156
MISCELLANEOUS.
sMeutz ; 1469.
613. Thomas Aquinas. Opus Quarti Scripti.
Printed by Schoiffer. Mentz. 1469. Folio.
We pursue the chronological order, ratlier than tliat £ according' to
the subjects,’ in our account of the impressions of Thomas Aquinas in
the present Library. We have here another striking specimen of the
diligence and skill of the early Mentz press. This volume is executed
in the same character and manner, and upon the same thick paper, as
the preceding one. Maittaire, Schwarz, Seemiller, and Braun, have
each given the colophon. The first column contains 60, and the second
and every full column 61 lines. On the recto of the first leaf, without
prefix, we read the commencement thus :
Sjsit UcrBii suu
ct ^anauit coo
ct cripuit co£
bc intcricon%
A table occupies the last 7 leaves: on the recto of the 7th of which,
at the bottom of the sirst eolumn, is the following colophon:—printed
in red ink, in a type precisely the same as that used in the Bible of
1462.
IDrcdarsi fjoc opuo nuartiOcripti sct tfjo^
mc tJC arsuino, 3sima in brfic mogutina. in^
clitc nacoio gcrmaicc. cjita tici ricmctia ta
alsi ingcnij ittlnc. Donocu gratuitu. cctcrio
tcrra^ nacotbi pfcrrc. iiiugtrac’sst bigna^
ta c. 3£rtistcio.aa quatia atiinucncoc impri^
mcntii scu caractcri$anbi aftsq^ tilla caiatni
craraconc sic ciligiatu. ct ab cuscbia bci in^
bustr c c^t cooumatu. p pctrii scpoiffljcr bc
gcrns$cm. 3snno bni miiicstmo rjuatirin-
gcntcsimoscjragcpimonono. €rcbccima
bic 3unij. Mt iauo bco,
The sliields, in red, are beneath. Consult the authorities in Panzer,
vol. ii. p. 119. This is also a fine large copy: in russia binding.
MISCELLANEOUS.
sMeutz ; 1469.
613. Thomas Aquinas. Opus Quarti Scripti.
Printed by Schoiffer. Mentz. 1469. Folio.
We pursue the chronological order, ratlier than tliat £ according' to
the subjects,’ in our account of the impressions of Thomas Aquinas in
the present Library. We have here another striking specimen of the
diligence and skill of the early Mentz press. This volume is executed
in the same character and manner, and upon the same thick paper, as
the preceding one. Maittaire, Schwarz, Seemiller, and Braun, have
each given the colophon. The first column contains 60, and the second
and every full column 61 lines. On the recto of the first leaf, without
prefix, we read the commencement thus :
Sjsit UcrBii suu
ct ^anauit coo
ct cripuit co£
bc intcricon%
A table occupies the last 7 leaves: on the recto of the 7th of which,
at the bottom of the sirst eolumn, is the following colophon:—printed
in red ink, in a type precisely the same as that used in the Bible of
1462.
IDrcdarsi fjoc opuo nuartiOcripti sct tfjo^
mc tJC arsuino, 3sima in brfic mogutina. in^
clitc nacoio gcrmaicc. cjita tici ricmctia ta
alsi ingcnij ittlnc. Donocu gratuitu. cctcrio
tcrra^ nacotbi pfcrrc. iiiugtrac’sst bigna^
ta c. 3£rtistcio.aa quatia atiinucncoc impri^
mcntii scu caractcri$anbi aftsq^ tilla caiatni
craraconc sic ciligiatu. ct ab cuscbia bci in^
bustr c c^t cooumatu. p pctrii scpoiffljcr bc
gcrns$cm. 3snno bni miiicstmo rjuatirin-
gcntcsimoscjragcpimonono. €rcbccima
bic 3unij. Mt iauo bco,
The sliields, in red, are beneath. Consult the authorities in Panzer,
vol. ii. p. 119. This is also a fine large copy: in russia binding.