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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 189

PETRARCA, Francesco (1304-1374), PORCARI, Stefano (d.1453), FILELFO, Francesco (1398-1481), BRUNI, Leonardo (?1370-1444), MANETTI, Giannozzo (1369-1459): various orations and epistles, in Italian and Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM

Auction 03.12.1997
03.12.1997
Schätzpreis
10.000 £ - 15.000 £
ca. 16.618 $ - 24.927 $
Zuschlagspreis:
20.700 £
ca. 34.399 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 189

PETRARCA, Francesco (1304-1374), PORCARI, Stefano (d.1453), FILELFO, Francesco (1398-1481), BRUNI, Leonardo (?1370-1444), MANETTI, Giannozzo (1369-1459): various orations and epistles, in Italian and Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM

Auction 03.12.1997
03.12.1997
Schätzpreis
10.000 £ - 15.000 £
ca. 16.618 $ - 24.927 $
Zuschlagspreis:
20.700 £
ca. 34.399 $
Beschreibung:

PETRARCA, Francesco (1304-1374), PORCARI, Stefano (d.1453), FILELFO, Francesco (1398-1481), BRUNI, Leonardo (?1370-1444), MANETTI, Giannozzo (1369-1459): various orations and epistles, in Italian and Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM [Florence, ca. 1460] 225 x160mm. 1-6 10 , 7 2 COMPLETE, catchwords in the middle of the lower margin, 29 lines written in brown ink in a semi-gothic bookhand, justification: 150 x 62mm, rubrics in red, two- to three-line initials of red or blue with penwork flourishing of lilac or red extending up the margins, HISTORIATED INITIAL WITH A PORTRAIT OF PETRARCH AND A THREE-SIDED BORDER made up of foliage of pink blue and green with burnished gold infills and disks on penwork tendrils and including a bird and two putti holding a wreath (opening folio smudged and rubbed, arms erased, light worming final folios). Original panelled goatskin with rope-work border and central sections and roundel stamped in blind, trefoil catches on lower cover and star-shaped studs on upper cover holding remains of silk-covered clasps, spine in five compartments (three corners and head and foot of spine restored, light worming, upper cover worn, endpapers stained and rusted), modern black morocco box. PROVENANCE: 1. It is likely that the arms on the opening folio were those of the original owner; these are now almost entirely erased but it is possible to see that the upper half of the shield was divided per pale on an azure field. 2. Sir Edward Dering, sale at Puttick's 13 July 1865 3. Sir Thomas Phillipps: spine label 23255, Sotheby's 26 June 1919, lot 68 4. Martini sale at Hoepli, Lugano, August 1934, lot 144 CONTENTS Francesco Petrarch, epistle to Niccolò Acciaiuoli ff.1-8; Lentulo, Roman official, epistle ff.8-8v; Stefano Porcari, orations in Florence in connection with his office as Capitano del Popolo ff.9v-18; Leonardo Bruni, oration on the nomination of Niccolò da Tolentino as Capitano di guerra for the city of Florence ff.18v-22; Stefano Porcari, orations in Florence and Rome ff.22-42; a foreign scholar's oration arguing for an increase in the study of science and the liberal arts in Florence ff.42-44v; Francesco Filelfo, oration introducing the cycle of lectures on Dante ff.44v-47; Leonardo Bruni, epistle to the inhabitants of Volterra ff.47-48; Giannozzo Manetti, protest held at Florence ff.48-55v; anonymous letter sent to a man cured of illness ff.55v-61 The manuscript is signed below the text on f.61 'Pierus s[er] Bonachu[r]sii Not[arius]'. Piero Buonaccorsi (1410-77) was the son of a notary who died early leaving a large family and larger debts. Piero, a notary himself, was the only one of the heirs who was earning and he had to assume responsibility for the debts and the family's upkeep. He worked first for the vintners' guild and then for the Comune ; in 1441 he was chancellor of the Signoria of Florence. His weighty family obligations continued, and throughout his life he struggled to keep financial ruin at bay. His sole consolation was his love of Dante, whom he studied with passion. His 1430 transcription of the Divine Comedy survives (Florence, Bib. Riccardiana 1038). He was the author of a short pious and moral tract Quadragesimale but his most famous original work is his commentary on the Divine Comedy , written in the form of epistles to Romolo de' Medici of the Franciscan convent of S. Croce in Florence. The first of these Epistole is better known as the Cammino di Dante . Many of the texts gathered together here were orations originally delivered in Florence, usually from the ringhiera of the Palazzo Signoria, the orator standing beside the marzocco , the statue of the heraldic lion symbolic of Florentine jurisdiction and justice. The manuscript must date after January 1452 (1453 n.s.) the latest date mentioned in the text, when Stefano Porcari was suspended from office. The letter to Acciaiuoli on the nature of kingship is one of very few letters by Petrarch to have been translated

