Lot no. 12
[Jean BOUCHET] S'ensuyt le temple de bonne renõmée & repos des hommes et fēmes illustres trouve par le Traverseur de voyes perilleuses en plorãt le tresregrette deces du feu prīce de Thalemont unicque fils du Chevalier et Prince sãs reproche... Small in-4, red morocco, triple fillet, spine with 5 nerfs nicely decorated, interior lace, gilt edges on marbling (Trautz-Bauzonnet). Bechtel, 93-B332 // Brunet, I-1155 // Tchemerzine-Scheler, II-19 // USTC, 63160. (4f.)-LXVIIIf. / +4, A-R4 / 38 lines, gothic car / 180 x 120 mm. A friend of Rabelais and protected by Louis de La Trémoille, whose poet laureate he was, Jean Bouchet (1476-1557), a Poitiers public prosecutor, was a prolific writer. His Temple de bonne renommée praises Charles, Prince of Talmont, son of Louis II de La Trémoille, who died at the battle of Marignan. He takes up the history of great men and famous women... and [there] mixes a bit of everything: there is even a chapter entitled "Tabernacle des arts et sciences" in which he praises the French language. According to Bechtel, this is one of Bouchet's rarest books. Second or third edition, as rare as the first which was published in 1516 by Galliot du Pré. The second and third editions were published at the same time by Jean Trepperel-Jehan Jehannot and Alain Lotrian. The edition appears to be very similar to that cited by Bechtel under reference B-332, which gives the same collation, but a few differences should be noted: differences in the spelling of the title, the colophon on the 4th leaf and 3 woodcuts instead of 2. Title in red and black and 3 woodcuts, the first on the title depicting a kneeling man praying before an altar under the watchful eye of an angel, the second on the verso showing the king hunting with a falcon and the third on the verso of the 4th leaf depicting the author offering his book to the king. Although we cannot say for certain, and despite the differences we noted above with the copy described by Bechtel, this is very probably the same edition of which, again according to Bechtel, only two copies seem to be known, that of Firmin-Didot bound by Capé and that of Rahir, ours, bound by Trautz-Bauzonnet. Corner repair. Provenance: Alfred-Henry Huth (ex-libris, I, 15-24 November 1911, no. 860), Édouard Rahir (ex-libris, II, 6-8 May 1931, no. 429) and Fairfax Murray (no number, large label From the library of Ch. Fairfax Murray).
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Books, Manuscripts and Comic books
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Jean Bourdel Library
75008 Paris - France
06/19/2024
Offered by Artcurial
+33 1 42 99 16 58