“HIS FIRST IMPORTANT THEOLOGICAL WRITINGS”: SCARCE 1497 INCUNABLE PRINTING OF AQUINAS’ COMMENTARY ON LOMBARD
AQUINAS, Thomas. Super quarto libro sententiarum. Venice: Bonetus Locatellus for Octavianus Scotus, 23 May 1497. Small folio (8-1/2 by 12 inches), contemporary full limp vellum, manuscript title in ink on spine; ff. 264. Housed in a custom clamshell box.
Incunable Venetian printing of Thomas Aquinas’ early and important theological commentary on Petrus Lombardus’ “Sentences,” finely printed with numerous woodcut initials, in contemporary vellum. An attractive incunable.
Aquinas’ commentary on Lombard, written circa 1250, stands among “his first important theological writings” and is one of “the immediate forerunners of the Summa Theologica,” his masterpiece (Catholic Encyclopedia). Peter Lombard, a chief precursor to medieval scholasticism, wrote his Four Books of Sentences in the mid-12th century to deal “in an orderly fashion with the main themes of Christian theology… It eventually became the basic textbook for the teaching of theology in the universities… Therefore the works of major scholastic theologians usually include a Commentary on the Sentences” (González I:314-15). The work was printed as early as 1469 by Peter Schöffer in Mainz (Proctor 87). Printer’s device on final leaf. Text in Latin. BMC V:447. Goff T172. Hain 1485. Adams A-1450. Early owner signatures to title leaf. Bookseller label on front pastedown.
Faint dampstain to upper right corner, a few small wormholes, marginal paper repairs to title leaf and first leaf of text, not affecting text. An extremely good copy in contemporary vellum.