RARE FIRST ALDINE EDITION OF CAESAR’S COMMENTARIES, 1513, WITH MANUSCRIPT CAPTIONS, POSSIBLY IN ALDUS’ OWN HAND
(ALDINE PRINTING) CAESAR, Julius. Commentatiorum de bello Gallico libri VIII. De bello civili pompeiano libri IIII. De bello Alexandrino liber I. De bello Africano liber I. De bello Hispaniensi liber I. [Venice: in aedibus Aldi, et Andreae soceri, April 1513]. Small octavo, contemporary full vellum, tan calf spine label, all edges gilded and gauffered. Housed in a custom clamshell box.
First Aldine edition of Caesar’s Commentaries, with manuscript captions to the illustrations of Massilia and Uxellodunum in a hand very similar to Aldus’ own. With a double-page hand-colored woodcut map, five splendid full-page woodcut illustrations, and the anchor and dolphin Aldine device on title-page and on verso of last leaf.
“On 28 June 1512, Fra Giocondo of Verona successfully petitioned the Venetian Senate for ten years’ protection of editions of various classical authors which he had prepared. These included Commentarii de Cesaro, the basis of Aldus’ only edition, which appeared at the end of 1513… The most striking feature of [the edition] is the map, the Pictura totius Galliae… There are five additional woodcuts in the frontmatter, all dealing with Caesar’s strategic and tactical operations. The most significant are the two pictorial representations of the sieges of Massilia and Uxellodunum. In many copies of the 1513 Caesar, these woodcuts carry the manuscript captions… Renouard says that this is Aldus’ holograph… the script does indeed look like known specimens of Aldus’ handwriting… Further, we have numerous reports of Aldus’ constant correcting of proofs and finished text; his diligence amazed Erasmus in 1508” (Fletcher, 118). The work was so popular that the Aldine press was to publish a further fourteen editions. Text in Latin. Adams C26. Renouard, 60. Annotations in an early hand.
Minor dampstain to margin of first two gatherings, light scattered foxing, intentional early scissor-cut “pointer” to the Uxellodunum woodcut, worm trails to front cover of contemporary vellum. An extremely good copy of a very scarce Aldine printing.