado por Ex Typographia Balleoniana, Venice, 1760
Librería: Sanctuary Books, A.B.A.A., New York, NY, Estados Unidos de America
Hardcover. Condición: Very Good. MDCCLX (1760). Folio, 2 volumes (282 x 205mm). Vol. I: xcii, 866pp., [1]; Vol. II: 588pp. [i.e. 888], [72, corrections]. Signatures: Vol. I: *-*5(8), *6(6), A-Ggg(8), Hhh(10); Vol. II: A-Iii(8), Kkk(4), A-I(4). Full-page engraved frontispiece of angels, symbols and the four Evangelists infirst volume only. Both title pages with the copperplate engraved vignette of putto beside thurible on clouds. Woodcut ornate initials, friezes and other ornamentation throughout the text, most historiated vignettes and of Old and New Testament scenes. Title page printed inred and black in first volume. Text in two columns throughout. Extensive printed footnotes. Contemporary mottled calf, spine with six raised bands and gilt in compartments, edges speckled in red; (vol. 1 with minor marginal worm hole through part of the prologue, fewcreases; corners bumped, light edgewear (more severe on volume 1), overall a good and sturdy two volume set of the Biblia Sacra). 19th-century ownership inscription written in Portuguese by a priest "Antonio Bernadini" from Coimbra. At one time in the Portuguesecollection of Julio Dantas "Livraria Particular." Stamped "Residentia Bracarensis IHS" on both titles. Jean-Baptiste du Hamel was a French cleric and physicist who published numerous scientific treatises and works on natural history in his lifetime. His last major work and his crowning achievement was his editorial work done on the Latin Vulgate Bible, his "Grande Bible," to which he added an introduction, notes, and chronological, historical, and geographical tables with the assistance of the bible scholar Giuseppe Bianchini (1704-1764). The Vulgate edition of the Bible had already undergone significant revisions by Pope Sixtus V (in 1590) and Clement VIII (in 1592), and this version which Du Hamel worked from issometimes called the Sixtine-Clementine version. Du Hamel s Biblia Sacra was first printed in Paris in 1705, only one year before his death. Balleoniana editions of the Vulgate Bible appeared in 1731, 1741, 1760 (here) and 1779. This esteemed Venetian press was known for printing finely produced religious works; the Old and New Testament woodcuts are a remarkable collection of biblical imagery. This copy retains the early ownership inscription of a priest in Coimbra and seems to have enjoyed a long monastic, scholarly life at a Benedictine Jesuit house in Braga, Portugal. Together, they comprise a complete set, two magnificent mammoth folios of the revised Du Hamel Bible a classic for examining biblical criticism and interpretation in the eighteenth century. This edition quite rare; OCLC located copies a few copies in the US at Ohio Univ., Mount Angel Abbey in Oregon, andBenedictine College in Kansas.
Publicado por Jean-François Broncart, Liege, 1701
Librería: ERIC CHAIM KLINE, BOOKSELLER (ABAA ILAB), Santa Monica, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Ejemplar firmado
Hardcover. Condición: Nearly Fine. New edition. Two volumes, folio. Text in two columns (Latin and French). Engraved frontispiece (Johann Friederich Karg von Bebenburg). Main titles for each volume in red and black; sectional titles; engraved printer's devices; 30 quarter-page engraved cartouches head the biblical books. Engraved folding plate with 16 vignettes (4x4) depicting the greatest hits of the biblical cavalcade; 4 engraved folding maps: The Holy Land; The Promised Land Apportioned by Tribe; Jerusalem in the Second Temple era (after Lamy); The World Known to the Evangelists. Amply margined copy exquisitely bound in levant morocco extra over wooden boards, with mosaic compartments in crimson, ochre; and dark brown bordered in fine gilt line; spine with raised bands; pair of brass mounts, finished in black, with steel rivets at both covers (clasps and catched perished). All edges gilt and elaborately gauffered in textured floral motif; gilt inner dentelles; decorative endleaves in orange and black; crimson silk ribbon marker. The work of a master binder. Expertly repaired at spine caps. Mild marginal dampstains beginning in second half (mostly at outer corners; expanding to fore-edge and darkening in final 20 leaves). Occasional faint embrowning; else amply-margined text about fine and crisp throughout. Sumptuous edition of the Sixto-clementine Vulgate paired with the Port-Royal French in parallel columns, annotated throughout by Thomas Du Fossé and H.-C. Beaubrun, with finely engraved title vignettes and three engraved folding plates. Dedicated to Johann Friederich Karg von Bebenburg (1648-1719), the signed frontisportrait drawn and engraved by C. Gustav of Amling. An advocate of maximal papal power, Karg served as Privy Councilor of the Prince-Bishop of Bamberg and Würzburg, Peter Philipp von Dernbach, then of Elector Max Emanuel of Bavaria. He served as Dean of Our Lady in Munich, and was entrusted by Emperor Leopold I with a legation to Pope Innocence XI. By these efforts he secured in 1688 the election of Prince Joseph Clemens of Bavaria as Archbishop of Cologne, as a result of which he was made Chancellor and Minister of State (here noted on the frontispiece). Provenance and annotations: Bookplate of Herman Blum (Blumhaven Library & Gallery), with his ticket below; two gilt-stamped ex-libris morocco labels: Henry W. Poor (oval); Adolph Lewisohn (octogonal). References: Darlow & Moule 3779; Deleveau & Hillard, Bibles imprimées du XVe au XVIIe siècles conservées è Paris, 605. ADB 15 (1882), "Karg: Johann Friedrich".
