becoming the personal physician to the Duke of Ferrara, Alfonso I d'Este.
Giovanni Manardo died on March 7, 1536, in Ferrara, afflicted by gout and nephritis. He was buried in the cloister of San Paolo, with his tombstone eventually moved with several other well-known Ferrans to the university building of Palazzo Paradiso. His tombstone features verses by his friend, the Ferraran poet Giglio Gregorio Giraldi.
The first edition of Epistolarum appeared in 1521, but the book was expanded from 6 to 18 books for the Basel editions and to 20 for the 1540 posthumous edition. Along with a delightful collection of illustrated initials (see .gif above), our copy has a manuscript waste cover and is chock full of marginalia.
The initials depict all kinds of scenes, but many feature pastoral elements, death, and mischievous putti. The manuscript cover is written in a scholastic hand and is believed to be from The Life of Anthony (St. Anthony the Great). Although marginalia is one of my favorite finds in rare books, historic inks are notorious for how acidic they are.
So as fun, interesting, and informative as marginalia can be, it can be fairly destructive as well. The banner image above demonstrates how, over the centuries, inks can eat away at the paper fibers. Otherwise, this fantastic folio is in great shape and awaits its next reader.
Contact me to take a look at this book or any others from this or past newsletters: damien-ihrig@uiowa.edu or 319-335-9154.