1536


I. HORÆ IN LAUDEM BEATISSIME VIRGINIS MARIÆ AD USUM ROTHOMAGENSEM. PARISIIS, AD INSIGNE VASIS EFFRACTI, 1536.

Small octavo, roman type, line engravings.[370]


II. LAZARII BAYFII ANNOTATIONES, etc.

Quarto, Robert Estienne, 1536.

Charles Estienne, brother of the printer, who seems to have been the editor of this book, informs us, in a brief preface, that the drawings scattered through it were taken by him from ancient monuments, and especially from marbles still extant at Rome. Several of the plates bear the Lorraine cross, Robert Estienne's mark, on the title-page; also the engraving on page 19 of 'De re navali' (repeated on page 168), and those on pages 4, 44 and 64 of 'De re vestiaria'. All the other engravings, although not signed, probably came from Tory's workshop. This book was reprinted by Robert Estienne, in 1549, in the same form. Here is a summarized list of the engravings contained in it: In the first part, 'De re navali,' are some twenty representations of antique vessels, biremes, triremes, etc., of which one is signed; in the second part, 'De re vestiaria,' three are signed: (1) a woman; (2) a man; (3) a soldier; in the third part, 'De vasculis,' are eight or ten representations of vases, etc., not signed.

All these engravings were reproduced on copper in a reprint of Baïf's work, published in Grævius's great collection called the 'Treasure of Antiquities,'[371] and, strangely enough, the artist has left the Lorraine cross on the first.[372] This mark appears again in column 1100 of the same volume, in an analogous work by another author. The same engraving was reëngraved on copper, with the cross, for the edition of Grævius's 'Thesaurus,' published at Venice in 1732, after the edition of Utrecht. This later edition was like the earlier one, and the engraving in question appears in the same volume and same column. So that we have an engraving on copper, with the Lorraine cross, executed in the eighteenth century!