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Lipsius, Justus: Admiranda, sive, de Magnitudine Romana Libri Quattro (3rd ed.); De Militia Romana Libri Quinque, Commentarius ad Polybium (3rd ed.); Analecta sive Observations Reliquae ad Militiam et Hosce Libros; Poliorceticon sive de Machinis. Tormentis. Telis. Libri Quinque. Ad H Antverpi? [Antwerp]: Ex Officina Plantiniana, apud Ioannem Moretum, 1605; 1602; 1602; 1605; 1604; 1604. 6 parts in 1 vol. 4to., pp.223, [ix]; 366, [ii] + 1 folding plate; xxix, [vii]; [ii], 219, [iv]; 55, [i], [ii], 59-77, [vii] + 2 folding plates; 136, [iv] + 4 double-page plates. Many further illustrations in the text, engraved printer's devices. Occasional toning, some faint staining, tiny burn hole to leaf d4 Amiranda. Contemporary vellum, title inked to spine, overlapping fore-edges, edges sprinkled red. Vellum a little grubby, a few spots, but very good. Lipsius's (1547-1606) Opera Militaria, comprising six essays on Roman military power with plates depicting armaments, machinery, fortresses, gladiators and amphitheatres. First published in 1595 (Antwerp: Plantijn-Moretus).   Ref: 54052  show full image..
£1000
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[Lucan] Lucanus, Marcus Annaeus: (Grotius, Hugo; Farnaby, Thomas; Schrevel, Cornelius, eds.:) De Bello Civili [...]. Londini [London]: Typis excudebat J.F. Dove;,prostant venales apud R. Priestley, 1818. 8vo., pp.[xviii], 599, [lxxxvii]. A little faint foxing. Contemporary diced tan calf, sturdily rebacked retaining original spine with raised bands and dark brown morocco label, gilt borders, blue marbled edges and endpapers. Retained spine worn and marked, reback a perhaps a little heavy, a few scuffs, very good. To ffep verso, ownership inscription of F. H. Sandbach, dated '25 ( being Francis Henry Sandbach (1903-1991), professor of Classics at the University of Cambridge). To a preliminary blank, the ownership inscription of Roland George Mayer, Peterhouse 1970. Also contains "Petronii Arbitri Specimen belli civilis" and "Supplementum Lucani, libri septem, authore Thoma Majo".   Ref: 54907  show full image..
£80
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Lucian of Samasota: (Mayne, Jasper, trans.:) Part of Lucian Made English from the Originall. In the Yeare 1638. Oxford: R. Davies, 1664. FIRST PART ONLY. 1st edition 2nd issue, folio, pp. [xvi], 398, [iv] + portrait frontispiece of Lucian signed: W: Faithhorne sculpsit.. As usual pp.162-167 and pp.316-317 are misnumbered as 182-187 and 306, 311 respectively. Woodcut device to title-page, woodcut initials and head- and tail-pieces. Some old repairs to frontis at gutter, to title-page verso (particularly head and tail edges) plus a few other places e.g. head of first dedicatory leaf, M1, Z1, and some other smaller repairs; small worm trail to bottom corner of fore-edge margin roughly pp.202-281, repaired in some places; light browning and possible dampstaining to head and tail edges near front and rear; occasional wax spots and tiny scorch holes, final blank leaf laid down.. Contemporary speckled calf boards neatly rebacked in polished sheep, raised bands and morocco gilt label to spine, blind-tooled borders, edges sprinkled red, endpapers replaced. Endcaps, raised bands and joints rubbed, a little chipping to edges, corners worn, a few light scuffs and scrapes. A good copy, soundly repaired. To the front paste-down: small book label of Charles Whibley. To frontispiece verso: various pen trials and doodled faces, plus inscriptions of Thos. Hartopp and Elizabeth Mallory 'Her Booke, 1694'. To title-page recto: two more inscriptions of Tho. Hartopp, and one of Ralph Welles. To final blank: another inscription of Elizabeth Mallory dated 1694 and another (seemingly in the same handwriting) of Elizabeth Welles; in the same hand a quotation, 'One moment gives Invention to Destroy / What to Rebuild would A whole Age Imploy'. This comes from William Congreve's play The Double-Dealer, which was first produced at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in November or December of 1693 and first appeared in print the following year. There are also what appear to be faded signatures on the leather of the lower board, though these are illegible. This version, with its title-page dated 1664, seems to be a reissue of the original 1663 first (the title-page of the first issue is dated 1663 and there is no portrait). The second part of the work is not found here; titled "Certain select dialogues of Lucian: together with his true history, translated from the Greek into English. By Mr. Francis Hickes", it has separate pagination, register, and title page with the imprint "printed for Richard Davis,... 1663". It appears that it was also issued separately (Wing L3425). ESTC R23081; Wing L3435   Ref: 52318  show full image..
