Descripción
A MILESTONE IN THE TRANSLATION HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH NEW TESTAMENT He Kaine Diatheke. Novum Testamentum. Juxta exemplar Millianum. Oxford, Typis Joannis Baskerville, E Typographeo Clarendoniano, Sumptibus Academiae, 1763. FIRST EDITION (only 500 copies published). 2 vols in a very large 4to format with signatures in twos. Text not divided into verses but with verse-numbers given in the margin (Darlow & Moule, 4755); 415 pp. plus title-page, lacking the initial half-title; this copy was specially bound for William Newcome (1729-1800), Archbishop of Armagh, Primate of All Ireland, with interleaved blank sheets throughout and ten additional initial and final blanks in both volumes: Matthew and Luke, pp. 1-236, in Vol. I, and Paul and John, pp. 236-415, in Vol. II. Copiously annotated and underlined by the owner, who left his autograph on the top right corner of the t-p. The books are provided with plenty of philological observations and references to classical authors, both Greek and Latin, and comparisons with critical studies of the bible by other eminent scholars. Contemp. bindings, calf over gilt spine in compartments with red morocco label, vellum corners, marble paper over thick boards. Covers, joints and edges rubbed, 1st vol. s head of spine slightly damaged. Notwithstanding, an appealing binding. A clean, wide-margined and unique copy. This edition shows the Greek types designed by the celebrated printer John Baskerville (1706- 1775). It mostly reproduces the text edited by John Mills (1707), which is perhaps the most famous Greek Testament of the eighteenth century […] a reprint of Stephanus text of 1550, with a very few slight variations. (Darlow & Moule, 4725). The press made one purchase from Baskerville.Once the type arrived in 1761, the workmen were paid to set up and print two samples for a new Greek Testament, one in the new type and the other in the Large Greek . On the basis of this comparative specimens the Delegates agreed that a Greek Testament in Quarto and Octavo be printed on Baskerville s Letter . However, no more type was ever bought from Baskerville (Gadd (ed.)., The History of the Oxford University Press, I, p.222). The owner of this copy was a prestigious Englishman and cleric of the Church of Ireland: The Most Reverend William Newcome. A fine classical scholar, imbued with an excellent knowledge of Ancient Greek and Latin, Newcome is especially remembered for An attempt toward revising our English translation of the Greek Scriptures, and toward illustrating the sense by philological and explanatory notes (1796) (commonly known as Archbishop Newcome s new translation ). This is to be distinguished from the revised version of Thomas Belsham published by Unitarians after his death: The New Testament in an Improved Version Upon the Basis of Archbishop Newcome s New Translation (1808). Newcome worked at a revision of the whole English bible, of which An Attempt was the New Testament portion. In the preface to his work he declares: my original intention extended no further than to improve our authorised translation of the Greek scriptures; following the text of Griesbach s excellent edition […] I subjoined a comment to the text of such an important and difficult book. I therefore engaged in a second labour of selection and abridgment from a body of notes which I had formed, or compiled, many years ago, with occasional additions suggested by able commentators, or by my own study of the sacred writings. One can hence identify the present annotated copy as the result of his learned effort to provide the English reader with a more trustworthy translation of the Gospels, achieved through an expansive philological investigation and comparison of Ancient Greek and Latin sources. Darlow & Moule, 4755; Gaskell Add. 2. N° de ref. del artículo ABE-1528124785146
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