Yazar
The Johns Hopkins University Sheridan Libraries, Dickinson, Edmund
Basım Tarihi
1655
Basım Yeri
Oxford -
Excudebat H
Tür
belge
Dil
ara,heb,lat,und
Dijital
Evet
Yazma
Evet
Kütüphane
Harvard Kütüphanesi
Kayıt Numarası
TN_cdi_jstor_oai_community_35015165
Lokasyon
ONLINE ACCESS
Tarih
1655
Notlar
Full title: Delphi Phoenicizantes, sive, Tractatus, in quo Græcos, quicquid apud Delphos celebre erat (seu Pythonis & Apollinis historiam, seu Pœanica certamina, & præmia, seu priscam Templi formam atque inscriptionem seu Tripodem, Oraculum, &c. spectes) è Iosuæ historiâ, scriptisque sacris effinxisse rationibus haud inconcinnis ostenditur. Et quamplurima quæ philologiæ studiosis apprimè jucunda futura sunt, aliter ac vulgò solent, enarrantur. Appenditur Diatriba de Noæ in Italiam adventu, ejusque nominibus Ethnicis nec non de Origine Druidum. His accessit Oratiuncula pro Philosophiâ liberandâ. Authore Edmundo Dickinsono, Art: Magist: & Mettonensis Collegii Socio. 8vo. ff. 19 (prelims), pp.142, [17], 40, [9]. Signatures: *4 A8 a2 B-O8 P4. Contemporary paste boards. Manuscript spine title. Stamp “A.F.J.” of A. and J. Freeman. Title within border of printers' ornaments. Headpieces, initials. A letter from Zachary Bogan: 6th-16th prelim. leaves. Printed annotations. In Latin, with some Greek, Hebrew and Arabic.Only edition of this work by Edmund Dickinson, a believer of Annius. Attributed by Anthony Wood to Henry Jacob. See D. C. Allen, The legend of Noah: Renaissance Rationalism in Art, Science, and Letters. Urbana, 1963; D. Wing (ed.), Short-title Catalogue of Books Printed in England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, and British America, and of English Books Printed in Other Countries, 1641–1700. 4 vols. New York, 1982-98 (2nd ed.), D1385; English Short Title Catalogue Online, R8623. Click here to view the Johns Hopkins University catalog record. Part of: Bibliotheca Fictiva -- Johns Hopkins Digital Collections
Kaynak
Open Shared Collection
Başlık
Delphi Phoenicizantes, sive, Tractatus, in quo Græcos, quicquid apud Delphos celebre erat (seu Pythonis & Apollinis historiam, seu Pœanica certamina, & præmia, seu priscam Templi formam atque inscriptionem seu Tripodem, Oraculum, &c. spectes) […]