Book Illustrations © Bob Staake
Saturday, October 01, 2005
Alexander by Rufus by Petrus
Quintus Curtius Rufus rose from a dubious background to the ranks of Roman nobility during the reigns of Tiberius Caesar Augustus and Caligula in the first century A.D.
As a Roman senator, in the years before his death Rufus recorded the life of Alexander the Great [De gestis Alexandri Magni], basing his account largely on a biography by Cleitarchus who was a contemporary of Alexander. Although this introduced some mistakes into Rufus's novel-like work, it is notable for both having survived mostly intact for 2 centuries and for containing relatively simple latin phrasing.
The images here are details from a 1467 copy made of De gestis Alexandri Magni by Petrus Cenninius in Florence. It has been owned by the National Széchényi Library of Hungary since 1830.
![](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/1717/1584/320/RufusCover1.jpg)
![](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/1717/1584/320/Rufus1.jpg)
- The whole of the Petrus manuscript is on display through the Hungarian Bibliotecha Corviniana Digitalis site - english commentary/options available.
- A good short commentary on the quality of the original work of Rufus.
- Highlights in english of what we are told by Rufus of Alexander.
- The extant latin text reproduced.
Dard on Paper
If ever I manage to wrench out the great novel from within, it would be the epitome of elegance (but unlikely economic sense) to have a craftsman of the calibre of Dard Hunter hand make and publish each book.
Born into a printing family in 1883, Dard Hunter became skilled in a range of artistic fields and after visiting europe, devoted his life to studying, practising and recording all facets of the hand papermaking and printing-typographic trades.
Before his death in the 60s Hunter had written and published a number of limited edition gold-standard papermaking and associated books. All of these, plus some he had handmade for clients have been digitized and are displayed in the University of Utah Dard Hunter Exhibition.
I think his work is tastefully exquisite personally.
- A 1-page biography as part of the Georgia Institute of Technology Paper Museum Tour.
- Another excellent exhibition on Dard Hunter by the University of Ohio.
- Friends of Dard Hunter Inc. website.
Friday, September 30, 2005
Earthquake Images
Turkey 1509------- Mitilini, Greece 1867
There's something poetic about my abysmal html/graphic handling techniques being demonstrated in a post whose illustrations portray earthquakes. Click on the links below the pictures for larger images.
Moscow 1445--------- Istanbul 1556: comet AND earthquake
The National Information Service for Earthquake Engineering at University of California, Berkeley have the Jan T Kozak Exhibition: Historical Images of Earthquakes on display. There are a larger number of images than I expected (875!) and this includes photographs. They range from 464BC to 1932 and can be displayed chronologically or alphabetically.
- The Getty Research Institute have a 1-page exhibit called Irresistable Decay which I think complements the NISEE display.
- There are some other presentations (including footage) about earthquakes on the NISEE homepage.
Thursday, September 29, 2005
The Master and Margarita
Irina Shipovskaia
Apt. 50 Unlucky Visitors Ch.18
S.A.Alimov
Veselaia kompaniia (The Happy Company) 1983
Mikhail Bulgakov had been dead 26 years when his fantasy politico-religious satire The Master and Margarita was released in 1966. It was written in Russia during the Stalin era. I must profess complete ignorance to its very existence until a short while ago. I'm now very intrigued.
I came across a website devoted to the The Master and Margarita which has a sizeable number of wonderful +/- disturbing illustrations associated with the book. There's also an exegesis of the work.
- Here's an extended Wikipedia entry if you need anything more.
- A Russian tv series was being produced last year to the consternation of some - Guardian article.
Irina Shipovskaia
from: Illustrations II
Addit:
Strutt & Play
All images in this entry are from: The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England: including the Rural and Domestic Recreations. May Games, Mummeries, Shows, Processions, Pageants, and Pompous Spectacles, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time. 1801 by Joseph Strutt [edited and enlarged by JC Cox 1903]
Joseph Strutt (1749-1802) made a substantial contribution to English antiquarian historiography but there is a dearth of material available about him on the internet.
The study of games at every level of society - jousting and hawking for the nobility, chess and backgammon for the intelligentsia, wrestling and bowling for the commoners, and field games for the children - are all included in Sports. Strutt is referenced when interpreting some words in Shakespeare and is credited with popularizing golf and of having an influence in the origin of baseball.
He also wrote extended works on the antiquities of England and a dictionary on engraving but his other great achievement was documenting historical dress styles.
Strutt is said to have undertaken most of his social studies at the British Museum, using stained glass windows and illuminated manuscripts as inspiration to record the hobbies and dress customs going back to Roman times.
After Strutt died, Sir Walter Scott completed a lacklustre romance novel that Strutt had started, and he credited Strutt with influencing his subsequent writing of the famed Waverley novels.
