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Auction archive: Lot number 86

Tixier, De memorabilibus et claris mulieribus, Paris, 1521, Parisian calf binding for Marcus Fugger

Estimate
US$10,000 - US$15,000
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 86

Tixier, De memorabilibus et claris mulieribus, Paris, 1521, Parisian calf binding for Marcus Fugger

Estimate
US$10,000 - US$15,000
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

Tixier, Jean, de Ravisi. De memorabilibus et claris mulieribus aliquot diversorum scriptorum Opera. Paris: Simon de Colines, 8 November 1521. Bound with:
Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples, Agones martyrum mensis januarii, libro primo contenti. Paris: [Henri I Estienne, 1519/1520] 
An anthology of the lives of famous women, extracted (or printed entirely) from the works of Plutarchus, Jacopo Filippo Foresti, Battista Fregoso, Raffaele Maffei, Valerand de La Varanne, and other authors, several anonymous. Jean Tixier, a teacher of rhetoric at the Paris Collège de Navarre, contributed biographies of the founder of his college (Jeanne de Navarre, ca. 1305), the French Queen Anne de Bretagne (1477–1514), Charlotte de Bourbon (1474–Fontevraud abbey 14 December 1520, widow of Engelbert de Clèves, comte de Nevers), and lists of infamous women (Meretrices quaedam), educated women (Mulieres doctae), illustrious women (Nomina quarundam foeminarum illustrium), warriors (Mulieres bellicose & masculae virtutis), and women who have caused wars or other evils (Bella & alia quaedam mala a mulieribus orta).
The publication of a “women’s book” was always an opportunity for authors and editors to pay homage to women from whom they hoped to obtain patronage. Boccaccio had dedicated De Claris mulieribus to the lady of the house where he stayed in Naples in 1362 (Andreina Acciaioli, Countess of Altavilla) and Foresti to the widow of Matthias Corvinus (Beatrice d'Aragona) and to noblewomen of the court of Ferrara. Tixier dedicates his book (8 July 1521) to Jeanne de Vignacourt (Wignacourt; d. 1544), wife of the second Président au Parlement de Paris, Charles Guillard (1457–1537). The printer Simone de Colines cut a fine criblé initial of their impaled arms (dexter, Guillard; sinister, Vignacourt).
Contents
(ff. 3–14) Plutarchus, De Virtutibus mulierum traductio, per Alamanum Ranutinum ciuem Florentinum (Alamanno Rinuccini, 1426–1499); (ff. 14–160) Opus Iacobi Philippi Bergomensis de Claris mulieribus (Jacopo Filippo Foresti, 1434–1520); (ff. 160–176) Divae Catharinae Senensis vita … per loannem Pinum Tolosanum (Jean de Pins, 1470?–1537); (ff. 176–186) Aliud De illustribus foeminis opusculum, incerto authore (evidently based on Boccaccio; see L. Torretta, "Il ‘Liber de Claris Mulieribus’ di Giovanni Boccaccio… ," in Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 40 (1902), pp. 35–65); [inserted bifolium after f. 176 (i.e., yix.x inserted between y8 and z1, as published): De illustrissima et cordatissima Gallorum Regina, & Britonum duce Anna – Diversa eiusdem annae epitaphia / Naenia Annae; De nobilissima femina Caroleta Borboniensi, Nivernorum comite]; (ff. 186v–187) Vita Monegundis (Grégoire de Tours); (ff. 188–189) De Foeminis quae doctrina excelluerunt authore Baptista Fulgoso (Battista Fregoso, 1453–1504); (ff. 189–190), De Moribus muliervm … ex commentarijs Raphaelis Volaterrani (Raffaele Maffei, 1455–1522); (ff. 190–191) De Blancha Regis Castellae Filia & Fancorum regina – De illustrissima, et mirae sanctitatis femina D. Ioanna Francorum regina Regalis collegij Nauarrae fundatrice (Jean Tixier); (ff. 191–198) Capita qvaedam De Claris Mulieribus authore Rauisio Textore Niuernensi (Jean Tixier); (ff. 199–214 Valerandi Varanii De Gestis Ioannae virginis Franciae, egregiae bellatricis Libri quatuor (Valerand de la Varanne, fl. Ca. 1500); (ff. 214–217) De Sancta Clotilde, Burgundionvm regis filia, & Francorum regina; (ff. 217–219) De Sancta Genovefa, Virgine gallica, Parhhisiensium patrona.
