Paris, Arthus Bertrand, 1810, , 2 tomes en 1 volume in-8 de (4), 449 et (1) pages, puis (4) et 482 pages, plein veau marbré de l'époque, dos lisse, Seconde édition, de la traduction française de Nicolas Jolyclerc, après une première parue en 1798. D'après la page de titre, cet ouvrage serait la "première interprétation française, calquée sur les éditions de Murray, de Person, de Wildenow ; augmentée et enrichie de notions élémentaires, de notes diverses, d'une concordance avec la méthode de Tournefort et les familles naturelles de Jussieu". Pourtant, dés 1787, Antoine Gouan avait publié une "Explication du système botanique du Chevalier von Linné pour servir d'introduction à l'étude de la botanique", et en 1794 à Montpellier, une "Nomenclature botanique" de Linné. Bon exemplaire portant plusieurs ex-libris manuscrits ou imprimés, et le cachet, annulé, de l'Institut Catholique de Paris. Couverture rigide
Reference : 62534
Bon 2 tomes en 1 volume in-8 de
Librairie Alain Brieux
Jean Bernard Gillot
48, rue Jacob
75006 Paris
France
331 42 60 21 98
Vente aux conditions habituelles de la Librairie
Paris Ronvaux 1798 in-8 demi-veau un volume, reliure d'époque demi-veau havane in-octavo (binding half calfskin in-octavo), RELIURE D'EPOQUE, dos long (spine without raised band) décoré or (gilt decoration), titre frappé or (gilt title), pièce de titre sur fond noir avec roulette or cernée d'un double filet "or" de part et d'autre du titre, roulette or cernée d'un double filet "or" de part et d'autre en place des nerfs et en tête et en pied, entre-nerfs à fers spéciaux "or" (baton de pâtre, panier, trompette, grand chapeau, et cabrette), avec légers manque de dorure, papier peigné marron aux plats (cover with painting paper), tête lisse (top edge smooth), toutes tranches lisses (all smooth edges), sans illustrations (no illustration), deux tableaux dépliants (méthode de Jussieu)dont un trés grand in-fine, [2]-789-[1] pages, An VI - (1798) A Paris, chez Ronvaux Editeur,
1ère Edition Française......Nicolas Jolyclerc (mort en 1817), ancien moine de la congrégation des bénédictins de Saint-Maur originaire de Lyon, se consacra à la botanique avec la sécularisation des couvents et obtint la chaire d'histoire naturelle de l'École centrale de l'Oise. En 1797, il donna une nouvelle édition des Éléments de Tournefort et, l'année suivante, les traductions françaises du Système sexuel et de la Cryptogamie de Linné. Quérard V, 319-320.....RARE.......en bon état (good condition). bon état
A Paris, chez Ronveaux, An VI - 1798, in-8, [6]-789-[1] pages, veau marbré Directoire, dos lisse orné de fers aux urnes, pièce de titre rouge, coupes et coiffes guillochées, Première édition de la traduction française de Nicolas Jolyclerc; "première interprétation française, calquée sur les éditions de Murray, de Person, de Wildenow; augmentée et enrichie de notions élémentaires, de notes diverses, d'une concordance avec la méthode de Tournefort et les familles naturelles de Jussieu". Nicolas Jolyclerc (mort en 1817), ancien moine de la congrégation des bénédictins de Saint-Maur originaire de Lyon, se consacra à la botanique avec la sécularisation des couvents et obtint la chaire d'histoire naturelle de l'École centrale de l'Oise. En 1797, il donna une nouvelle édition des Éléments de Tournefort et, l'année suivante, les traductions françaises du Système sexuel et de la Cryptogamie de Linné. Exemplaire en stricte reliure d'époque. Petits trous de vers sur le dos et sur le premier plat, légères galeries intérieures en pied du volume, sans atteinte au texte. Quérard V, 319-320. Couverture rigide
Bon [6]-789-[1] pages
P., Bertrand, 1810, 2 volumes in 8 reliés en demi-basane verte, dos ornés de filets dorés (reliure postérieue), (tache d'encre sans gravité sur la page de titre du tome 1), T.1 : (2), 449pp., T. 2 : (2), 482pp.
