Lot 521
Habrecht II (Isaac) and Johann Christoph Sturm (editor), Planiglobium Coeleste ac Terrestre, Nuremburg, Christoph Gerhard, [1666].
Hammer Price: £3,000
Description
Habrecht II (Isaac) Planiglobium Coeleste ac Terrestre, edited by Johann Christoph Sturm,14 engraved engraved plates, a few with small tears at folds and one paper repair to verso, illustrations, woodcut head-pieces and initials, G4 torn away at lower margin (not affecting text), some spotting and light foxing, dedication leaf heavily browned, lacking front endpaper, contemporary calf, spine gilt, upper joint cracked, lower starting, extremities rubbed, [Houzeau and Lancaster 3039; Zinner 5089], 4to, Nuremburg, Christoph Gerhard, [1666].
⁂ Rare with the full complement of plates, including the two planispheres. This work is a new first edition enlarged and edited by Habrecht's student Sturm, of his famous treatise published in two parts in 1628 and 1629. Sturm augmented the text, reprinted the original two planispheres from the same plates (one of them is still dated 1628), and added to them a further 12 plates, including two handsome polar projections of the world and ten engravings showing the various parts of his celestial and terrestrial globes. "The plates, superbly executed by Jacob van der Heyden, were probably intended to be mounted and assembled to form several instruments, each with a revolving plate measuring 27cm in diameter and a movable pointer. Each was to be supported on an approximately 12cm base" (W.P. Watson, Cat. 18).
Description
Habrecht II (Isaac) Planiglobium Coeleste ac Terrestre, edited by Johann Christoph Sturm,14 engraved engraved plates, a few with small tears at folds and one paper repair to verso, illustrations, woodcut head-pieces and initials, G4 torn away at lower margin (not affecting text), some spotting and light foxing, dedication leaf heavily browned, lacking front endpaper, contemporary calf, spine gilt, upper joint cracked, lower starting, extremities rubbed, [Houzeau and Lancaster 3039; Zinner 5089], 4to, Nuremburg, Christoph Gerhard, [1666].
⁂ Rare with the full complement of plates, including the two planispheres. This work is a new first edition enlarged and edited by Habrecht's student Sturm, of his famous treatise published in two parts in 1628 and 1629. Sturm augmented the text, reprinted the original two planispheres from the same plates (one of them is still dated 1628), and added to them a further 12 plates, including two handsome polar projections of the world and ten engravings showing the various parts of his celestial and terrestrial globes. "The plates, superbly executed by Jacob van der Heyden, were probably intended to be mounted and assembled to form several instruments, each with a revolving plate measuring 27cm in diameter and a movable pointer. Each was to be supported on an approximately 12cm base" (W.P. Watson, Cat. 18).