This copy is from the library of Marcus Fugger (1529–1597), scion of the powerful banking family and trading family based in Augsburg (see lots 26, 33). It is one of a large number of bindings he commissioned from Parisian binders in the early 1550s, the great majority in brown calf, simply decorated, with a small tool of a hand holding a branch, upon which perches a bird (as here), or a crowned double–headed eagle. Marcus habitually wrote his name on the pastedown of the upper cover, but no date, or purchase details. His librarians often added a longitudinal title on vellum strips mounted in the compartments of the spine (as here), and/or inscribed a title in large capitals along the fore–edge.
The circumstances of these book purchases are not documented, neither in the Fugger archive in Dillingen nor in the surviving Öttingen-Wallerstein archive at Harburg. It is possible that Marcus Fugger himself visited Paris in these years, moving between the Fugger branches in France, Spain and the Netherlands. Alternatively, booksellers or other parties might have bought books for him and had them bound on his behalf, as was done for other book-collecting members of the Fugger family. The humanist Ludovicus Carinus (Kiel; 1496-1569), sometime preceptor in the Fugger house, is a potential agent for Marcus in the Paris book trade. From 1549–ca. 1551, Carinus accompanied Marcus’s younger brother, Hans Fugger (1531–1598), during his studies and travels in France; after 1555, he was settled in Basel. Once he took over his father's business, in 1560, the pace of Marcus’s acquisitions sharply decreased. His purchases were now often bound in vellum, and more his elaborate bindings were now mainly commissioned from bookbinders in southern Germany.
Folio (320 x 210 mm). (I) Roman type, 45 lines plus headline. collation: a–y8 (+ yix.x) z8 A–E6 F8: 224 leaves (F8 blank). Woodcut Colines device on title-page, woodcut initials from several series, including a Q with the impaled insignia of the dedicatee and her husband (Vignacourt and Guillard; a2r, A6v, C3r). (II) Roman type, 45 lines plus headline. collation: a–k8: 80 leaves. Caption title, floriated woodcut initials, including a fine 12-line criblé C.
binding: Parisian polished tan calf over pasteboards (328 x 224 mm), ca. 1550, blind fillets around sides, 2 concentric frames of blind fillets, gilt bud and leaf at outer angles of outer frame, gilt fleuron at outer angles of inner frame, in center gilt hand-held floral sprig surmounted by a bird, spine with 7 full and 2 half bands, fine manuscript longitudinal title on vellum strips mounted in compartments "DE CLARIS. MVLIERIBVS. DIVERSI. AVTORES.," plain edges. (Extremities a bit worn.)
provenance: Marcus Fugger (1529–1597; signature on upper pastedown), by descent to — Philipp Fugger (1567–1601), by descent to — Marcus Philipp Fugger (1598–1620), by descent to — Marquard Fugger, Graf von Kirchberg und Weissenhorn (1596–1655) — Öttingen-Wallerstein, family library at Schloss Maihingen (armorial ink-stamp on title-page) — Eugen Wolfgang Karl Friedrich Joseph Notger, Fürst zu Öttingen-Öttingen und Öttingen-Wallerstein (1885–1969 [not traced in the Karl & Faber auctions in Munich, 1933-1935]) — Emil Offenbacher, Kew Gardens, NY — Cornelius J. Hauck (1893–1967), his bequest to — Cincinnati Historical Society Library (Christie’s New York, 27 June 2006, lot 241). acquisition: Purchased at the Hauck sale through Robin Halwas.  
references: (I) BP16 104403; FB 89144; USTC 145382; P. Renouard, Simon de Colines, pp. 20–22; (II) USTC 184050; cf. Hägele, "Einbände aus der Bibliothek des Markus Fugger," in "Ein Reichtum, den kein Maß bestimmen kann“: Die Sondersammlungen der Universitätsbibliothek Augsburg (Augsburg, 2021), pp. 72–80.

