CORROZET (GILLES), bookseller at Paris from 1538 to 1568.—One mark, representing, by way of allusion to the name of its owner, a rose upon a heart ('cor'), and with 'Gilles Corrozet' at the foot (Silvestre, no. 145). This mark, which I have seen on a book of 1539,[456] was undoubtedly the first that Corrozet used. It descended to his heirs, and his grandson Jean was still using it a century later, on the 'Trésor des histoires de France,' the work of another Gilles Corrozet, which Jean reprinted several times between 1622 and 1644. Jean simply removed from the mark his grandfather's Christian name, regardless of the lack of symmetry in the engraving caused by this subtraction. So that here was an engraving that was in use more than a hundred years; it is an interesting example of the durability of these woodcuts.
COTEREAU or COTTEREAU (RICHARD), bookseller at Chartres;—(PHILIPPE), bookseller at Blois.
DAVID (MATHIEU), printer-bookseller at Paris from 1554 to 1566. Three marks (Silvestre, nos. 227, 394, and 759). They represent a warrior bearing on his shoulders a woman plunging a sword in his throat. One of the marks has the word 'odiosa' in the border on one side, and 'veritas' on the other. Another is printed in an octavo volume of 1539 (Bibliothèque Nationale), Ravisius Textor's 'Epistolæ a mendis repurgata.'