Here is a view of the books before they take a trip to the 2025 Boston Book show! come see us at booth 404
895J Johannes Hiskias Cardilucius (1630-1697); Johannes, de Rupescissa, approximately 1300-approximately 1365.; Paracelsus, 1493-1541.; [Winthrop, John, 1606-1676 owned a copy.] Magnalia Medico-Chymica, Oder Die höchste Artzney- und Feurkünstige Geheimnisse : Wie nemlich mit dem Circulato maiori & minori oder dem Universal aceto mercuriali, und... Continue Reading →
Balthasar de Porta, Expositio Canonis Missae (Leipzig, ca. 1495) — Editio princeps of a Cistercian Mass commentary. This copy bears a handwritten sacristy inventory listing wax, salt, holy water, ampullae, and altar cloths—tangible evidence of late-medieval liturgical life.
671J Titus Livius (59BC-AD17) , Marcus Antonius Sabellicus.(1436-1506); Johannes Andreae, and others [Titi Livii Historiae romanae decades I, III-IV, cum Johannis Andreae Epistola et L. Flori Epitome decadum XIV. Praemittuntur M.A. Sabellici epistola et annotationes.]. Venice : (no printer) [Johannes... Continue Reading →
Included in this list , Four works by Early Modern Women, A leveler, Doctors, Quakers, New World Natural History, Poetesses, A master of ancient satire, Cosmology . 1) Edward Brown 1677, 2) Anne Finch 1701, 3) Q. Horatius Flaccus 1481,... Continue Reading →
Gregory I sammelband 16th century printing Lyon 1516 early Reformation sources proto-Reformation Gregory and Luther penitential theology in Reformation indulgences and Gregory Pope Gregory the Great Homiliae divi Gregorii Lyon printers 16th century


Philosophia Mentis et Sensuum (1698): Jesuit Aristotelianism and Empirical Philosophy
Rare 1698 Augsburg–Dillingen edition of Tolomei’s Philosophia mentis et sensuum, a Jesuit Aristotelian synthesis embracing new science and empiricism.
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