Auction archive: Lot number 86
Auction:
Datum:
11 Oct 2023
Auction house:
Sotheby's
34-35 New Bond St.
London, W1A 2AA
United Kingdom
+44 (0)20 7293 5000
+44 (0)20 7293 5989
Beschreibung:

Tixier, Jean, de Ravisi. De memorabilibus et claris mulieribus aliquot diversorum scriptorum Opera. Paris: Simon de Colines, 8 November 1521. Bound with:
Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples, Agones martyrum mensis januarii, libro primo contenti. Paris: [Henri I Estienne, 1519/1520] 
An anthology of the lives of famous women, extracted (or printed entirely) from the works of Plutarchus, Jacopo Filippo Foresti, Battista Fregoso, Raffaele Maffei, Valerand de La Varanne, and other authors, several anonymous. Jean Tixier, a teacher of rhetoric at the Paris Collège de Navarre, contributed biographies of the founder of his college (Jeanne de Navarre, ca. 1305), the French Queen Anne de Bretagne (1477–1514), Charlotte de Bourbon (1474–Fontevraud abbey 14 December 1520, widow of Engelbert de Clèves, comte de Nevers), and lists of infamous women (Meretrices quaedam), educated women (Mulieres doctae), illustrious women (Nomina quarundam foeminarum illustrium), warriors (Mulieres bellicose & masculae virtutis), and women who have caused wars or other evils (Bella & alia quaedam mala a mulieribus orta).
The publication of a “women’s book” was always an opportunity for authors and editors to pay homage to women from whom they hoped to obtain patronage. Boccaccio had dedicated De Claris mulieribus to the lady of the house where he stayed in Naples in 1362 (Andreina Acciaioli, Countess of Altavilla) and Foresti to the widow of Matthias Corvinus (Beatrice d'Aragona) and to noblewomen of the court of Ferrara. Tixier dedicates his book (8 July 1521) to Jeanne de Vignacourt (Wignacourt; d. 1544), wife of the second Président au Parlement de Paris, Charles Guillard (1457–1537). The printer Simone de Colines cut a fine criblé initial of their impaled arms (dexter, Guillard; sinister, Vignacourt).
Contents
(ff. 3–14) Plutarchus, De Virtutibus mulierum traductio, per Alamanum Ranutinum ciuem Florentinum (Alamanno Rinuccini, 1426–1499); (ff. 14–160) Opus Iacobi Philippi Bergomensis de Claris mulieribus (Jacopo Filippo Foresti, 1434–1520); (ff. 160–176) Divae Catharinae Senensis vita … per loannem Pinum Tolosanum (Jean de Pins, 1470?–1537); (ff. 176–186) Aliud De illustribus foeminis opusculum, incerto authore (evidently based on Boccaccio; see L. Torretta, "Il ‘Liber de Claris Mulieribus’ di Giovanni Boccaccio… ," in Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 40 (1902), pp. 35–65); [inserted bifolium after f. 176 (i.e., yix.x inserted between y8 and z1, as published): De illustrissima et cordatissima Gallorum Regina, & Britonum duce Anna – Diversa eiusdem annae epitaphia / Naenia Annae; De nobilissima femina Caroleta Borboniensi, Nivernorum comite]; (ff. 186v–187) Vita Monegundis (Grégoire de Tours); (ff. 188–189) De Foeminis quae doctrina excelluerunt authore Baptista Fulgoso (Battista Fregoso, 1453–1504); (ff. 189–190), De Moribus muliervm … ex commentarijs Raphaelis Volaterrani (Raffaele Maffei, 1455–1522); (ff. 190–191) De Blancha Regis Castellae Filia & Fancorum regina – De illustrissima, et mirae sanctitatis femina D. Ioanna Francorum regina Regalis collegij Nauarrae fundatrice (Jean Tixier); (ff. 191–198) Capita qvaedam De Claris Mulieribus authore Rauisio Textore Niuernensi (Jean Tixier); (ff. 199–214 Valerandi Varanii De Gestis Ioannae virginis Franciae, egregiae bellatricis Libri quatuor (Valerand de la Varanne, fl. Ca. 1500); (ff. 214–217) De Sancta Clotilde, Burgundionvm regis filia, & Francorum regina; (ff. 217–219) De Sancta Genovefa, Virgine gallica, Parhhisiensium patrona.
