BRANT, Sebastian.
ILLUSTRATED INCUNABULAR AMERICANUM
BRANT, Sebastian.. Stultifera navis
Basel, Johann Bergmann, de Olpe, 1497.
A landmark of early printing, with superb woodcut illustrations partly attributed to the young Dürer, as well as with early references to Columbus s discoveries and, for the first time in this first enlarged Latin edition, a poem on the Ottoman threat. A German humanist from Strasbourg, Sebastian Brant (1458-1521) completed his studies at Basel. There, until 1500, he published his major works, the most renowned of which, Das Narrenschiff , in 1494. The humanist Jakob Locher translated it into Latin as Stultifera navis in March 1497, adding four woodcuts and in this fifth and first enlarged Latin edition also a new poem by Brant, De pereuntibus . Stultifera navis is a powerful satirical poem. In a ship laden with one hundred fools, steered by fools to the fools paradise of Narragonia, Brant satirizes all the weaknesses, follies and vices of his time. Composed in popular humorous verse and illustrated by a remarkable series of woodcuts of which 75 are now attributed to the young Dürer the book was an immediate success (PMM 37). The nautical theme was probably strengthened under the influence of contemporary debates on voyages of exploration and the vanity of seeking knowledge of God s creation. Most famous is the chapter on the inquisition of geographical regions , or the foolishness of those who want to measure the earth, illustrated by a fool s-capped figure holding a compass. It also mentions Columbus s recent discoveries, which had first appeared in print in his letter to Ferdinand and Isabella of 1493, reprinted by Bergmann, Brant s Basel publisher, in 1494. The verse states that Ptolemy, Pliny and Varro were all wrong, and the terra that was previously incognita was now revealed; these Western Hesperides now belonged to King Ferdinand. Brant s new and final poem, De pereuntibus , deals with the Ottoman threat, and bears a separate t-p with figures engaged in foolish activities and a diagrammatic horoscope. After foreseeing a nefarious planetary conjunction on 2 October 1503, he bemoans the dangers in which Christianity has been cast by the Turks irruptio and argues for the support of the Emperor Maximilian in his fight against them. A lavishly illustrated important work and a fascinating edition.
PMM 37 (1494 ed.); Goff B1090; HC 3750*; ISTC ib01090000; Alden 497/5; Church 13 (first Latin ed. of March 1497); Harrisse, Additions, 5 (first Latin ed. of March 1497). Not in BMC XV or Sabin. Göllner does not mention it in the C15 section of his introduction.