“NO LIBRARY DEVOTED TO IRISH MATTERS IS COMPLETE WITHOUT IT”: FIRST EDITION OF LELAND’S HISTORY OF IRELAND, 1773
LELAND, Thomas. The History of Ireland from the Invasion of Henry II. With a Preliminary Discourse on the Antient State of that Kingdom. London: Printed for J. Nourse et al., 1773. Three volumes. Tall quarto, contemporary full tree calf rebacked with original elaborately gilt-decorated spines laid down, red and black morocco spine labels, marbled endpapers.
First edition, London issue, of Leland’s important three-volume history of Ireland, in contemporary tree calf-gilt.
A Dublin-born, widely respected preacher in the Church of Ireland, Leland was also a prolific scholar. His History of Ireland surveys its subject from the 12th century to the 1691 Treaty of Limerick. "Highly praised on its first appearance for its style and manner" (Lowndes, 1339), Leland's History "marks 'the transition from chronicle to history' in accounts of Ireland's past… Leland did not apologize for the dispossession of Catholics, and he harshly criticized the dissenters' Puritan predecessors. However, he also criticized English policies that denied political freedoms to loyal Irish citizens" (Miller, 130). "Too impartial to be accepted by either of the two parties into which Ireland was then divided… as years passed on the work grew in favor even with partisans and today no library devoted to Irish matters is complete without it" (Read, Cabinet of Irish Literature, I:305-6). With half titles. Issued the same year in a Dublin edition, no priority established. Lowndes, 1339. Allibone, 1083. CBEL II:887. See Bibliotheca Hibernicana 16. Gift inscriptions dated 1835. Occasional marginalia.
Occasional light foxing. Loss to lower corner of leaf [2O4], Volume I. Bindings with spines lightly rubbed, corners lightly bumped and worn. A handsome set in near-fine condition.