---- Deuxième édition REVUE et AUGMENTEE ---- "During his lifetime, Linnaeus exerted an influence in his fields -botany and natural history- that has had few parallels in the history of science. Driven by indomitable ambition and aided by an incredible capacity for work, he accomplished the tremendous task that he had set for himself in his youth : the establishment of new system for the three kingdoms of nature to facilitate the description of all known animals, plants and minerals... There was at that time an urgent need for a simple and easy-to-grasp system for the plant kingdom... Since the time of Cesalpino many botanists had tried to create a useful system ; and toward the eighteenth century some of these systems had begun to win considerable support, especially those of John Ray and Tournefort, based upon the appearance of the corolla. But none was sufficiently practical, and the various systems were reciprocally competitive, thus increasing the confusion. Only Linnaeus'system, based on sexuality, had the requisite of being generally adoptable... Around 1720 the sexuality of plants was still being disputed by many botanists. Linnaeus had already learned about it from his teacher Rothman... As a student he had pursued the subject through his own investigations and soon was convinced of its truth. In Praeludia sponsaliorum plantarum (1730), he announced that the stamens and pistils were the sexual organs of plants. At the same time he began to investigate whether the stamens and pistils could be used to construct a new botanical system. After a short period of doubt he was sure that they could and in Systema naturae he presented the sexual system in its definitive form... To be sure, the system was attacked ( in Germany by Siegesbeck and Heister, in Switzerland by Haller and in France where Thournefort's system had long been generally accepted). But acceptance of the sexual system could not be halted ; it gained footing almost everywhere, especially in England, beginning in the 1760's". (DSB VIII)**3329/CART7-3333/CART5
P., Ronvaux, 1798, un volume in 8 relié en pleine basane, dos orné de fers dorés (reliure de l'époque), (1 coin légèrement émoussé, petite piqure de vers à la partie inférieure d'un mors), (3), 789pp.
----- PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE ---- BON EXEMPLAIRE ---- "During his lifetime, Linnaeus exerted an influence in his fields -botany and natural history- that has had few parallels in the history of science. Driven by indomitable ambition and aided by an incredible capacity for work, he accomplished the tremendous task that he had set for himself in his youth : the establishment of new system for the three kingdoms of nature to facilitate the description of all known animals, plants and minerals... There was at that time an urgent need for a simple and easy-to-grasp system for the plant kingdom... Since the time of Cesalpino many botanists had tried to create a useful system ; and toward the eighteenth century some of these systems had begun to win considerable support, especially those of John Ray and Tournefort, based upon the appearance of the corolla. But none was sufficiently practical, and the various systems were reciprocally competitive, thus increasing the confusion. Only Linnaeus'system, based on sexuality, had the requisite of being generally adoptable... Around 1720 the sexuality of plants was still being disputed by many botanists. Linnaeus had already learned about it from his teacher Rothman... As a student he had pursued the subject through his own investigations and soon was convinced of its truth. In Praeludia sponsaliorum plantarum (1730), he announced that the stamens and pistils were the sexual organs of plants. At the same time he began to investigate whether the stamens and pistils could be used to construct a new botanical system. After a short period of doubt he was sure that they could and in Systema naturae he presented the sexual system in its definitive form... To be sure, the system was attacked ( in Germany by Siegesbeck and Heister, in Switzerland by Haller and in France where Thournefort's system had long been generally accepted). But acceptance of the sexual system could not be halted ; it gained footing almost everywhere, especially in England, beginning in the 1760's". (DSB VIII)**3327/A2-3328/CART.7
"1798. Paris chez Ronvaux an VI (1798) - Reliure d'époque 13 cm x 20 cm 789 pages - Texte de Carl von Linné - Reliure fatiguée dos à restaurer sinon bon état intérieur"