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De proprietate latini sermonis

De proprietate latini sermonis

Printer: Nicolaus Jenson, Venice
Binder: Kalthoeber, London
Author: Nonius Marcellus (Roman, 4th century CE)
Date: 1476
Dimensions:
Leaf: 27.9 × 19.7 cm (11 × 7 3/4 in.)
Medium: printed book, ink and pencil on blank sheet; crimson Morocco binding
Place of Origin: Venice, Italy
Classification: Books
Credit Line: Museum Purchase
Object number: 1922.99
Label Text:Among the earliest printers in Venice, Nicholas Jenson was the most skillful. Much of his fame rests on the beauty of his Roman type. He selected and improved the Roman letters of his time and produced a model that for a long period was unexcelled. Many of the Jenson characteristics exist today. Jenson printed from 1470 to 1480.

Jenson ranks among the most skillful of the early printers in Venice. This beautiful sermon book is an excellent example of the masterful printing Jenson achieved. Much of his fame rests on the beauty of his Roman type, as can be seen here and from Jenson's Pliny text (exhibited nearby).

Jenson was a great success. both financially and artistically. He produced superb books in roman, gothic, and greek types of the greatest distinction. Indeed, Jenson's roman type, distinguished for the clarity of lerrer forms and their arrangment on a page, became the model for what is used today.

Renaissance readers were eager to obtain classic texts and thus broaden their knowledge of the world. Pliny (23-79 A.D.; he died as a result of the Mount Vesuvius eruption) compiled a massive encyclopedia on natural history, which remains one of the great litrary monuments of first century Roms. For centuries this text was regarded as the chief authority on scientific matters; its inaccuracies were not challenged until 1492.
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