- Mounted annots. by Van den Broek on upper pastedown; otherwise contents fine and clean. Corners sl. rubbed.
= Rare and important work on the Forgotten War of Noord-Holland. On 27 August 1799 the English army invaded Noord-Holland from Den Helder to liberate the Low Countries from the French. Together with the Russians they fought several fierce battles, reaching a climax in the battle of Castricum, where the English and Russian armies were defeated in an unexpected Batavian attack. On 18 October 1799, no less than 2 months after their glorious invasion, the English and Russian armies were forced to retreat and the Duke of York signed an agreement with the French warlord Brune. The plates illustrate Den Helder from Mars Diep, Oude Huys, Schagen, Bergen, Alkmaar, Egmont op Zee, Egmont op den Hoef. Provenance: the collection A.M. van den Broek. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE CXXIX.
- Joints, spine-ends and corners sl. rubbed; paper ticket on frontcover vol. 3.
= Haitsma Mulier/ Van der Lem 513e.
- Folded; sl. yellowed and fingersoiled.
= Early issue of the longest running newspaper (first weekly, later daily) in the world. The first number was published in 1656 by Abraham Casteleyn.
- Ten sm. holes; fingersoiled, creased and sl. frayed.
= Contains i.a. coverage of the peace negotiations in Münster.
= I.a. issues of the Leeuwarder (Saturdagse) Courant, Opregte Saturdagse Haerlemse Courant, Zuid-Hollandsche Courant, De Tolk der Vrijheid, Staatkundig Dagblad van de Zuiderzee, Gazette van Gend, Groninger Courant and Sanktpeterburgische Handels Zeitung.
- Formerly folded; creased; edges cut sl. unevenly; sl. fingersoiled; traces of sellotape on verso.
- Lacks 3 plates (portions remaining); upper pastedown detached. Upper joint splitting; vellum stained and sl. darkened.
= Cf. Van der Linde, Spinoza 106; Bibl. Med. Neerl. 522; Caillet 8009 (French ed.); Bierens de Haan 3561. Main work of this follower of Descartes and opponent of Spinoza.
- Lacks 1 portrait; bookplate on upper pastedowns; sl. foxed. First vol. frontcover detached.
= Haitsma Mulier/ Van der Lem 222.
- Occas. sl. browned. Fine copy.
= Rare. Haitsma Mulier/ Van der Lem 248a; Carasso-Kok 246; De Wind p.176f.
Burger van Schoorel, D. Chronyk Van de gantsche oude Heerlykheydt van het Dorp Schagen (...). Hoorn, J. Duyn, n.d. (1736), 115,(8)p., contemp. wr., sm. 8vo.
- Wr. sl. worn/ dam. at backstrip. = Haitsma Mulier/ Van der Lem 93c; Nijhoff/ Van Hattum 62.
- Remnant of paper ticket on spine; frontcover waterstained. = Nijhoff/ Van Hattum 303. Rare.
- A fine copy. = Lipsius/ Leitzmann p.365 (under Schynvoets [sic]).
- Trifle yellowed. Upper joint splitting; covers chafed; paper over boards partly worn off.
= Lipsius/ Leitzmann p.235.
BOUND WITH: Kolyn, K. Geschicht-historiaal rym, of rymchronyk (...); beginnende met den Simberschen vloed, en eyndigende met de dood van Graaf Dirk (...) In 't jaar elfhonderdzesenvyftig voorgevallen (...). Ed. G. van Loon. Ibid., idem, 1745, (4),XII,477,(12)p., engr. title-vignette.
- Partly (sl.) browned. = Famous mystification, ascribed to Regnerus de Graaf, engraver from Haarlem.
- Occas. trifle yellowed; bookplate and annots. on first endpaper. Shelftickets on spine. Otherwise a fine copy.
= Lipsius/ Leitzmann p.261.
- New first free endpaper; sl. browned throughout. Binding sl. worn; lacks ties.
= Very rare numismatical work on Roman emperors and their depictions on coins. The first illustrated German edition. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE CXXXI.