Publicado por [Germany, 11th century].
Librería: Antiquariat INLIBRIS Gilhofer Nfg. GmbH, Vienna, A, Austria
Manuscrito
2 leaves ca. 430 × 285 mm (the two fragments stitched together). Latin manuscript on vellum. Carolingian minuscule script in iron-black ink, 2 columns and ca. 42 lines of text recto and verso on each leaf, with chapter numbers and initials in red cinnabar rustic capitals. Two large and incredibly scarce fragments from an 11th century Vulgate showcasing a very fine example of Carolingian minuscule. Likely these are survivals from a lectern Bible in use in Germany during the Holy Roman Empire period, with 15th century ecclesiastic provenance from the Romanesque church of St Aposteln, Cologne. The fragments comprise the upper part of one leaf and the side of another, each with chapter numbers in elegant red rustic capitals. The text of one comprises the Vulgate Numbers 6:6-19 ('Omni tempore [ ] fermento unam de ca[nistro]') and 6:22-7:13 ('Locutus est dominus ad Moysen [ ] in sacrificium'), with chapter numbers XIII-XVI at Numbers 6:22, 7:1, and 7:10, continuing on the verso; the text of the other comprising Numbers 20:9-18 ('quae erat in conspectu domini [ ] armatus occurram') and 20:27-21:7 ('Fecit Moyses ut praeceperat [ ] Peccavimus, quia locuti'), with chapter numbers XLVIII-LII at Numbers 20:14, 21:1, and 21:5, continuing on the verso from Numbers 21:16 (?) to 22:12, the chapters each starting on a new line with a red initial. This section of the Vulgate includes the story of how Moses led his people into the desert, and of their difficulties and suffering for the faith. - Recovered from use as pastedowns in a tanned leather binding, with consequent cropping and stains, the glued side of each difficult to read, the two parts sewn together in the 19th (?) century, or perhaps earlier. - Provenance: 1. Peter Sennekamp (?), vicar of the Romanesque church of St Aposteln, Cologne: inscribed in a 15th-century hand 'Liber iste pertinet Petro Senepkamp animarum vicario in ecclesia sanctorum Apostolorum Colon.'; presumably given or sold by him to: 2. Georg Buckes, vicar of the Romanesque church of St Gereon, Cologne: inscribed in another 15th-century hand 'Modo pertinet Georgio Buckes de [.] vicario sancti Gereonis'. The churches of St Gereon and St Aposteln are about a ten-minute walk from each other. 3. Colker MS 199, acquired in 1972 from Maggs.
