Author: Ian Maclean (University of Oxford / St Andrews)
Publisher: Brill, 2021
In Episodes in the Life of the Early Modern Learned Book, Ian Maclean investigates intellectual life through the prism of the history of publishing, academic institutions, journals, and the German book fairs whose evolution is mapped over the long seventeenth century. After a study of the activities of Italian book merchants up to 1621, the passage into print, both locally and internationally, of English and Italian medicine and ‘new’ science comes under scrutiny. The fate of humanist publishing is next illustrated in the figure of the Dutch merchant Andreas Frisius (1630–1675). The work ends with an analysis of the two monuments of the last phase of legal humanism: the Thesauruses of Otto (1725–44) and Gerard Meerman (1751–80).
Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Figures
Abbreviations
Introduction
The Evolution of the Frankfurt and Leipzig Book Fairs and their Catalogues, 1564–1700
Italy and the heyday of the Frankfurt Fair, c. 1580–1620
Publishers, Book Fairs, Academies, Journals: the Dissemination of English Medicine and Natural Philosophy in the Second Half of the Seventeenth Century
Publishing Italian Natural Philosophy and Medicine, 1661–1710
Andreas Fries (Frisius) of Amsterdam and the Search for a niche Market, 1664–75
The Thesauruses of Otto and Meerman as Publishing Enterprises: Legal Humanism in its Last Phase, 1725–1780
Bibliography of Secondary Sources
Index