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Previews available in: Latin
Subjects
Criticism, interpretation, Future life, Eschatology, BiblePeople
Thomas BurnetShowing 1 featured edition. View all 1 editions?
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De statu mortuorum et resurgentium liber: accesserunt epistolæ duæ circa libellum de archæologiis philosophicis
1723, [publisher not identified]
in Latin
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Collation includes final blank leaf.
Apparently the third privately printed edition of De statu mortuorum, the first (not in ESTC 1990) being "a few copies printed for the use of [the author] and his friends" and the second (probably ESTC t139812, dated 1720) "25 copies handsomely printed in 4to" for Richard Mead, incorporating editorial blunders by Michael Mattaire (see Nichols, Literary anecdotes, v. 6, p. 221). "Mr. Wilkinson of Lincoln's Inn, who was executor to Dr. Burnet, lent Dr. Mead afterwards a corrected copy, of which Dr. Mead was at the expence of printing 50 copies, with a caution prefixed to those chosen few on whom the book was bestowed, not to suffer it to be translated, or reprinted, and published" (op. cit.). Both the 1720 and 1723 editions have this "Monitum" (p. [iii-iv]) and the printer's ornaments are those used by Mead's friend William Bowyer (the elder). The Wellcome copy of the present edition was presented by Mead to John Evelyn. On the other hand, Leslie Stephen, in his entry for Burnet in DNB, attributes publication of the 1723 De statu mortuorum to the efforts of Lord Macclesfield (Thomas Parker, 1st Earl). This attribution may be a simple error, but both Nichols and Stephen agree Parker was responsible for the private edition of Burnet's De fide et officiis Christianorum liber, 1722, and a copy of the latter at the British Library (695.h.34) shares binding tools with two copies of the present work (BL 678.e.15; Wellcome).
"Ad virum clarissimum A.B. circa nuper editum de Archæologiis philosophicis libellum, authoris epistolæ duæ" has a fly-title and separate pagination, but the register is continuous. Archæologiæ philosophicæ was first published in 1692. This is the first printing of the first letter.
ESTC n000350.
ESTC N350.
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