£450
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Lucretius Carus, Titus: De Rerum Natura Libri Sex. Birminghamae [Birmingham]: Johannis Baskerville, 1772. First Baskerville edition. 4to., pp. [ii], 280. First and last leaves (and endpapers) toned at edges, occasional very faint foxing. Contemporary tree calf, spine gilt, red morocco label, edges pale yellow, marbled endpapers. A little loss to endcaps, upper joint split but cords firm, rear joint just starting, corners frayed with a little loss of leather to bottom corner of upper board, still very good overall. Strangely-deteriorated (has become dark reddish-brown) bookplate of William Downes to front paste-down. William Downes, 1st Baron Downes PC (1751-1826) was one of the most prominent Irish judges of his time. He was Lord Chief Justice of Ireland from 1803 to 1822. The first Baskerville edition of Lucretius (a duodecimo followed the next year). In a somewhat backhanded fashion, Dibdin comments that this edition is remarkable for its typographical beauty though nothing else. ESTC T50365; Dibdin II (4th edn.), 203; Gaskell 43; Gordon 20; Schweiger II, 577   Ref: 54592  show full image..
£400
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Lucretius, Carus Titus: [Philippe, ?tienne Andr?:] De Rerum Natura libri sex. Accedunt selecta lectiones dilucidando Poemata apposita. Lutetiae Parisiorum [Paris]: Typis Josephi Barbou, 1754. 12mo., pp.xxxvi, 288 + 7 finely engraved plates, including frontispiece. Woodcut initials, typographic and engraved head- and tail-pieces, ample margins. A few small marks (possibly wax?), but clean and bright. Contemporary tan mottled calf, spine gilt with red morocco label, plain gilt ruled borders, a.e.g., gilt dentelles, turquoise marbled endpapers. Lightly rubbed, upper joint neatly repaired, upper corner of rear board slightly frayed, very good indeed. An attractively printed pocket edition from Barbou's series of classical texts. The frontispiece and six plates are reduced versions of those from Havercamp's 4to edition of 1725 (Gordon, 503), skillfully reproduced by Claude Duflos from van Mieris's originals. Each book also has an engraved headpiece above its first lines. Text from Philippe's Parisian edition of 1744. Gordon, 504B; Schweiger II, 576   Ref: 54921  show full image..
£350
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[Martial] Martialis, Marcus Valerius: (Farnaby, Thomas, ed.:) Epigrammata. Amsterdami [Amsterdam]: Ex officina Janssonio-Waesbergiana, 1670. 12mo., pp.456. Illustrated title page, engraved initials and end-pieces. Internally very clean. Contemporary vellum school prize binding, title inked to spine, plain gilt borders, gilt centrepiece with arms of Amersfoot. Vellum a little greyed with some small spots and stains, ties lost, slight separation at gutter between ffep and title-page but sewing all intact, very good. Thomas Farnaby (1574/5?1647) was a celebrated schoolteacher and grammarian. 'The success of his establishment allowed Farnaby to devote himself to a long-held obsession: the systemization of the grammatical principles of classical Latin and Greek in print. Commencing with the satires of Juvenal and Persius (1612), he annotated many of the classical authors?Seneca, Martial, Lucan, Ovid, Virgil, and Terence?in a manner intended to render their works intelligible to schoolboys [...] He also corresponded with the Dutch intellectuals Gerardus Johannes Vossius and Daniel Heinsius, both of whom acknowledged their own debts to his learning.' (ODNB) His edition of Martial first appeared in London in 1615. Schweiger 598; Spoelder 4.   Ref: 54551  show full image..
£175
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[Martial] Martialis, Marcus Valerius: (Hay, William, ed.:) Epigrammata Selecta [?] Select epigrams of Martial. Translated and imitated by William Hay, Esq; with an appendix of some by Cowley, and other hands. London: printed for R. And J. Dodsley in Pall-mall, 1755. 1755. 12mo., pp. [xii], 139 (i.e. 239), [xxv]. Parallel Latin and English texts. Two final leaves of advertisements. A little toned, very good. Contemporary brown calf, gilt spine with label, gilt borders to boards edges sprinkled red. Bookplate to front pastedown, initials S and B twined together by a rope ampersand, beneath the coronet of an earl. William Hay (1695?1755) was a writer and Whig politician, sitting in the Commons from 1734 to 1755. The 'Advertisement' preceding the text notes that his edition was also available in an English-only 8vo. volume, 'that they may not be encumbered with the Latin, who do not understand it.' ESTC T94257   Ref: 54216  show full image..
£125
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Martin, S. Rebecca: The Art of Contact: Comparative Approaches to Greek and Phoenician Art. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2017. First edition. Large 8vo., pp. x, 282 + plates. Maps and illustrations. Hardback: black cloth, gilt-lettered to spine. Dust-jacket. Unused, a hint only of shelf-dust: a fine copy.   Ref: 54357 
£20
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Mastrangelo, Marc: The Roman Self in Late Antiquity: Prudentius and the Poetics of the Soul. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008. First edition. 8vo., pp. viii, 259. Hardback: burgundy cloth, gilt-lettered to spine. Dust-jacket. Unused, a hint only of shelf-dust: a fine copy.   Ref: 54301 
£10
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Matyszak, Philip: Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain. Barnsley: Pen & Sword, 2021. 8vo., pp. xviii, 182 + plates. Maps. Paperback. Unused, a hint only of shelf-dust: a fine copy. First published 2013.   Ref: 54511 
£10
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