Librería: Antiquariaat FORUM BV, Houten, Holanda
574; [2], 575-729, [2], [5 blank]; "637" [= 635], [1], [1 blank], [4 blank] (in place of [1], [3 blank]); 192; 479, [1 blank]; 861, [2], [1 blank]; 128, [186], [6 blank]; 336, [2], 337-758, [2], [8 blank] pp.A small Latin Vulgate bible printed by the Plantin-Moretus office in Antwerp, the smallest-format edition of the Sixtine-Clementine authorized Catholic text. The first volume of the Old Testament has only the engraved general title-page, while each of the remaining Old Textament volumes as printed has a separate volume title-page naming the books it covers (including the volume with the apocrypha, miscellaneos texts and the indexes. After the general title-page follow a preface to the reader, the decree of the Council of Trent, "Paulus Papa V. Ad futuram rei memoriam" (Pope Paul V died in 1621) and a privilege, dated Brussels, 1611. The Old Testament also has prefaces to the books. The New Testament has no preliminaries except its title-page. In 1546 the Council of Trent ordered a revision of the Vulgate Latin Bible to establish an authorized Catholic text. Pope Sixtus V ordered the preparation of the new edition, printed by the Vatican Press and published in 1590. The book has been variously described as 12mo, 16mo and 24mo, but it is in fact a 24mo in 8s. The three divisional titles possibly printed specially for this copy have vertical chainlines and may be in 18mo format. The binding stamps are finely cut and skilfully applied, especially the curls on the spine, so it is likely to have been executed by one of the great French binders of ca. 1700.With an owner's inscription on a free endleaf in volume IV as bound ("ce livre apartient a monseigneur L[']Evesque D[']Evreux"), presumably Jean Le Normand (1662-1733), Bishop of Evreux from 1711 to his death, whose bookplate appears in 7 of the 9 volumes: the handwriting is old-fashioned for 1711, so the book could have come to Le Normand from an earlier Bishop of Evreux, but perhaps he simply wrote in an old-fashioned style. The pagination of volume ii accidentally omits numbers 577-578 but no leaf is missing there. Very slightly browned, with an occasional minor spot and with the library stamps on the letterpress title-pages abraded, but still generally in very good condition. With small cracks in the hinges of 4 volumes, minor wear on the board edges and corners, and volume III as bound (vol. ii as printed) darkened, but the binding is also otherwise in very good condition, with the tooling clear and sharp. A lovely little Catholic bible beautifully bound ca. 1700 in French gold-tooled red morocco, an unusually small format for a Catholic bible.l Darlow & Moule 6211 (New Testament only); STCV 6650952; USTC 1003882; not in www.bibliasacra.nl.
Librería: Antiquariaat FORUM BV, Houten, Holanda
[4], 410; [106] ll.Extraordinary copy of the first edition, published by Moretus (Moerentorf) & Van Keerberghen, of the famous Moerentorf Bible in the vernacular Dutch language, printed in 1599, especially interesting for its vivid contemporary hand-colouring and for its richly blind-tooled contemporary binding. The authoritative Moerentorf Bible or Moretus Bible, was a revision of the 1548 Louvain Bible in Dutch, but corrected based on the improved Latin Vulgate of 1592 published by the authority of Pope Clement VIII. The Moerentorf Bible met extraordinary success and "became the standard Bible for Dutch Roman Catholics" (Darlow & Moule) for almost three centuries, being repeatedly reprinted as the official Dutch translation of the Vulgate in the Low Countries.Jan Moerentorf, better known as Jan I Moretus, published this revised Dutch translation of the Old and New Testament together in 1599 with the title Biblia sacra. The first woodcut of the Old Testament, in Genesis, is signed "P.B" by Peter van der Borcht, a Flemish painter, draughtsman and etcher who was full-time assistant to Christopher Plantin and illustrated many of his liturgical works. The other woodcut illustrations in the Old Testament are copied from the engraved print series of the German painter and printmaker Hans Sebald Beham (1500-1550), who was especially known for his very small engravings. The present edition appeared in two issues, one with the imprint of Moretus alone and the present one with the imprint of both Moretus and Van Keerberghen. Poortman shows a completely different first woodcut illustration (not signed P.B.) for the Moretus version, says its other illustrations are printed from a different series of blocks, differing in detail and rendering the scenes in mirror image, and also notes differences in the orthography. With the bookplate (on the front paste-down) and library stamp (on a free endleaf, the back of the title-page, and the first text page) of Wetenschappelijke Bibliotheek Eindhoven, the former monastic library of the Augustinian monastery in Eindhoven and one of the most important scholarly theological libraries of the Netherlands. Also with one contemporary annotation on Pp1 of the Old Testament.Binding slightly worn around the edges, especially around the spine, edges a little dust-soiled and some damage to the back board where the leather fastenings were originally attached to the boards with brass pins. Minor marginal stains, spots and dust-soiling, mostly in the first part, and a few creases throughout the book, a small tear in the right lower corner of Oo6 in the Old Testament (not affecting the text), a larger tear (partly restored) and restoration in the foot margin in L6 of the Old Testament. The colouring of the initials and woodcuts has slightly browned the paper. Overall, however, the Bible is in good condition. A beautiful copy of one of the most important Dutch Bibles ever published, here in a richly blind-tooled contemporary binding and complete with all the illustrations coloured by a contemporary hand.l Belgica typographica 1541-1600, 473 & 7886; Biblia Sacra 1599.B.dut.JM1.A; Bibliotheca Catholica Neerlandica impressa 4529; BM STC Dutch, p. 24; Darlow & Moule 3300; Dirk Imhof, Jan Moretus and the continuation of the Plantin press (1589-1610), B-36B; Pettegree, Netherlandish Books 3891; Poortman, Bijbel en prent I, and pp. 131-133, 217; STCV 12923651; USTC 402496; not in Adams.