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BOUHÉREAU ( Élie ). Traité d'origéne contre Celse. Ou défence de la Religion Chrétienne contre les a

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:150.00 - 200.00 EUR
BOUHÉREAU ( Élie ). Traité d'origéne contre Celse. Ou défence de la Religion Chrétienne contre les a

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
BOUHÉREAU ( Élie ). Traité d'origéne contre Celse. Ou défence de la Religion Chrétienne contre les accusations des Païens. Traduit du grec par Elie Bouhéreau. Amsterdam, chez Henry Desbordes, marchand libraire, dans le Kalver-straat, 1700FIRST EDITION IN FRENCH, with an engraved frontispiece, pp (30), 480, (4, additional notes and errata), complete with the preface and the two final leaves, 4to, contemporary calf, gilt spine, with label, gilt, neatly repaired retaining original endpapers and flyleaves, very slight worming at beginning affecting the blank margin only of the frontispiece, the title and the first few leaves, otherwise a very good copy with the 18C armorial bookplate of Charles Grave Hudson, a director of the South Sea Company, of Wanlip Hall, Leicestershire. The only substantial published work by Élie Bouhéreau, the first public librarian in Ireland. Bouhéreau (1642?-1719) a learned Huguenot physician who fled to England in 1685 on the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, was a notable Huguenot scholar, but this is his only substantial work : his only other published work is an early pamphlet, Lettre at Mademoiselle D.B., sur le choix d’un médecin (1674 ); and he also contributed to an edition of the Bible in 1714. With the accession of William III he was appointed secretary first to Thomas Cox, envoy to the Swiss Cantons, and then in Piedmont to Henri de Massue de Ruvigny, Deputy-general of the Huguenots, and subsequently Earl of Galway. Galway was Lord Justice of Ireland in 1697-1701, and Bouhéreau probably first came to Ireland in his train. While in Dublin he came to the notice of Narcissus Marsh, the protestant primate, who was then campaigning for the establishment of a public library in Dublin : Marsh persuaded Bouhéreau to give his own library (valued at £500-600) on condition that he be appointed stipendiary library keeper. The library was established by Royal Warrant in 1701 and by Act of Parliament in 1707 ; Bouhéreau occupied the post until his death in May 1719, latterly with the assistance of his son John. This translation of Origen’s Contra Celsum (a reply to the pagan Celsus’s attack on Christianity) was begun as early as 1669, when Bouhéreau’s friend Valentin Conrart, one of the founders of the Académie Française, persuaded him to direct his studies in a definite course. It was still not finished in 1685, when the translator submitted the MS to Friedrich Spanheim, and the final publication was delayed until early 1700, when Bouhéreau was established at Dublin : the dedication to Galway in the present copy has ‘A Dublin, le [blank]’, but the copy at Marsh’s library is apparently dated 1 January (see White p. 139). Brunet IV 229 notes that ‘dans beaucoup d’exemplaires on a omis la préface, les errata, et l’index des notes’ : this copy has both the preface and the two leaves at the end. They are also present (oddly enough, in duplicate) in the copy Bouhéreau gave to Spanheim, now in the British Library; but the NUC record does not list them and Brunet seems to be accurate (as usual) in his estimate - a quick check of several known copies reveals almost none with these two final leaves. For an account of Bouhéreau, see Newport J.D. White, ‘Elias Bouhéreau of La Rochelle, first public librarian in Ireland’, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 27, section C (1908-9), pp. 126-58. NUC records only three copies: OCH, PPL, ICU. Not included in Sweeney, Ireland and the Printed Word.CLASSICS; AMSTERDAM PRINTED; RELIGION; IRELAND; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;