Featured My most international books; Emperor Leopold I (1716)

Discussion in 'Books' started by Ex Libris, Apr 15, 2022.

  1. Ex Libris

    Ex Libris Well-Known Member

    I do not post much here on this forum, but this is a series of books that I gladly want to share :). I bought volume II and III first at an auction and later I have found the matching volume I at an antique book dealer!

    It is a book called "Admirables efectos de la providencia sucedidos en la vida, e imperio de Leopoldo primero" and is written in Spanish attributed to Don Luis de Borje and Centellas by an Italian writer called Contstanino Roncaglia, printed in folio by 2 brothers (Henricus and Cornelius Verdussen) in Antwerp (now Belgium). It is about the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I (1640-1705), who reigned over Austria and Hungary and a lot of other regions in Europe. He is well known for his battle against the Ottomans around Vienna. The books describe the period of 1657-1687. The books contain many copper engravings of important people and important events in that period by Gasper Bouttats.

    I bought the last two volumes from a dealer in France. Later I saw a matching volume at a dealer in the United States, so now the complete series is here in the Netherlands :). I haven't seen enough evidence to determine if these volumes once really belonged together, or this was the standard way of binding of these books. In early modern times most books were bought without a binding and bound at a separate book binder.

    I am really happy to bring these loose volumes together again!

    image0 (7).jpeg

    Frontispiece of volume I. Leopold had a typical Habsburg chin/jaw

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    King Gustav of Sweden
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    Sultan Suleiman of the Ottoman Empire
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    Landscapes with massive battles

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    Festivities in Vienna
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  2. KikoBlueEyes

    KikoBlueEyes Well-Known Member

    How wonderful to reunite these volumes. How long did it take you to track Volume one down?
     
  3. Ex Libris

    Ex Libris Well-Known Member

    Only a few weeks. After that a few weeks of doubting :smug: . I bought it, because maybe I never have the chance anymore to make the set complete…
     
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  4. KikoBlueEyes

    KikoBlueEyes Well-Known Member

    Wow. That was serendipitous that a volume 1 of such an old and beautifully illustrated book was floating around out there. The best part is you found it across the pond and brought them back together from where it wandered from for perhaps centuries. The fact that this is the original book of this set or at least from that time period is astonishing. No wonder you are proud.
     
    Last edited: Apr 15, 2022
  5. Aquitaine

    Aquitaine Is What It IS! But NEVER BORED!

    GRRRRREAT!!! Collection!!!!!:singing::singing::singing::singing::singing::singing::singing:
     
  6. David Kiehl

    David Kiehl Well-Known Member

    Wow, just WOW!
     
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  7. Firemandk

    Firemandk Well-Known Member

    Love to see stuff like this !
     
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  8. charlie cheswick

    charlie cheswick Well-Known Member

    How flaming COOL are those book spines !!
     
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  9. Bookahtoo

    Bookahtoo Moderator Moderator

    Those are beautiful illustrations. Congratulations!
     
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  10. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    I would have expected an archaic Spanish but it's not. Fully readable.

    Debora
     
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  11. Ex Libris

    Ex Libris Well-Known Member

    I really like to research my old paper, so I started looking into this book. A question that really puzzles me is: "Why is a book, written in Spanish about a ruler in Central Europe is printed in Antwerp?" That does not really sound logical to me. One hint I found in the book is the attribution of the book to Don Luis de Borja (Borgia) y Centellas". Together with a copper engraving of his family crest, a long list of his titles are printed and there is still an et cetera at the end :D
    This is the Spanish part of the Borgia family. The BBC TV-series "The Borgias" is about the part in Italy in the 16th century.

    The last title on the list is (what I understand of the Spanish) "Governador de Districto Amberes", what I read as "Governor of the Antwerp District". In the early 18th century current Belgium was called the Spanish Netherlands. So this book was likely printed for their own governor (that happen to be a Spanish nobleman). Maybe Don Luis ordered the book.

    It is particular difficult to find information about Antwerp in this period. After the closing of the river Scheldt (Schelde in Dutch) in the late 16th century (1585) and thereby closing it's important harbor, the economy collapsed and ended Antwerp's golden age. This economic turmoil would last until 1792, when the Scheldt was reopened, just after the French Revolution (1789). This results in a kind of dark ages of information.


    image0 (9) (Large).jpeg

    Coat of Arms of the Borgia family, with a red bull.
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  12. Ex Libris

    Ex Libris Well-Known Member

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  13. Jon L

    Jon L Well-Known Member

    Well done on a BEAUTIFUL set!!!
     
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  14. Ex Libris

    Ex Libris Well-Known Member

    Great evidence that the books belonged to the same set:
    Book 1
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    Book 2 image1 (5).jpeg

    Book 3
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    This suggests that in 1882 the 3 volumes were part of the same set. I find is difficult to read this ownermark (ex libris :D ). De Ant.(?) Miguel dos (?) la(?) Basto(?). Can anyone else read this better?

    The number 100 is probably the number in the library.

    The pencil mark with the number of prints (estampes in French) has probably been added after the set has been split.
     
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  15. Ex Libris

    Ex Libris Well-Known Member

    I asked Twitter as well, and maybe it is António Miguel da Costa Basto.
     
  16. Ex Libris

    Ex Libris Well-Known Member

    If that is correct I can add Portugal as a new related country as well
     
  17. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    I don't find it illogical that the book was printed in Antwerp. It was a Spanish possession and the publisher specialized in Spanish-language books. Perhaps Don What's-His-Name, as the secular authority, gave permission for its publication. (That's what the language "Con licencia de los Superiores" is about.)

    Debora
     
    Last edited: Apr 16, 2022
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  18. Ex Libris

    Ex Libris Well-Known Member

    There are more books to find on the internet with the same owner name. Unfortunately I cannot zoom in more.

    Screenshot 2022-04-16 201045.jpg Screenshot 2022-04-16 204514.jpg
     
  19. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    "Miguel de Costa Basto" according to description above. I think perhaps that's "Miguel da Costa Basto." Portuguese, not Spanish.

    Debora
     
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  20. Ex Libris

    Ex Libris Well-Known Member

    Likely the cataloguer had also problems with reading his owner mark. Just like this one: AAC17CEF-294B-4E58-921F-9F6FC5F62776.jpeg
     
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