CLAVIUS, Christophorus (1537-1612). In Sphaeram Ioannis de Sacro Bosco commentarius . Rome: Victorius Helianus, 1570. 4° (209 x 150mm). Woodcut diagrams, initials and printer's device at end. (Some spotting and staining, occasional browning, clean repair tear to Nnn1.) Contemporary limp vellum (worn). Provenance : early ink diagrams on endpapers.
CLAVIUS, Christophorus (1537-1612). In Sphaeram Ioannis de Sacro Bosco commentarius . Rome: Victorius Helianus, 1570. 4° (209 x 150mm). Woodcut diagrams, initials and printer's device at end. (Some spotting and staining, occasional browning, clean repair tear to Nnn1.) Contemporary limp vellum (worn). Provenance : early ink diagrams on endpapers. FIRST EDITION of Clavius's anti-Copernican work, accusing him not only of having presented a physically absurd doctrine but of also contradicting numerous scriptural passages. Nevertheless, Clavius subsequently became firm friends with Gaileo. A year before his death, in a report of April 1611 to Cardinal Bellarmine, Clavius and his colleagues confirmed Galileo's discoveries published in the Sidereus nuncius (1610), though they did not confirm Galileo's theory. DSB III, p. 311; Houzeau & Lancaster I, 2678: 'excessivement rare'.
CLAVIUS, Christophorus (1537-1612). In Sphaeram Ioannis de Sacro Bosco commentarius . Rome: Victorius Helianus, 1570. 4° (209 x 150mm). Woodcut diagrams, initials and printer's device at end. (Some spotting and staining, occasional browning, clean repair tear to Nnn1.) Contemporary limp vellum (worn). Provenance : early ink diagrams on endpapers.
CLAVIUS, Christophorus (1537-1612). In Sphaeram Ioannis de Sacro Bosco commentarius . Rome: Victorius Helianus, 1570. 4° (209 x 150mm). Woodcut diagrams, initials and printer's device at end. (Some spotting and staining, occasional browning, clean repair tear to Nnn1.) Contemporary limp vellum (worn). Provenance : early ink diagrams on endpapers. FIRST EDITION of Clavius's anti-Copernican work, accusing him not only of having presented a physically absurd doctrine but of also contradicting numerous scriptural passages. Nevertheless, Clavius subsequently became firm friends with Gaileo. A year before his death, in a report of April 1611 to Cardinal Bellarmine, Clavius and his colleagues confirmed Galileo's discoveries published in the Sidereus nuncius (1610), though they did not confirm Galileo's theory. DSB III, p. 311; Houzeau & Lancaster I, 2678: 'excessivement rare'.
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