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1576 SIXTUS of SIENA Bibliotheca Sancta antique 16th century PIGSKIN BOUND FOLIO
1576 SIXTUS of SIENA Bibliotheca Sancta antique 16th century PIGSKIN BOUND FOLIO
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$849.80 USD
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$1,214.00 USD
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Siena, Sisto da.
Bibliotheca Sancta.
Secunda editio, novis ex postrema veneta editione ...
Cologne, Cholinus, 1576
4 leaves, 733 pp., 1 blank leaf, 22 leaves.
With 2 woodcut printer's marks on the titles.
Original blind-tooled pigskin over wooden boards ( with wormholes, somewhat stained) with intact chased brass clasps.
Spine with raised bands, with manuscript title label
- VD16, S 6601. –
Early edition from the Cholinus printing house.
Title page with period manuscript ownership entry and library stamps "Franziskaner-Kloster Dettelbach".
Some leaves with marginal stains, otherwise well preserved.
Foilo. Size: 10 1/2 by 15 1/4 inches
Text in Latin
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Sixtus of Siena (or Sixtus Senensis) (1520–1569) was a Jew who converted to Catholicism, and became a Catholic theologian.
He began his career as a Franciscan preacher, speaking throughout Italy. Though he was convicted to die in Rome for the crime of heresy or recidivism, he was saved by a Dominican inquisitor, the future Pope Pius V, who repealed the condemnation when Sixtus recanted and pledged to transfer to the Dominican Order instead. He is considered one of the two most outstanding Dominican scholars of his generation.
He had as a master Lancelotto Politi, some of whose writings he later publicly criticised. Sixtus apparently destroyed all his remaining manuscripts and writings before his death.
Sixtus coined the term deuterocanonical to describe certain books of the Catholic Old Testament that had not been accepted as canonical by Jews and Protestants but which appeared in the Septuagint, and the definer for the Roman Catholics of the terms protocanonical and the ancient term apocryphal.
His work Bibliotheca sancta ex præcipuis Catholicæ Ecclesiæ auctoribus collecta (Venice 1566) treats the sacred writers and their works, the best manner of translating and explaining Holy Writ, and gives a copious list of Biblical interpreters, in eight books. It was the first of the genre of encyclopedic teaching repertories of dogma and Church tradition issued in the wake of the Council of Trent.
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