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Vermont Book, Postcard & Ephemera Fair

Swann Galleries

Buchauktionen Antiquariat KIEFER: Startseite | Auktionshaus Kunstauktionen

Cooperstown Antiquarian Book Fair

Potter Auctions


Joseph M Lenard, Terror Strikes

Always something to discover at Quill & Brush

Back of Beyond Books

Booked Up


Hillsdale College Online Courses

Gibson’s Books

Aviation...

Booksellers’ Gulch

Old Edition Book Shop & Gallery


www.sovereignty.org.uk

The Economist


Cooperstown Antiquarian Book Fair

Vermont Book, Postcard & Ephemera Fair

Potter Auctions

Buchauktionen Antiquariat KIEFER: Startseite | Auktionshaus Kunstauktionen

Swann Galleries

Freeman

Addison & Sarova, the Rare Book Auctioneers

Leslie Hindman Auctineers

PBA Galleries

Biblio

PRB&M/SessaBks at The Arsenal


D & D Galleries

Hobart Book Village

Westmpunt 2023

2023 Rochester Antiquarian Book Fair, Saturday, September 30th, 10am-5pm.


www.antiwar.com

Jekyll Island Club Hotel

Austin’s Antiquarian Books

Fulton County Historical Society & Museum


Freeman

PBA Galleries

Addison & Sarova, the Rare Book Auctioneers

Leslie Hindman Auctineers

Biblio

PRB&M/SessaBks at The Arsenal

Results of Swann's October 24th Auction

Swann Galleries’ Thursday, October 24 sale of Early Printed, Medical, Scientific & Travel Books saw a full auction room and active bidding on the internet and phones with particular interest in works by scientists, as well as incunabula, bibles and manuscript publications.
    
Isaac Newton’s Opticks, 1704, brought $40,000, followed by a 100% sell-through rate for material relating to the acclaimed scientist. Additional highlights included Philosophiae naturalis principia mathematica, the third authorized edition and the last edition to appear in the Newton’s lifetime, sold for $9,375, as well as the unauthorized third edition which earned $6,500.
    
Additional science material included a first edition of Galileo’s 1649 dialogue on the Copernican and Ptolemaic systems, establishing the validity of heliocentricity, which brought $16,900; and a second edition Georg Agricola’s De re metallica, 1561, on the first systematic treatise on mining and metallurgy, garnered $10,000.
    
Incunabula performed well with “one of the best and most comprehensive of the western medieval lapidaries,” Albert Magnus’s De mineralibus, 1491, realizing $17,500, and a 1480-81 illuminated manuscript by Nicolaus Panormitanus de Tudeschis selling for $11,250.
    
Bibles and religious texts included a Bible in Latin printed in Nuremberg in 1477 that sold for $9,375 and The Holy Byble, conteining the Olde Testament and the Newe, London, 1585, that earned $6,250. Also of note was Niccolò Circignani’s 1585 publication with 31 engraved plates of Christian martyrdom scenes by Giovanni Battista Cavalieri, after frescoes in the church of S. Stefano Rotondo in Rome, which brought $8,125; as well as the last official papal addition to the Corpus juris canonici with Pope Clemens V’s collection of decretals compiled during 1305-14, Constitutiones, Nuremberg, 1482, realizing $6,250.
    
Among the unique items was an unpublished Spanish manuscript version of Andrea Alciato’s 1531 Emblemata—the first and most frequently reprinted emblem book. The late sixteenth- or early seventeenth-century Emblemas brought $11,250. Additional manuscript material featured an eighteenth- or early nineteenth-century manuscript cookbook in English that was won by an institution for $6,500.

For more information please call (212) 254-4710,  ext. 19