26 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



Thomas Aquinas, " Secunda Secunclae," printed by Panlus. 

 de Butschbach, at Mantua, 1474. One of the earliest books 

 printed at Mantua. 



Ambrosius de Cora, " Oratio de Johannis Apostoli 

 Laudibus." One of the earliest books from the press of 

 Bartholomaeus Guldinbeck, Rome, about 1475. 



Cicero " De Officiis," printed by Antonius Zarotus, Milany 

 147G. 



Thomas Aquinas, " De Unitate Intellectus," printed by 

 Joannes de Hassia, Treviso, 1476. The only known book 

 bearing the name of this printer. The only other recorded 

 copy of the work is in the Bibliotheque Mazarine, Paris. A 

 second and hitherto unidentified work by the same printer 

 was purchased for the Library in 1902. 



Conradus de Halberstadt, " Concordantiae Bibliae," printed 

 by J. Otmar, Reutlingen, about 1478. 



Saxolus Pratensis, " De Accentibus et Diphthongis Graecis," 

 printed by Bonus Accursius, at Milan, about 1479. One of the 

 six earliest printed Greek books. The only other known copy 

 is in the Spencer Collection in the John Rylands Library, 

 Manchester. 



^' Coutumes de Bretagne," printed by Guillaume Lefevre, 

 Paris, 1480. The only book produced by this printer ; only 

 two other copies are known, both of which are in Public 

 Libraries. 



Gregory I. Pope, " Liber Dialogorum," in Italian, printed 

 by Domenico Bocociola, Modena, 1481. The first book 

 produced by this printer. 



Heinrich Stainhowel, " Regimen wider die Pestilenz," 

 printed by Conrad Dinckmut, at Ulm, about 1482. One of 

 the very few books in this printer's first type. 



Reuchlin, Johann, " Vocabularium Breviloquus," printed 

 by Petrus Ungarus, Lj^ons, 1482, a printer who is not known 

 to have produced more than four books. 



Tucher, Hans, Account of a Journey to Palestine, printed 

 at Augsburg, 1482. The first edition of this book was printed 

 by Hans Schonsperger, at Augsburg, in 1482, but the author, 

 Hans Tucher, finding this edition very incorrectly printed, 

 himself reprinted the book at Nuremberg. From this edition 

 Schonsperger printed another edition at Augsburg, so that 

 three editions appeared in the same year, 1482. The present 

 is a copy of Schonsperger's reprint, of which only one other 

 copy, in the Royal Library at Munich, is known. 



Arnaldus, de Villa Nova, " Von Bereitung der Weine," 

 printed by Martin Schott, at Strassburg, about 1483. With 

 a fine woodcut border and initials. 



Augustine, Saint, "De conflictu Vitiorum et Virtutum," 

 printed by Antoine Caillaut, at Paris, about 1484. One of 

 the first illustrated books printed at Paris. 