- Contemp. annots. throughout. Binding is sl. too large. = Lipsius/ Letzmann p.383; Graesse VI, 507/508 note.
- Final part lacks one preliminary leaf and 2 preliminary leaves repaired w. tape; first quire sl. receding waterstain in lower blank margin (title-p. also in blank upper margin); contemp. annots. on both endpapers and on first blank; owner's stamp on verso of frontisp.
= Querard II, p.263 (listing this edition); Caillet 2529; Dorbon-Ainé 838 (both other editions). Interesting work on the (occult) science of numbers.
- Bookplate (Collectie Buijnsters-Smets) on upper pastedown. Fine copy.
= Waller 1347; The Children's World of Learning 2020 (same publisher, 20th ed. dated 1800); cf. coll. Versnel 887, Scheepers I, 554f and Bierens de Haan 5570. Very popular and consequently often reprinted astrological manual. All editions are (very) rare.
- Upper hinge weak; (vaguely) waterst. (mostly in upper right corner); a few lvs. w. sm. (rust)stain. Plates w. some defects: 8x loose and sl. frayed/ soiled in margins; 3x w. (sm.) tear; 1x sl. cut short in right margin; 1x sl. wrinkled. Backstrip dam./ loosening; sl. rubbed/ chafed.
= The first Dutch translation of the original Latin edition Mundus subterraneus (Amst., 1664). Wellcome III, 395; Nissen ZBI 2197; Sabin 37968; Dünnhaupt 16; Caillet 5783 ("Le plus curieux des nombreux ouvrages de ce savant"); Ferguson I, 467; De Backer-S. IV, 1060. B.L. Merrill, Athanasius Kircher, no.17: "The Mundus subterraneus, perhaps the most popular of Kircher's works in his day and the best known in ours, is cited in letters and works of such contemporaries as Martin Lister (1639-1712), the zoologist and geologist; Robert Moray (1608?-73), chemist, metallurgist, and first president of the Royal Society; the philosophers Baruch Spinoza (1632-77) and John Locke (1632-1704); Henry Oldenburg (1618-77), the secretary of the Royal Society and the first professional scientific administrator; Nicolaus Steno (1638-86), the anatomist and geologist; and the physicist Christian Huygens (1629-95). The basis and impetus for the Mundus subterraneus was Kircher's visit to Sicily in 1637-38, where he witnessed an eruption of Aetna and Stromboli. He prefaced the work with his own narrative of the trip, including his spectacular descent into Vesuvius upon his return to Italy. His observations of these volcanoes led him to conclude that the center of the earth is a massive internal fire for which the volcanoes are mere safety valves.
But the work is not solely geologic. Kircher continues with fantastic speculations about the interior of the earth, its hidden lakes, its rivers of fire, and its strange inhabitants. Major topics include gravity, the moon, the sun, eclipses, ocean currents, subterranean waters and fires, meteorology, rivers and lakes, hydraulics, minerals and fossils, subterranean giants, beasts and demons, poisons, metallurgy and mining, alchemy, the universal seed and the generation of insects, herbs, astrological medicine, distillation, and fireworks. In this work he discloses his experience with palingenesis: he had allegedly resuscitated a plant from its ashes. Much of the work deals with alchemy. Kircher ridicules Paracelsus' belief in transmutation and discredits the work of alchemists in general, complaining about the obscurity of their writings. This diatribe brought him vicious criticism and abuse later in life from alchemists who no longer feared the authority of the Jesuit order. Kircher does, however, praise the work of the "true chemist," the chymiotechnicus." SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE CXXX.
- The plate foxed/ stained; several pencil markings and annots.
= The third part concerns the national character of the Dutch.
- One view w. 2 closed tears in image (with browning from former tape); bookplates and owner's stamp on upper endpaper.
= Nijhoff/ Van Hattum 159.
BOUND WITH: Keuren der Stad Oudewater. (Oudewater), n.publ., 1753, woodcut printer's mark on title-p., (2),129,(42)p.