first edition
1585 · Paris
by Persius & Juvenal; Pierre Pithou, ed.
Paris: Mamert Pattison, at the press of Robert Estienne, 1585. Very Good. Octavo (17 cm); [10], 302, [10] pages. Estienne device on title page. Foliated woodcut initial and ornamental headpiece at beginning. In c17 polished calf, double-ruled in gilt on boards; five raised bands on spine, with gilt floral tools in the compartments. All edges gilt. A fine copy with some wear to corners and joins of binding; a few scattered underscorings and marginalia in an early hand. References: Schreiber, 258; Renouard, Estienne, 186:2; see also Gilbert Highet, Juvenal the Satirist, pages 207-208.
First appearance of Pierre Pithou's edition of Juvenal and Persius, based on the discovery of a 9th-century manuscript in the Benedictine abbey of Lorsch. The manuscript was turned up in the course of the Humanist program of hunting and recovering early monastic copies of classical texts, and it was awarded to Pithou (1539-1596) in his capacity as one of the ablest classicists of his time. In addition to the text of the poems, it contained the ancient scholia and glosses on the satirists, published in print here for the first time. The manuscript remains our oldest and best textural source for the Persius and Juvenal. It is kept at Montpellier, where it is known as "Codex Pithoeanus" after its first editor. (Inventory #: 6469)
First appearance of Pierre Pithou's edition of Juvenal and Persius, based on the discovery of a 9th-century manuscript in the Benedictine abbey of Lorsch. The manuscript was turned up in the course of the Humanist program of hunting and recovering early monastic copies of classical texts, and it was awarded to Pithou (1539-1596) in his capacity as one of the ablest classicists of his time. In addition to the text of the poems, it contained the ancient scholia and glosses on the satirists, published in print here for the first time. The manuscript remains our oldest and best textural source for the Persius and Juvenal. It is kept at Montpellier, where it is known as "Codex Pithoeanus" after its first editor. (Inventory #: 6469)