{"product_id":"lancione-sempronio","title":"LANCIONE, Sempronio.","description":"\u003cp\u003eExtremely rare, possibly unrecorded variant edition of this writing manual for secretaries, claiming to present new examples of cursive script by the Roman calligrapher Sempronio Lancione. This was the earliest of four manuals of cursive script published by Lancione between 1601 and 1613 (see A.S. Osley, Luminario: An Introduction to the Italian Writing-Books of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Leiden, Brill, 1972), p. 161). The title-page advertises  the invention of twenty-two rules with their signs (images), so that one can quickly acquire this noble art without the presence of a teacher.  A second prefatory leaf claims that  the elements of the system of writing, designed for the most accurate use by secretaries, and others, has been derived from the rules of the art of writing and from mathematics.  (Lancione, who also published works of philosophy, was trained in mathematics and geometry: in 1629 he published a treatise on spheres with a view to achieving a theory of the tides.) There is also a plate with examples of exercises for copying   single letters, ligatures, nonsensical strings of letters and calligraphic devices   in order to  strengthen the hand.  There are further entire alphabets and numerous examples of secretarial letters, often signed by Lancione or with one of his monikers,  Il Romano  or  Romanus,  and from locations including Venice, Rome and Verona.  \u003cbr\u003e\n  This and other works of Lancione were often reprinted. For instance, these plates appear eccentrically renumbered in a later compilation of engraved writing samples by Lancione and several other masters   entitled Parnaso de  piu eccelsi scrittori de  nostri tempi   libri quattro, issued later in the century in Venice by Marco Sadeler  (David P. Becker, The Practice of Letters: The Hofer Collection of Writing Manuals 1514-1800, 61). It would appear that our copy is a similarly  eccentrically renumbered  variant: the plates have a different numeration from other copies appearing under the same title, ours being numbered 52-93 (misnumbered, omitting number 82) rather than the usual 1-40. This could imply that our edition was issued as a  second part  in continuation of the former, which also apparently contains six pages of introductory and dedicatory letterpress, dated 1601 and signed from Verona, which are absent here. Whether there was enough difference between the contents of the two variants to constitute a separate work is unclear; Osley comments simply that  plates vary  (op. cit). Bonacini, meanwhile, notes a copy with Tummelmans  frontispiece and 73 plates, irregularly numbered ( numerate irregolarmente ) (1005), which still does not wholly explain the numeration of the plates in our copy; Bonacini called the edition with plates numbered 1-40  rarissimo  (1006; Claudio Bonacini, Bibliografia delle arti scrittorie e della calligrafia (Firenze, 1953), pp. 187-188).\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"LANCIONE, Sempronio.","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":57868713754959,"sku":"L4545","price":5750.0,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/1016\/2425\/0703\/files\/Lancione-L4545-1.jpg?v=1781793381","url":"https:\/\/sokol-books-ltd.myshopify.com\/products\/lancione-sempronio","provider":"Sokol Books Ltd","version":"1.0","type":"link"}