Treatise on Domestic Pigeons

John MOORE

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Treatise on Domestic Pigeons
Treatise on Domestic Pigeons
Treatise on Domestic Pigeons

“FIRST DISTINCT WORK ON THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE TAME PIGEON”: TREATISE ON DOMESTIC PIGEONS, 1765, WITH 13 COPPERPLATE ENGRAVINGS

[MOORE, John]. A Treatise on Domestic Pigeons. London: Printed for and Sold by C. Barry… P. Stevens, et al., 1765. Octavo, modern full brown leatherette, black morocco spine label, raised bands.

First edition of the first illustrated and expanded publication of John Moore’s work on the domestic pigeon, anonymously issued, with copper-engraved frontispiece and 12 plates, with the first mention of birds such as the Lace, Frillback and the “beautiful Black and Yellow Mottles.”

“The first distinct work on the natural history of tame pigeon,” British physician John Moore initially published his study of domestic pigeons in 1735 under the title of Columbarium (Tegetmeier, Pigeons, 49). In 1765 this expanded and illustrated edition was published anonymously. “Moore had deplored the want of illustrations” in the Columbarium, and “the anonymous editor of “the Treatise evidently knew the value of pictures” (Journal of Horticulture, 319). The 13 handsome copper-engraved plates in this edition, featuring full-page engravings of the English Powter, the Jacobine and other pigeons, wonderfully completes a work that “possesses considerable interest both to naturalists and fanciers” (Tegetmeier, Moore’s Columbarium, iii). Other additions include “the first mention of the Bald-pated Tumbler and the Beard, and of the beautiful Black and Yellow Mottles, also the Lace and Frillback are described for the first time. Then we have here and there an additional bit of description, as in the fuller account of the Owl, then a practical remark, as in the case of the Legborn Runt, drawn from the writer’s own experience” (Journal of Horticulture, 320). Copies of Moore’s 1735 Columbarium “are of the greatest rarity” (Tegetmeier, Moore’s Columbarium, iii). With frontispiece and 12 copper-engraved plates, engraved ornamental head- and tailpieces. See Lowndes, 1290. Contemporary owner signature on title page.

Text and plates generally quite fresh, only slight soiling to boards. An about-fine copy of this major ornithological work.

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