Without date'.j
LATIN BIBLES.
37
The collections of Gaignat, La Valliere, and Pinelli, did not contain a
copy. See the Bibl. Soubise, p. S, n°. 82, where it is called ‘ tihs-rare.’
21. Biblia Latina Vulgata. TVithout Date,
Place, or JSfame of Printer. Folio. 2 vols.
This ancient edition begins with a table, of which the following is,
in part, the title :
atiufo omniu tiiuine £cg
ture geu fcifciie libroif. %n
qua tjerfiotf ^pcntiio.
quitJ t quoliftet cuiuoliliet iilbri ca
pitulo agitut* siue tractat: tarn ca
This table occupies ten leaves. Then succeed the usual epistle and
preface of St. Jerome, prefixed to the Pentateuch. The book of Ge-
nesis begins about the middle of the second column, having ‘ffijcpfictt
plogu0. 3fnciptt fificr fircatcfi quem nos gene^tm titm9* ®apttuiu pmu*’ pre-
ceding it, as a head title. The first volume ends with
€jrplicit ££alteriu* ♦ ♦
on the recto of the last leaf, nearly at the bottom of the first column.
The second volume begins with eighteen leaves of a table of the
contents of the remaining books of Holy Scripture: the table ending
with
bEO GRAC/JAS*
Then follows St. Jerom’s epistle to the books of Solomon. The Old
Testament ends ‘ ©rpfictt fifier 0c5o ^acijabeorum:’ succeeded, on the
recto of the ensuing leaf, by St. Jerom’s epistle concerning the Four
Gospels. The New Testament ends at the bottom of the second col.,
on the recto of the last leaf,
oErglicit liBcr agocalipgig fcea
ti 3Jo|janni£ apostoli.
This edition is printed in a short thick Gothic type, upon coarse
brown-tinted paper, and very strongly resembles the printing of Uiric
Zel at Cologne. There are neither numerals, signatures, catchwords,
nor running titles. A full page contains 42 lines. Daunou assigns an
LATIN BIBLES.
37
The collections of Gaignat, La Valliere, and Pinelli, did not contain a
copy. See the Bibl. Soubise, p. S, n°. 82, where it is called ‘ tihs-rare.’
21. Biblia Latina Vulgata. TVithout Date,
Place, or JSfame of Printer. Folio. 2 vols.
This ancient edition begins with a table, of which the following is,
in part, the title :
atiufo omniu tiiuine £cg
ture geu fcifciie libroif. %n
qua tjerfiotf ^pcntiio.
quitJ t quoliftet cuiuoliliet iilbri ca
pitulo agitut* siue tractat: tarn ca
This table occupies ten leaves. Then succeed the usual epistle and
preface of St. Jerome, prefixed to the Pentateuch. The book of Ge-
nesis begins about the middle of the second column, having ‘ffijcpfictt
plogu0. 3fnciptt fificr fircatcfi quem nos gene^tm titm9* ®apttuiu pmu*’ pre-
ceding it, as a head title. The first volume ends with
€jrplicit ££alteriu* ♦ ♦
on the recto of the last leaf, nearly at the bottom of the first column.
The second volume begins with eighteen leaves of a table of the
contents of the remaining books of Holy Scripture: the table ending
with
bEO GRAC/JAS*
Then follows St. Jerom’s epistle to the books of Solomon. The Old
Testament ends ‘ ©rpfictt fifier 0c5o ^acijabeorum:’ succeeded, on the
recto of the ensuing leaf, by St. Jerom’s epistle concerning the Four
Gospels. The New Testament ends at the bottom of the second col.,
on the recto of the last leaf,
oErglicit liBcr agocalipgig fcea
ti 3Jo|janni£ apostoli.
This edition is printed in a short thick Gothic type, upon coarse
brown-tinted paper, and very strongly resembles the printing of Uiric
Zel at Cologne. There are neither numerals, signatures, catchwords,
nor running titles. A full page contains 42 lines. Daunou assigns an