DEPARTMENT OF PRINTED BOOKS. 25 



Ovidius. Metamorphoses and Fasti. Brothers of the 

 Oommon Life, Rostock [about 1-176]. Two important additions 

 to the representation of this interesting press. (Dunn copies.) 



Pontanus. Singularia. M. Huss, Toulouse [about 1476]. 

 One of the earliest Toulouse books. ('Dunn copy.) 



Valla. Elegantiae. H. Aiding, Naples, 1477. (Dunn 

 copy.) 



Jacobus de Erfordia. De contractibus. Attributed to 

 Neumeister, Albi [about 1480]. In a fine Gothic t3^pe. (Dunn 

 €opy.) 



Wiirzburg Missal. G. Reyser, Wiirzburg, 1481. 



Cordiale. Louis Cruse, Geneva [about 1485]. A very rare 

 work. (Dunn copy.) 



Guido Vincentinus do Pileo. Margarita ad retinendum 

 memorie omnia capitula S. Scripture [about 1485]. Probably 

 printed in Spain. (Dunn copy.) 



Boethius. De disciplina Scholarium. G. Le Roy, Lyons, 

 1486. With MS. notes by William Drummond of Hawthornden. 

 (Dunn copy.) 



Itinerarium Beatissime Virginis Marie. L. Ysenhut [Basle, 

 = about 1489]. In a fine binding by Niedree. (Huth copy.) 



Catholicum Parvum [about 1490]. A Latin-French dictionary 

 of philological as well as typographical interest, (Dunn copy.) 



Bartolus de Saxoferrato. Tractatus judiciorum. H.Mayer, 

 Toulouse [about 1490]. (Dunn copy.) 



Quiricus de Augustis. Lumen Apotecariorum. P. Maufer, 

 Cremona, 1494. From a press hitherto unrepresented in the 

 Museum collection. (Dunn copy.) 



Angelus de Clavasio. Summa Angelica. J. Le Bourgeois, 

 Rouen, 1495. No other specimen of this type in the Museum 

 ■collection. (Dunn copy.) 



Gregorius Ariminensis. Quaestiones. Valentia, 1500. 



Also the following later foreign books : — 



Missale Maguntinense. J. Schoffer, Mentz, 1513. 



Coustumes du Mayne. Paris, 1535. 



Moustiers. Des estats et maisons de la Chrestiente. Paris, 

 1549. 



Taillemont. Discours des Champs. Lyons, 1553. 



Stevin. De Thiende. Leyden, 1585. The first systematic 

 treatment of decimal fractions. 



Pitiscus. Canon Sinuum. Frankfort, 1613. The first 

 really accurate astronomical tables. 



Castillo Solorzano. La Fovne de Seville. Paris, 1661 



