LEADER 03945cam a2200373Ia 4500001 9985430693506421 005 20251106053712.0 008 040417s1565 fr 000 0 lat d 035 (NjP)8543069-princetondb 035 |z(NjP)Voyager8543069 035 (OCoLC)ocn230621114 040 AUD |beng |cAUD |dOCLCG |dOCLCQ |dOCLCO |dNjP 130 0 Bible. |lLatin. |sVulgate. |f1565. 245 10 Biblia sacra veteris et noui testamenti, iuxta vulgatam, quam dicunt, editionem: Ioannis Benedicti ... industria accuratè recognita & emendata ... In hac autem editione ... haec quatuor sunt adiecta: scilicet, commentariorum accurata recognitio & amplificatio: tertius liber Machabaeorum: eruditus ... sententiarum & rerum ... index ... : |bdenique exquisita stromata in vniuersum corpus biblicum ... / |cAuthore Renato Benedicto ... 260 Lutetiae [Paris] : |bApud Ioannem Macaeum (excudebat Floricus Preuost) ..., |c1565 (1564) 300 [16], 904, 235, [247] pages ; |c39 cm 336 text |btxt |2rdacontent 337 unmediated |bn |2rdamedia 338 volume |bnc |2rdacarrier 500 The Stromata has a separate title page, dated 1564 and separate signatures. 500 Printer's device appears on both title pages. 500 The Prevost colophon, which is dated 1564, appears at the end of the New Testament. 500 Contains the text of the latin Vulgate Bible. 510 4 Adams |cB1068 561 |3Ex copy:Copy owned and annotated by the Benedictine monk François de Bar (1528-1606) of the Abbey d'Anchin ("Ex bibliotheca aquicinctenis") with two autograph ex-libri, one on the titlepage of the Bible and the other, with the date 1569, on the titlepage of the Stromata by René Benoist. There are numerous notes in his hand in the margins and interlines, in a tiny humanist script, some in Greek and Hebrew. The annotations form a continuous commentary on those books where they are found (Genesis to Esdras II (Nehemiah) cap. viii (pp. 1-398) and Ecclesiasticus i-xxxi (pp.595-618)), and are based on a wide range of printed and other materials. There are many references to the Glossa ordinaria, and it is probable that the mentions of such writers as Cyril, Chrysostom, Nicolaus de Lyra come from that source, or in the last case possibly from one of the editions of the Bible with his commentary, as there are many, and quite detailed quotations. There are precise references also to St. Thomas Summa Theologica. But there are references too to much more recent works, e.g. the commentaries Genesis and Exodus by Luigi Lippomano, Bishop of Bergamo, published in Paris in the middle of the century (e.g. pp. 9, 37 and elsewhere). Lippomano's commentaries were published in 1546 and 1550. These immense volumes are themselves based on copious quotations from earlier commentaries, and for both Genesis (a huge volume of 434 leaves) and Exodus there are substantial quotations in Hebrew, which may themselves be mirrored in these manuscript annotations in this volume. The annotations in the present volume are undated but on p. 268 (end 2 Kings) there is a date -19th June 1581. This seems to be an indication of the date at which this point had been reached. |5NjP 655 7 Annotations |2rbmscv 700 1 Benoit, René, |d1521-1608. |tStromata in universum organum. 700 1 Macé, Jean, |dactive 1533-1588, |epublisher. |0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/nr95024563 700 1 Prévost, Fleury, |dactive 1544-1572, |eprinter. |0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/nr94038979 700 0 Bar, François de, |d1528-1606, |eformer owner. |5NjP 710 2 Abbaye d'Anchin (Pecquencourt, France), |eformer owner. |5NjP |0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/nr98012474 902 gls |bm |6a |7m |dv |f1 |e20141124 904 llb |bo |hmcbe20140716 914 (OCoLC)ocn230621114 |bOCoLC |cmatch |d20251105 |eprocessed |f230621114