Liber Chronicarum

NUREMBERG CHRONICLE   |   Hartmann SCHEDEL

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Liber Chronicarum
Liber Chronicarum
Liber Chronicarum
Liber Chronicarum
Liber Chronicarum
Liber Chronicarum

A LANDMARK IN THE HISTORY OF PRINTING, AND ONE OF THE GREATEST ILLUSTRATED BOOKS EVER PUBLISHED: 1493 FIRST EDITION OF THE MONUMENTAL “NUREMBERG CHRONICLE,” IN EARLY ELABORATELY BLIND-TOOLED LEATHER BOARDS

SCHEDEL, Hartmann. Liber Chronicarum. (Nuremberg: Anton Koberger, 12 July 1493). Tall folio (12-1/2 by 17-1/2 inches), late 16th-century elaborately blind-tooled alum-tawed leather over wooden boards, rebacked in 19th-century brown morocco, elaborately gilt-decorated spine, raised bands, original brass clasps with catches; 326 leaves (without final two blanks only). Housed in a custom half leather clamshell box.

First edition of the extraordinary “Nuremberg Chronicle,” the most profusely illustrated book of the 15th century, featuring the first modern map of Europe and Ptolemy’s map of the world. Complete with folios CCLVIIII, CCLX, and CCLXI (often missing) present and properly blank except for headlines and foliation, and with the five unnumbered leaves “De Sarmacia regione Europe” bound in between CCLXVI and CCLXVII. Bound in wonderful 16th-century elaborately tooled alum-tawed leather.

Hartmann Schedel compiled this elaborate history of the world from "the first day of creation" to his own time in an effort to correct what he felt was a slight to German history by other chroniclers. He divided his work into the usual six ages of the history of mankind, adding a seventh in which he foretold the coming of the Antichrist, the destruction of the world, and judgment day. The invention of printing is mentioned on verso of leaf CCLII: "born in Germany… in the city near the Rhine [i.e. Mainz]… in the year 1440"; on verso of leaf CCXC is a brief account (not appearing in the subsequent German edition of the same year) of the "Portuguese voyage of discovery along the coast of Africa in 1483 [1484], under the direction of Diego Cam and Martin Behaim of Nuremberg, which has been used as a basis for the unwarranted theory that the expedition reached America" (Sabin). Leaves CCLVIIII-CCLXI were left blank by Schedel for the owner to record future historical events occurring after publication.

The fame of the volume rests on its illustrations. "There are 1809 woodcuts printed from 645 different blocks. They picture the major events of the Old and New Testaments, episodes in the lives of many saints, portraits of prophets, kings, popes, heroes, and great men of all centuries, freaks of nature, and panoramic views of cities. Nuremberg artists Michael Wolgemut and Wilhelm Pleydenwurff were responsible for the production of the book… The wood blocks were designed by the two masters and their assistants, including the young Albrecht Dürer, who was apprenticed to Wolgemut at the time. The printing was carried out under the supervision of the great scholar-printer Anton Koberger, whose illustrated books were famous throughout Europe" (Legacies of Genius 5). The unusually detailed woodcuts, many full- and double-page, feature the first modern map of Europe (double-page), Ptolemy's map of the world, and an extraordinary two-page illustration of the destruction of Jerusalem; biblical subjects include Adam and Eve and the building of the ark by Noah; cities include Nineveh, Rome, Nuremberg (showing the first German paper mill), Warsaw, Budapest, Venice, Basle, Paris; historical personages include the Venerable Bede, Wicliff, Boethius, Cato, Dante, St. Augustine, Charlemagne, and St. Catherine; this copy with the portrait of Pope Joan (leaf CLXIX, verso) and the accompanying text intact (the portrait is usually severely defaced; in this copy there is only a light X drawn through the faces of her and her infant and a marginal manuscript notation; the verses accompanying the Imago Mortis woodcut are also lightly crossed out). The illustrations in this work represent a landmark in the history of wood-cutting: "The peculiarity of the cuts in the 'Nuremberg Chronicle' is that they generally contain more of what engravers term 'colour' [shading to render form] than any which had previously appeared" (Chatto & Jackson, A Treatise on Wood-Engraving). The "Imago mortis" or Dance of Death, for example, (leaf CCLXIIII) has been described as "one of the most powerful representations of German art" (Stadler, 45). Text in Latin. This Latin edition of July 12, 1493, precedes the German-language edition by five months (December 23, 1493). Text complete, without two final blanks, as often found. This copy does contain the blank that accompanied the five leaves of "De Sarmacia," often not present. Hain-Copinger 14508. Goff S-307. Thacher 121. Sabin 77523. Church 7. BMC II:437. Two bookplates, one armorial.

Title page mounted, restoration to bottom corners of the preliminary table of contents leaves (not affecting text), expert repair to double-page Map of Europe at rear. Occasional light staining. An excellent large copy in fine early tooled vellum of this magnificent and fascinating compendium of medieval world history. Rare and extraordinarily important.

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