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 189
Auktion:
Datum:
03.12.1997
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
London, King Street
Beschreibung:

PETRARCA, Francesco (1304-1374), PORCARI, Stefano (d.1453), FILELFO, Francesco (1398-1481), BRUNI, Leonardo (?1370-1444), MANETTI, Giannozzo (1369-1459): various orations and epistles, in Italian and Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM [Florence, ca. 1460] 225 x160mm. 1-6 10 , 7 2 COMPLETE, catchwords in the middle of the lower margin, 29 lines written in brown ink in a semi-gothic bookhand, justification: 150 x 62mm, rubrics in red, two- to three-line initials of red or blue with penwork flourishing of lilac or red extending up the margins, HISTORIATED INITIAL WITH A PORTRAIT OF PETRARCH AND A THREE-SIDED BORDER made up of foliage of pink blue and green with burnished gold infills and disks on penwork tendrils and including a bird and two putti holding a wreath (opening folio smudged and rubbed, arms erased, light worming final folios). Original panelled goatskin with rope-work border and central sections and roundel stamped in blind, trefoil catches on lower cover and star-shaped studs on upper cover holding remains of silk-covered clasps, spine in five compartments (three corners and head and foot of spine restored, light worming, upper cover worn, endpapers stained and rusted), modern black morocco box. PROVENANCE: 1. It is likely that the arms on the opening folio were those of the original owner; these are now almost entirely erased but it is possible to see that the upper half of the shield was divided per pale on an azure field. 2. Sir Edward Dering, sale at Puttick's 13 July 1865 3. Sir Thomas Phillipps: spine label 23255, Sotheby's 26 June 1919, lot 68 4. Martini sale at Hoepli, Lugano, August 1934, lot 144 CONTENTS Francesco Petrarch, epistle to Niccolò Acciaiuoli ff.1-8; Lentulo, Roman official, epistle ff.8-8v; Stefano Porcari, orations in Florence in connection with his office as Capitano del Popolo ff.9v-18; Leonardo Bruni, oration on the nomination of Niccolò da Tolentino as Capitano di guerra for the city of Florence ff.18v-22; Stefano Porcari, orations in Florence and Rome ff.22-42; a foreign scholar's oration arguing for an increase in the study of science and the liberal arts in Florence ff.42-44v; Francesco Filelfo, oration introducing the cycle of lectures on Dante ff.44v-47; Leonardo Bruni, epistle to the inhabitants of Volterra ff.47-48; Giannozzo Manetti, protest held at Florence ff.48-55v; anonymous letter sent to a man cured of illness ff.55v-61 The manuscript is signed below the text on f.61 'Pierus s[er] Bonachu[r]sii Not[arius]'. Piero Buonaccorsi (1410-77) was the son of a notary who died early leaving a large family and larger debts. Piero, a notary himself, was the only one of the heirs who was earning and he had to assume responsibility for the debts and the family's upkeep. He worked first for the vintners' guild and then for the Comune ; in 1441 he was chancellor of the Signoria of Florence. His weighty family obligations continued, and throughout his life he struggled to keep financial ruin at bay. His sole consolation was his love of Dante, whom he studied with passion. His 1430 transcription of the Divine Comedy survives (Florence, Bib. Riccardiana 1038). He was the author of a short pious and moral tract Quadragesimale but his most famous original work is his commentary on the Divine Comedy , written in the form of epistles to Romolo de' Medici of the Franciscan convent of S. Croce in Florence. The first of these Epistole is better known as the Cammino di Dante . Many of the texts gathered together here were orations originally delivered in Florence, usually from the ringhiera of the Palazzo Signoria, the orator standing beside the marzocco , the statue of the heraldic lion symbolic of Florentine jurisdiction and justice. The manuscript must date after January 1452 (1453 n.s.) the latest date mentioned in the text, when Stefano Porcari was suspended from office. The letter to Acciaiuoli on the nature of kingship is one of very few letters by Petrarch to have been translated

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 189
Auktion:
Datum:
03.12.1997
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
London, King Street
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