Lot 33

Consul Joseph Smith.- Bibliotheca Smithiana, seu Catalogus Librorum D. Josephi Smithii Angli per cognomina authorum dispositus, first collected edition, Venice, Jo. Baptista Pasquali, 1755.

Estimate: £3,000 - 4,000

Description

Consul Joseph Smith.- Bibliotheca Smithiana, seu Catalogus Librorum D. Josephi Smithii Angli per cognomina authorum dispositus, first collected edition, half-title, title printed in red and black and with large engraved arms, engraved armorial head-piece, wood-engraved tail-pieces, occasional spotting or faint foxing, mainly marginal, contemporary limp boards, remnants of black ?seal and small loss to both covers upper corner, some creasing and wear to joints and extremities, [De Ricci pp.54-55], 4to, Venice, Jo. Baptista Pasquali, 1755.

⁂ Leonardo Trissino's copy of the first complete edition of the catalogue of Consul Smith's superb library, which following its sale to King George III (for £10,000) became the foundation for the King's Library in the British Museum, now housed in the British Library. It is likely that this catalogue was prepared with the sale in mind. It is extremely valuable for its extensive appendix, which reprints the prefaces of all of the incunabula in the collection. Smith (c.1682-1770) was British consul at Venice (1744-1760), a patron of arts (notably Canaletto), and a collector of art and books. While at Venice he financed the Pasquali press, and enjoyed commissioning lavish limited editions, including an almost perfect facsimile of the rare 1527 edition of the Decameron.

Provenance: 'Leonardo Trissino 1830' (ink inscription to front free endpaper and ?his ink prices in margins). Trissino (1780-1841) was a Venetian bibliophile and friend of poet Giacomo Leopardi, whose Canzone ad Angelo Mai (1820) was dedicated to him. It appears that he has used this copy to record contemporary prices of books and possibly his own purchases.

Description

Consul Joseph Smith.- Bibliotheca Smithiana, seu Catalogus Librorum D. Josephi Smithii Angli per cognomina authorum dispositus, first collected edition, half-title, title printed in red and black and with large engraved arms, engraved armorial head-piece, wood-engraved tail-pieces, occasional spotting or faint foxing, mainly marginal, contemporary limp boards, remnants of black ?seal and small loss to both covers upper corner, some creasing and wear to joints and extremities, [De Ricci pp.54-55], 4to, Venice, Jo. Baptista Pasquali, 1755.

⁂ Leonardo Trissino's copy of the first complete edition of the catalogue of Consul Smith's superb library, which following its sale to King George III (for £10,000) became the foundation for the King's Library in the British Museum, now housed in the British Library. It is likely that this catalogue was prepared with the sale in mind. It is extremely valuable for its extensive appendix, which reprints the prefaces of all of the incunabula in the collection. Smith (c.1682-1770) was British consul at Venice (1744-1760), a patron of arts (notably Canaletto), and a collector of art and books. While at Venice he financed the Pasquali press, and enjoyed commissioning lavish limited editions, including an almost perfect facsimile of the rare 1527 edition of the Decameron.

Provenance: 'Leonardo Trissino 1830' (ink inscription to front free endpaper and ?his ink prices in margins). Trissino (1780-1841) was a Venetian bibliophile and friend of poet Giacomo Leopardi, whose Canzone ad Angelo Mai (1820) was dedicated to him. It appears that he has used this copy to record contemporary prices of books and possibly his own purchases.

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