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Odyssey [in Greek]

HOMER

Item#: 126314 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Odyssey [in Greek]
Odyssey [in Greek]

"QUITE RARE" (BRUNET): FIRST SEPARATE GREEK PRINTING OF HOMER'S ODYSSEY, PRINTED IN PARIS, 1541, FINELY BOUND IN CONTEMPORARY FULL MOROCCO-GILT

HOMER. Odyssey [in Greek]. [Paris: Conrad Neobar], 1541. Small octavo, contemporary full red morocco, gilt-decorated spine and covers, marbled endpapers, all edges gilt.

Rare first separate edition of the Odyssey printed in Greek—one of very few editions printed by Edmée Toussain, the widow of Conrad Neobar, Greek Printer to the King—in a lovely contemporary French morocco-gilt binding.

"This edition, printed in small Greek characters, bears neither place of printing nor name of printer, but instead we see the printer's mark of Conrad Neobar, printer of Paris, who died in 1540, succeeded by his widow. Quite rare" (Brunet, translated). "During the 1530s the French court resumed its interest for the study of Greek letters and history… The acquisition of Greek manuscripts on behalf of the royal library was actively pursued from 1538 onward. In 1539 the Regia Graeca Typographia was founded and entrusted to Conrad Neobar. The new royal printer was married to the niece of Jacques Toussain, since 1530 the regius professor for Greek… Neobar died prematurely in the course of 1540. He enjoyed his new position for barely some 18 months. His successor as Greek Printer to the King was to be Robert Estienne… Mme Beaud has suggested that the new Greek [font, 'new' after May 1540] was cut especially for Neobar's Typographia Regia and that possibly Garamont was involved… Some five years later Neobar's Greek [font] was to resurge at the presses of Pierre Gaultier and Jean Barbé, respectively a relative and associate of Garamont" (Vervliet, Greek Typefaces of the Early French Renaissance, 382). After Neobar's death and before Estienne succeeded him, Neobar's widow, Edmée Toussain, took over the press and produced a handful of books, of which this edition of Homer's Odyssey is one. Neobar's printer's device of a snake twisted around a staff is similar to the one later used by Estienne for his Greek printings. Text in Greek; ruled in red. With large woodcut printer's device on the title page. Brunet III, 284.

Text clean, binding lightly rubbed. An excellent copy, desirable in lovely contemporary French morocco-gilt.

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