Sanchez Thomas Petrocchius Ioannes Felix.Sanchez, R. P. Thomae,Tomás Sánchez, (S.I.); Francesco Niccólo Pezzana
Reference : 21958
Venetiis : Apud Nicolaum Pezzana, 1712; reliure demi veau dos lisse titré,posterieur .v. I ; Folio. (35 cm.) Contenu : tV. I : Complectitur hic tomus libros VI. - Posterior et accuratior editio, superiorum authoritate recognita, sparsisque hinc inde mendis, quae in prioribus exciderant, expurgata, uberrimis praeterea indicibus, altero disputationum, altero rerum scitu digniorum ditata. -Texte a deux col. -- -3 tomes reliés en un volume. ([80], 380 ; 308 ; 314 p.) 2° (34 cm).Titre impr. en noir et rouge avec marque d'impr. Texte impr. sur deux col.Vignette gravée sur bois au titre Les tomes 2 et 3 ont un simple faux-titre, avec pagin. propre. [T. 1.] Complectitur hic tomus libros VI, quorum I. agit de sponsalibus, II. de essentia, & consensu matrimonii in genere, III. de consensu clandestino, IV. de consensu coacto, V. de consensu conditionato, VI. de donationibus inter conjuges, sponsalitia largitate, & arrhis - [T. 2.] In quo etiam continetur liber septimus, qui de impedimentis matrimonii agit - T. 3.] In hoc tertio continentur, liber VIII qui est de dispensationibus, & IX qui de debito conjugali, ac demum X qui de divortio agit, cum indice rerum locupletissimo.
Complet des 3 parties,a grandes marges non rognées,texte bon,mouillures en marge des derniers feuillets,2e plat en partie defraichi.Three parts. Contains Elogia de P. Thomas Sanchez. 'Sanchez belongs to those who are much abused on account of their works. The chief work of Sanchez and the only one which he himself edited, is the 'Disputationes de sancti matrimonii sacramento'. The first edition is said to have appeared at Genoa in 1602; but this can have been only the first folio volume, for which permission to print was secured in 1599, as the two succeeding volumes contain both in their preface and the author's dedication the date 1603. The first complete edition was, according to Sommervogel, that of Madrid, 1605; later followed a series of editions printed at different places both before and after the author's death. The last edition seems to have been issued at Venice in 1754. The work had an extraordinary fate, inasmuch as some editions of the third volume have been placed on the Index of Prohibited Books, the grounds being not the doctrine of the author, but the perversion of the work and the suppression of what the author taught.