7. Hommius, Festus. LXX. | DISPVTATIO-|NES THEOLOGICÆ; | adversus | PONTIFICIOS: | Quibus omnes inter Evangelicos & | Pontificios Controversiæ continentur, & | excutiuntur: In gratiam SS. Theologiæ Stu-|diosorum in Academiâ Leydensi pri-|vatim institutæ, in | Collegio Anti=Bellarminiano, | PRÆSIDE | FESTO HOMMIO, | Eccl. Lugdun. Pastore. | Editio secunda; adjectionibus in | margine locupletior. | [woodcuts.]
Impr. 104: 1630: (eights) 16o: pp. [16] + 428 + [4]: p. 11 beg. Mosen quidem, 111 stitutus est: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) the author’s dedication to Princes Maurice of Orange and Louis of Nassau, dated Leiden, 24 Aug. 1614: (9–10) “Lectori Benevolo ...”: (11–12) two complimentary poems: (13–16) “Index Disputationum”: 1–428, the work: (1–4) “Leges Collegii hujus Anti-Bellarminiani”, with the names of the students. All in Latin: every printed page and margin are within bounding lines.
The first edition was issued at Leiden in 1614: see 1639 H.
8. Oxford, University. [woodcut] | BRITANNIAE | NATALIS. | [device.]
Impr. 73a: 1630: sm. 4o: pp. [4] + 78: p. 11 beg. Crescito pacifici: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication to King Charles by the University of Oxford: (4), 1–78, the poems.
148 poems (4 Greek, 3 French, the rest Latin) addressed to the King by members of the University of Oxford on the birth of Charles ii on 29 May 1630: a chronogram is on p. 43.
9. Pemble, William. A BRIEFE IN-|TRODVCTION | TO GEOGRAPHY | CONTAINING A | DESCRIPTION OF THE GROVNDS, AND GENERALL | PART THEREOF, VERY NE-|cessary for young students in | that science. | WRITTEN BY THAT LEARNED | man, Mr William Pemble, Master | of Arts, of Magdalen Hall in Oxford. | [device.]
Impr. 84a: 1630: sm. 4o: pp. [4] + 64 + [2]: p. 12 beg. The third rule: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) “To the Reader” by the editor: 1–64 the work.
See Wood’s Ath. Oxon., ii. 331. Pemble died in 1623: but the treatise was reissued in 1669 (according to Cole in Bliss’s Wood’s Ath. Oxon.) and in 1685, both times at Oxford, as well as in the collected editions of Pemble’s works (3rd ed. 1635 &c.) at London. There are several woodcut diagrams, but the whole book is occupied solely with what the author calls the general part of Geography, that is to say with the “nature, qualities, measure, with other general properties of the earth”, and not with a description of separate countries.
10. ——. “A Sum of moral Philosophy. Oxon. 1630 qu[arto].”