John Ingram and John Godfrey Collection, 1557-1839 (mostly 1819-1834) | Kütüphane.osmanlica.com

John Ingram and John Godfrey Collection, 1557-1839 (mostly 1819-1834)

İsim John Ingram and John Godfrey Collection, 1557-1839 (mostly 1819-1834)
Konu Artists—16th century—Biography—Italy[Browse]Book collecting—19th century[Browse]Private libraries—19th century—Italy[Browse]Travelers' writings, English—19th century—Italy[Browse]Ferrara (Italy)—Sources—History[Browse]Baruffaldi, Girolamo[Browse]Dossi, Dosso[Browse]Mazzolino, Ludovico[Browse]Tasso, Torquato[Browse]Tura, Cosmè[Browse]
Tür Kitap
Dil ara,eng,fra,ita,lat
Dijital Hayır
Yazma Evet
Fiziksel Boyutlar 2 boxes1.4 linear feet
Kütüphane: Princeton Üniversitesi Kütüphanesi
Kayıt Numarası 9944653903506421
Notlar Little is known of the nineteenth-century lives of John Ingram and his son-in-law, John Godfrey, other than that Ingram spent much of his time traveling in Italy and was a patron of Francesco Guardi. The collection includes letters to Ingram as well as notes, maps, and building plans by Ingram and Godfrey, and travel documents collected by Ingram.The collection includes letters to John Ingram, sketches of the lives of Italian Renaissance artists of the Ferrarese School by writer and art historian Girolamo Baruffaldi (possibly from or for his Vite de’ pittori e scultori ferraresi . . .) with notes by Ingram, notes on art and travel, and other pieces collected by Ingram. Also featured are early Greek and other inscriptions collected by John Godfrey, regional maps and plans of various temples, Arabic manuscripts, and other material relating to Ingram and Godfrey. Additionally, the collection contains a later edition (1597) of Giambattista Cinzio Giraldi’s book on the Duke of Ferrara ( Commentario delle cose di Ferrara . . .), interleaved with manuscript annotations by John and Frances Ingram, and accompanied by a notebook they kept as they pursued their research interest in the Renaissance city of Ferrara, as well as in travel, private libraries and book collecting, and the poet Torquarto Tasso.
Koleksiyoner Ingram, John
Getty Türü Correspondence[Browse]Inscriptions[Browse]Maps[Browse]Manuscripts[Browse]Notebooks—19th century—Italy[Browse]
Kaynağa git Princeton Üniversitesi Kütüphanesi Princeton University Library
Princeton University Library Princeton Üniversitesi Kütüphanesi
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John Ingram and John Godfrey Collection, 1557-1839 (mostly 1819-1834)

Konu Artists—16th century—Biography—Italy[Browse]Book collecting—19th century[Browse]Private libraries—19th century—Italy[Browse]Travelers' writings, English—19th century—Italy[Browse]Ferrara (Italy)—Sources—History[Browse]Baruffaldi, Girolamo[Browse]Dossi, Dosso[Browse]Mazzolino, Ludovico[Browse]Tasso, Torquato[Browse]Tura, Cosmè[Browse]
Tür Kitap
Dil ara,eng,fra,ita,lat
Dijital Hayır
Yazma Evet
Fiziksel Boyutlar 2 boxes1.4 linear feet
Kütüphane Princeton Üniversitesi Kütüphanesi
Kayıt Numarası 9944653903506421
Notlar Little is known of the nineteenth-century lives of John Ingram and his son-in-law, John Godfrey, other than that Ingram spent much of his time traveling in Italy and was a patron of Francesco Guardi. The collection includes letters to Ingram as well as notes, maps, and building plans by Ingram and Godfrey, and travel documents collected by Ingram.The collection includes letters to John Ingram, sketches of the lives of Italian Renaissance artists of the Ferrarese School by writer and art historian Girolamo Baruffaldi (possibly from or for his Vite de’ pittori e scultori ferraresi . . .) with notes by Ingram, notes on art and travel, and other pieces collected by Ingram. Also featured are early Greek and other inscriptions collected by John Godfrey, regional maps and plans of various temples, Arabic manuscripts, and other material relating to Ingram and Godfrey. Additionally, the collection contains a later edition (1597) of Giambattista Cinzio Giraldi’s book on the Duke of Ferrara ( Commentario delle cose di Ferrara . . .), interleaved with manuscript annotations by John and Frances Ingram, and accompanied by a notebook they kept as they pursued their research interest in the Renaissance city of Ferrara, as well as in travel, private libraries and book collecting, and the poet Torquarto Tasso.
Koleksiyoner Ingram, John
Getty Türü Correspondence[Browse]Inscriptions[Browse]Maps[Browse]Manuscripts[Browse]Notebooks—19th century—Italy[Browse]
Princeton University Library
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