CICERO, Marcus Tullius, [LAMBIN, Denis.]
RARE
CICERO, Marcus Tullius, [LAMBIN, Denis.]. Rhetoricorum ad C. Herennium libri IIII (with) De Oratore libri III Cum annotationibus Dionysii Lambini
Venice, ex Bibliotheca Aldina, 1569.
Very good copy of two Aldine editions, intended as companion volumes, of Cicero s rhetorical works, here issued for the first time with a commentary by the humanist Denis Lambin. Despite the imprimatur Ex Bibliotheca Aldina , these works were printed by the Torresani, heirs to Andrea, Aldus s socerus and associate; these were also their first Ciceronian editions. The Torresani editions have been praised as handsome, almost all rare, and kept in much esteem (Renouard, Notice , 72). Due to their excellence, they were either attributed to Aldus and his heirs or mistaken for counterfeits even by notable bibliographers until the mid-C19 (Bernoni, Dei Torresani , 128). One of the most influential figures of classical antiquity, Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43BC) put his legal skills to the service of politics with speeches which became landmarks of forensic oratory. Defined by Quintilian as eloquence itself , his copious prose production occupied a fundamental place in medieval syllabi. Subsequent to the rediscovery of further texts, including the letters, by scholars like Petrarch, Cicero contributed to forging the Latin style of the Renaissance and its ideas on political theory (e.g., Republicanism), rhetoric (e.g., the principles of argument, eloquence and invention) and philosophy (e.g., Stoicism). The first work in this sammelband includes his greatly influential ad Herennium , by then presented as probably spurious ( incerto auctore ), as well as De inventione and Topica (how to construct arguments in structure and content), and De partitione oratoria on oratory techniques. The second work begins with De oratore , an immensely influential analysis of how a good orator should construct persuasive arguments which should however be driven by sound ethical principles. There follow Orator , a description of the perfect orator integrating observations in previous works, and De claris oratoribus , a history of eloquence through individual figures including Pericles and Solon. Denis Lambin s commentaries to Rhetorica and to the first book of De oratore appended to each part bear a separate t-p, pagination and collation, but were not intended for separate publication. Lambin (1520-72) was a French humanist who taught Latin and Greek at the Collège de France. He was praised for his philological precision but also criticised for being too concerned with trivialities of language at the expense not only of philosophical issues but also of practical matters of politics and individual conduct (Salmon, Renaissance and Revolt , 50).
I) Renouard 207:13; BM STC It., p. 176; Ahmanson-Murphy 579. Not in Brunet.II) Renouard 207:14; BM STC It., p. 176; Ahmanson-Murphy 580. Not in Brunet. Adams C1689, both works, one complete copy only.