[135] The license had no sooner expired than the work was reprinted, as may be seen by a copy of an edition of 8 leaves, octavo, in gothic type, dated 1531, now in the Bibliothèque Nationale.
[136] See the description of these two opuscula in Part 2, § III, nos. [1] and [2].
[137] A much stranger omission is that of de la Barre's signature, which had to be added by hand to every copy, at the foot of the license.
[138] [The saint-augustin was a 13-point type, so called because it was used in 1467 to print St. Augustine's De Civitate Dei. The philosophie was 10-point.]
[139] See his little book entitled Les Trois Ilots de la Cité; octavo, 1860 (an extract from the Revue Archéologique).
[140] See Part 2, § III, no. [3].
[142] [The écu au soleil was a coin issued under Louis XI and Charles VIII, with a sun above the crown. The livre tournois was worth 20 sous.]
[144] Concerning the libraires jurés and non jurés, see Chevillier, Origine de l'imprimerie de Paris, part 4.