Bibliotheca Askeviana
The library of the physician Anthony Askew (1722–72) was outstanding in both printed books and manuscripts. He may have failed in his ambition to secure a complete collection of every printed edition of the Greek classics, but he did amass a classical library which remained unsurpassed until Spencer. Although he was later accused of plagiarism, virtually every edition of Aeschylus down to the 1850s cited 'Askew's collations'. He also secured Richard Mead's fine collection of Latin and Greek manuscripts, alongside other early classical codices from the Maffei library. The dispersal of Askew's collection in two sales, ten years apart, attracted international interest. Bidders at the 1775 book sale included George III, while the manuscript sale in 1785 led to acquisitions by the British Museum, the Bodleian and Cambridge University Library. Now reissued together, the sale catalogues have been annotated here by auction attendees who recorded prices and some purchaser details.
Product details
January 2014Paperback
9781108065849
212 pages
229 × 152 × 12 mm
0.32kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Part I. Bibliotheca Askeviana: Preface
- Conditions of sale
- First day's sale to twentieth day's sale
- Libri omissi
- Part II. Bibliotheca Askeviana Manuscripta: Preface
- Conditions of sale
- 1. Printed books with manuscript notes
- 2. Manuscripts, English, on paper
- 3. Manuscripts, English, on vellum
- 4. Manuscripts, Lat.
- 5. Manuscripts, Graec.
- 6. Beautiful Chinese, Persian and other manuscripts.