[107] Essai sur l’origine de la gravure, &c. tom. i. p. 260.
[108] Id. p. 261.
[109] Dict. de monogrammes, &c. tom. i. pp. 418, 499.
[110] Enciclop. metod. par ii. vol. vii. p. 16.
[111] Enciclop. metod. par. i. vol. x. p. 467.
[112] All the above prints are in the author’s possession, except No. 7, and his copy of No. 5 has not the tablets with the name, &c.
[113] Edit. Javigny, iv. 559.
[114] This edition is given on the authority of Peignot, p. 62, but has not been seen by the author of this work. In the year 1547, there were three editions, and it is not improbable that, by the transposition of the two last figures, one of these might have been intended.
[115] Foppen’s Biblioth. Belgica, i. 363.
[116] That of 1557 has a frontispiece with Death pointing to his hour-glass when addressing a German soldier.