This copy is from the library of Marcus Fugger (1529–1597), scion of the powerful banking family and trading family based in Augsburg (see lots 26, 33). It is one of a large number of bindings he commissioned from Parisian binders in the early 1550s, the great majority in brown calf, simply decorated, with a small tool of a hand holding a branch, upon which perches a bird (as here), or a crowned double–headed eagle. Marcus habitually wrote his name on the pastedown of the upper cover, but no date, or purchase details. His librarians often added a longitudinal title on vellum strips mounted in the compartments of the spine (as here), and/or inscribed a title in large capitals along the fore–edge.
The circumstances of these book purchases are not documented, neither in the Fugger archive in Dillingen nor in the surviving Öttingen-Wallerstein archive at Harburg. It is possible that Marcus Fugger himself visited Paris in these years, moving between the Fugger branches in France, Spain and the Netherlands. Alternatively, booksellers or other parties might have bought books for him and had them bound on his behalf, as was done for other book-collecting members of the Fugger family. The humanist Ludovicus Carinus (Kiel; 1496-1569), sometime preceptor in the Fugger house, is a potential agent for Marcus in the Paris book trade. From 1549–ca. 1551, Carinus accompanied Marcus’s younger brother, Hans Fugger (1531–1598), during his studies and travels in France; after 1555, he was settled in Basel. Once he took over his father's business, in 1560, the pace of Marcus’s acquisitions sharply decreased. His purchases were now often bound in vellum, and more his elaborate bindings were now mainly commissioned from bookbinders in southern Germany.
Folio (320 x 210 mm). (I) Roman type, 45 lines plus headline. collation: a–y8 (+ yix.x) z8 A–E6 F8: 224 leaves (F8 blank). Woodcut Colines device on title-page, woodcut initials from several series, including a Q with the impaled insignia of the dedicatee and her husband (Vignacourt and Guillard; a2r, A6v, C3r). (II) Roman type, 45 lines plus headline. collation: a–k8: 80 leaves. Caption title, floriated woodcut initials, including a fine 12-line criblé C.
binding: Parisian polished tan calf over pasteboards (328 x 224 mm), ca. 1550, blind fillets around sides, 2 concentric frames of blind fillets, gilt bud and leaf at outer angles of outer frame, gilt fleuron at outer angles of inner frame, in center gilt hand-held floral sprig surmounted by a bird, spine with 7 full and 2 half bands, fine manuscript longitudinal title on vellum strips mounted in compartments "DE CLARIS. MVLIERIBVS. DIVERSI. AVTORES.," plain edges. (Extremities a bit worn.)
provenance: Marcus Fugger (1529–1597; signature on upper pastedown), by descent to — Philipp Fugger (1567–1601), by descent to — Marcus Philipp Fugger (1598–1620), by descent to — Marquard Fugger, Graf von Kirchberg und Weissenhorn (1596–1655) — Öttingen-Wallerstein, family library at Schloss Maihingen (armorial ink-stamp on title-page) — Eugen Wolfgang Karl Friedrich Joseph Notger, Fürst zu Öttingen-Öttingen und Öttingen-Wallerstein (1885–1969 [not traced in the Karl & Faber auctions in Munich, 1933-1935]) — Emil Offenbacher, Kew Gardens, NY — Cornelius J. Hauck (1893–1967), his bequest to — Cincinnati Historical Society Library (Christie’s New York, 27 June 2006, lot 241). acquisition: Purchased at the Hauck sale through Robin Halwas.  
references: (I) BP16 104403; FB 89144; USTC 145382; P. Renouard, Simon de Colines, pp. 20–22; (II) USTC 184050; cf. Hägele, "Einbände aus der Bibliothek des Markus Fugger," in "Ein Reichtum, den kein Maß bestimmen kann“: Die Sondersammlungen der Universitätsbibliothek Augsburg (Augsburg, 2021), pp. 72–80.

Auction archive: Lot number 86
Auction:
Datum:
11 Oct 2023
Auction house:
Sotheby's
34-35 New Bond St.
London, W1A 2AA
United Kingdom
+44 (0)20 7293 5000
+44 (0)20 7293 5989
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