- The full text [reproduction] of Sports (the 1903 preface contains by far the most biographical material about Strutt)
- List of illustrations in Sports
- Another page of Sports illustrations (cache)
- A Complete View Of The Dress And Habits Of The People Of England 1799 - costume plates - or go to these thumb pages: I, II, III, IV (blogger isn't accepting uploaded images at present or else a few of these would have been included)
- Joseph Strutt bibliography
Wednesday, September 28, 2005
Minute Bodies
MICROGRAPHIA: OR SOME Physiological Descriptions of MINUTE BODIES MADE BY MAGNIFYING GLASSES with OBSERVATIONS and INQUIRIES thereupon. 1665.
Robert Hooke (1635-1703) could list in his not inconsiderable curriculum vitae, inventor, physicist, astronomer, biologist and architect among other talents. Sir Isaac Newton, who was mutually despised by Hooke, first wrote "If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants" as a sarcastic barb in a letter to Hooke, who was short in stature.
When he published Micrographia in 1665, Samuel Pepys described it as "the most ingenious book I have ever read in my life." Hooke accurately described his observations from use of a compound microscope in it and it was very popular following release.
About the flea image above he wrote:
"..a'dorned with a curiously polished suite of sable Armour, neatly jointed.."and in relation to the cork cell illustration above he observed:
"..I could exceedingly plainly perceive it to be all perforated and porous, much like a Honey-comb, but that the pores of it were not regular....these pores,....or cells,...were indeed the first microscopial pores I ever saw, and perhaps that were ever seen.."which announced the discovey of the cell. The third image is the head of a fly.
Hooke was also notable in being the official Surveyor of London following the Great Fire of 1666 and, together with Sir Christopher Wren, designed a number of replacement buildings in and around London. Curiously, no known portrait of Robert Hooke exists.
Southern Nature
The original sketch for the copper plate book engraving in Travels Through North and South Carolina, Georgia, East and West Florida, the Cherokee Country, the Extensive Territories of the Muscogulges or Creek Confederacy, and the Country of the Chactaws; Containing an Account of the Soil and Natural Productions of those Regions, Together with Observations on the Manners of the Indians by William Bartram 1791. .
Leaves of Liquid Amber and other trees; Magnolia altissima
from Hortus Europae Americanus by Mark Catesby 1767.
These images come from the American Philosophical Society's Southern Nature: Scientific Views of the Colonial American South Exhibit, [cache]which includes single page accounts of the lives and works of over a dozen authors (including Thomas Jefferson) with sample images, from the Society's Library manuscript and rare book holdings.
Tuesday, September 27, 2005
Passarola
Brazilian Jesuit priest, linguist and mathematician, Bartolomeu Lourenço de Gusmão might have demonstrated to King João V of Portugal in 1709 that a device heavier than air could fly. Supposedly he floated a paper balloon construction indoors by means of a small fire in a clay crucible. There is only slim support for the notion that he successfully flew a bird-like 'balloon' some 60 or 70 years prior to the Montgolfier brothers of France however. It is also suggested that Gusmão's papers with substantiating evidence were destroyed during the Inquisition. Various forms of the Passarola (portuguese for flying ship) have appeared in print over the years. It's the stuff of patriotic legend.
The image above is from the 2-page MIT Institute Archives and Special Collections: Balloon Prints from the Vail Collection.
The Featherbook
Dioniosio Minaggio worked as a gardner to the Governor of Milan. During his tenure he made Il Bestiarrio Barocco in which 156 pictures were crafted entirely from bird feathers and skin. It was completed in 1618 and is housed today in the Blacker-Wood Library of Biology's Rare Book Collection at McGill University in Montreal.
Thumb page views (high resolution images are available) -
Birds I, Birds II, Birds III, Birds IV, The Hunters, The Comedians, The Musicians, The Tradesmen
- Avian Taxidermy in Europe from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance in J. Ornithol. 144, (459-478) 2003.
- Eurasian Jay
Rare Books of the Japanese Diet Library
- The original untranslated homepage (translation)
- Original page of thumb views from which the above images were selected (translation) -- click on thumbs to go to each gallery (google translator home - copy gallery URL if you want it in english) [high resolution images are available]
- World rare book sample thumbs page translation.
- Europe rare book sample thumb page translation.
- Japan rare book sample thumb pages one and two translations.
- Very interesting 'item index' page translation - this may be all images on the site, but I'm just not certain (repeated as 'title index' translation - probably a little easier to follow)
Monday, September 26, 2005
Architectura Navalis Mercatoria
Frederik Chapman from Göteborg Sweden was partly educated in England and came to be regarded as one of the greatest shipbuilders and naval architects of all time. He approached design scientifically (going so far as to have legends and measurements in 3 languages) in contrast to the empirical/discussion methods of boating construction beforehand. One of his great works, Architectura Navalis Mercatoria, was published in Sweden in 1768 and contains a large number of diagrams from which the above were selected.
All the book illustrations (to my knowledge) are available at the Swedish subsite ChapmanNet. There is no english available that I could find. I somehow think there's a bit/lot more around on the parent site.