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Books > Arts & Architecture > Antiques & collectables > Books, manuscripts, ephemera & printed matter
This book, first published in 1999, studies and compares two
sixteenth-century libraries. Jean Grolier's was a bibliophilic
'cabinet' of fine books; Diego Hurtado de Mendoza's was a much
larger and more scholarly collection; a full catalogue is provided
for the first time. Both men were greatly influenced by experience
of Italy. Grolier has been called 'the Prince of Bibliophiles'; the
books he commissioned have long been famous. This is the first full
account of his life for eighty years. Hurtado de Mendoza was a
poet, historian, Greek scholar and Arabist. He served as the
Emperor's Ambassador in Venice (1540-6), to the Council of Trent
(1545-6), and to the Pope (1547-52). In Venice he set out to form
for Spain a collection of Greek manuscripts to rival that being
formed for France by Francis I's agents. Anthony Hobson's text is
complemented by ninety-one illustrations, several thematic indexes,
eleven appendices and a bibliography.
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