CHÉRADAME, Jean

CHÉRADAME, Jean

£2,750.00
Sale price  £2,750.00 Regular price 
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CHÉRADAME, Jean

CHÉRADAME, Jean

SCARCE ETYMOLOGICAL DICTIONARY

CHÉRADAME, Jean. Lexicopator Etymon ex Variis Doctissimo

£2,750.00
Sale price  £2,750.00 Regular price 

Paris, apud Guilelmum Rolant & Hieronymum Gormontium, 1543.

FIRST EDITION. Folio. p. [lxxxiv] 1910 columns [cxii], error in numbering: 1753-1772 omitted, text uninterrupted. Three parts in one. Roman and Greek letter, double column. Title within architectural woodcut border, depicting Nativity attended by Three Wise Men, medallion portraits of Evangelists within ornate ornamental border incorporating printer s arms with monogram E.G. on columns. Stamp of the Seminaire de Consolation , a former monastery of the order of the Minims, closed 1906, on t-p. At foot, ms Ex Libris F./J. Chaput Pteri (Presbyter) S.T.D. 1760 (Sacrae Theologiae Doctor), repeated on fly leaf. Floriated, white on black initials in Ars Etymologica and Graecae Linguae Dictionum Expositiones. In contemporary reversed sheep, slightly discoloured, raised bands. Surface crack to upper joint, damage to corners and covers towards upper edge. Very occasional light water stains to upper margins. A few pressed flowers between pages.

A handsome, well margined copy of this uncommon first edition Greek-Latin etymological dictionary and Greek grammar by Jean Ch éradame, a 16th century Hebrew and Hellenist scholar. A large folio organised into three sections, which comprise Ars etymologica , Etymi paedion an alphabetical dictionary of the Greek language and Farrago libellorum a collection of booklets by Greek grammarians on subjects such as De Notis Arithmeticis and De Numero Graecorum . The preface contains a reflection on linguistic history, with reference particularly to Hebrew as well as Latin and Greek. Ch éradame considers the origin of language to be the utterances of God, which were then heard and learnt by Adam to create a lingua sancta . In Farrago libellorum , Ch éradame includes expositions on different forms of the Greek language, including De Ionica Lignua , De Attica Lingua , and De Lingua Dorica , among others. These sections are in both Latin and Greek.

Ch éradame is the author of numerous titles, including Alphabetum linguae sanctae (1532), and Rudimenta quaedam Hebraicae grammatic_ (1523). Gabriel-Henri Gaillard said of Ch éradame: We don t know his French name; that of Ch éradame is an allegorical Greek name by which he claimed to express his ardour to overcome the difficulties of study; he also took the name Hippocrates, apparently because he had studied medicine. This man does not appear to have been modest; he is too little known for the names and praise he gives himself (Gabriel-Henri Gaillard, History of François the First, Saillant and Nyon, Paris, vol. VII, 1769, p. 332-333). In this medical capacity, Ch éradame published one of the first treatises on syphilis in 1519 (Codo‚àö¬±er, J., 2016, page 261). One of the first Greek teachers at the Coll√®ge de France, he also published a number of grammars of Greek, as well as Lexicon Graecum (Paris, 1523). The present work, dedicated to King Francis I, followed 20 years later and was intended to supplement the Lexicon Graecum.

USTC 153738; Not in ESTC, Adams, Brunet, or Graesse.

L3528

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