Thursday, May 01, 2014

Antiquarian Book News from Ibookcollector

Lilly Library makes a 'Catch'

The Lilly Library (Indiana) recently acquired an English book of music titled Catch that Catch Can, or A Choice Collection of Catches, Rovnds, & Canons for 3 or 4 Voyces. Printed in London by John Hilton for John Benson and John Playford in 1652, the book remains in its original, speckled calf, oblong boards. There are 144 songs by several composers, including William Lawes, Henry Lawes, and John Hilton. Catches appear as early as 1580 in English manuscript, while catches and rounds first appeared in print in 1609 with a collection published in London by Thomas Ravenscroft.

A ‘catch’ is a type of round. Usually a minimum of three voices are used to repeatedly sing the same melody (or sometimes slightly different melodies) beginning at different times. The catch was for each succeeding singer to take up or catch his part in time. In a ‘catch’, the lines of lyrics interact so that a word or phrase is produced that does not appear if sung by only one voice. This phrase is often laden with innuendo, politically subversive, or lewd. Noted composers of catches were Henry Purcell, Michael Wise and John Wall Callcott.
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The First Printed Atlas: An Unusual Perspective on Britain

One of the first printed atlases, Cosmographia, showing a Greco-Roman interpretation of Britain, will be offered in Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions’ Important Books sale on Monday 19th May at their saleroom in London’s Mayfair, alongside an illuminated manuscript Book of Hours and works from Wordsworth's library.
BloomsburyThe distorted map of Britain (pictured left) from the Cosmographia, 1490, was conceived alongside others of the whole Roman Empire by Greco-Roman astrologer, mathematician and writer Claudius Ptolemaeus.

Ptolemy’s Cosmographia was a ground-breaking treaty that challenged medieval map-making and revolutionised cartography. Medieval maps at the time were created to reflect the importance of landmarks and powerful cities were often disproportionately portrayed against their surroundings, irrespective of their actual size. Ptolemy’s Cosmographia used mathematical calculations in an attempt to create accurate representations of the land, thus changing map-making for centuries to come. 
This rare survivor is the fifth edition of Ptolemy’s work which is spilt into two parts. Book one is a thorough discussion on the geography of the Greco-Roman Empire, and the second book is a compilation of maps. The work, complete with 27 copper-engraved maps of the known world, is estimated at £70,000-90,000. [Lot 10]

BloomsburyAlso originating from the medieval period is a fine illuminated manuscript from 1490. This Book of Hours (pictured left) was produced on commission on a greater scale than any other book during the medieval period and played a vital role in the late Medieval and Renaissance cult of the virgin. 
This highly collectible and unique private devotional is exceedingly popular with collectors and is estimated to achieve £20,000-30,000. [Lot 1] 

Later examples of printed books of hours, which began to replace the manuscript versions after the invention of printing in the mid 15th century, illustrated with hand-illuminated woodcuts and decorations are also represented in the sale by Heures a Lusaige de Romme, 1521, estimated at £20,000-30,000 [Lot 3] and Hore beate marie secundum usum Romanium, 1507, estimated at £6,000-8,000. [Lot 2]
Elsewhere in the auction is a collection of three books which once belonged to William Wordsworth. They are bound in decorative cloth coverings, known as ‘Cottonian bindings’, in order to improve their visual appeal (pictured below). One of these is Henry Holland’s Some Account of the Life and Writings of Lope Felix de Vega Carpio, 1806, bearing a presentation inscription ‘From the Author’ together with Wordsworth's ink signature to title.

bloomsburyThe British Library holds a copy with similar provenance that purports to have been bound by Dorothy Wordsworth herself, leading the auctioneer to believe that this example may also have been bound by Wordsworth’s wife.   This book is offered alongside John Dunton’s two volume work The Life and Errors of John Dunton, 1818, once belonging to Wordsworth’s friend and contemporary Robert Southey (bearing his ink ownership inscriptions). The three works are together estimated at £500-700 [Lot 94]

Also included in the sale is Wordsworth’s personal copy of his Yarrow Revisited and other Poems, 1835, with a signed inscription reading ‘Wm Wordsworth, Rydal Mount, 21st April - 36’. It is estimated at £1,000-1,500 [Lot 98]
The auction will be held at Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions’ London saleroom in Mayfair on Monday 19th May, with viewing from Wednesday – Saturday, 14th – 18th May. The catalogue and details of online bidding with no additional fee can be found online at www.bloomsburyauctions.com
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New York Public Library

A telephone book from Warsaw, Poland, dated 1939 containing the names of Jewish families living in the area at the start of World War II is on display at the New York Public Library in honor of Holocaust Remembrance Day.

The directory was published shortly after the outbreak of war and shows the number of Jews residing in the city at the time. It was the largest population in any city in Europe at the time. It was decimated by the Holocaust.

The Holocaust Remembrance display will be open until May 7 and also features other memorabilia, such as pictures of the Warsaw Ghetto in ruins after the famed 1943 uprising, written accounts from concentration camp survivors and their children, and postcards and letters from those held in Nazi labour camps. Also on display is a Survivors Haggadah, published in 1946 for U.S. servicemen stationed in occupied Germany for the first Passover after the end of the war. The document compares Adolf Hitler to Pharaoh and Dwight D. Eisenhower to Moses. 

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