An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta
An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta
An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta
An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta
An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta
An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta
An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta
An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta
An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta
An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta
An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta
An utopian Ethiopia by Luis de Urreta

An utopian Ethiopia 1611

Luis de Urreta

InchiostroCartaPelle
21 ⨯ 15 cm
ConditionExcellent
Attualmente non disponibile tramite Gallerease

  • A proposito di opere d'arte
    Historia de la Sagrada Orden de Predicadores, en los remotos Reynos de la Etiopia.
    Valencia, Juan Chrysostomo Garriz, 1611. Small 4to (21 x 15 cm). With woodcut arms of the Dominican order on title-page, and a variant version on the last page, and 3 woodcuts in text (2 saints and the Cross). Further with 24 decorated woodcut initials in two series, including 11 repeats. Contemporary gold-tooled mottled calf, each board with the coat of arms of the French Seguier family, rebacked with original gold-tooled backstrip laid-down.

    First and only edition, in Spanish, of an early work on Ethiopia by the Spanish Dominican monk Luis de Urreta (ca. 1570-1636), who wrote two volumes glorifying his own order's accomplishments in Ethiopia while diminishing those of the Jesuits. In the present work, the second of the two, he deals specifically with the Dominican presence in Ethiopia and the history of the Ethiopian saints. Like the first work, the Historia ecclesiastica published in 1610, it is a late example of a stream of geographical fantasies where Ethiopia was presented as the wondrous utopian kingdom of Prester John, and Urreta makes the case for an ancient Dominican presence in the country, arguing that they should thus be given precedence over the Jesuits as Catholic missionaries in that country. With information on two Dominicans who entered Mecca around 1580.
    From the library of Pierre Seguier, Lord Chancellor of France from 1635 to 1672, best known for his appearance in The three musketeers, with his arms and monogram stamped in gold on the binding. And with an owner's inscription on title-page. With a faint water stain in the lower margin of four leaves in the introduction, a tiny corner torn from the title-page, otherwise in very good condition. Binding heavily restored, but with the gold-tooled coat of arms still very clear.
    Finger & Piccolino, p. 117; Palau 345993; cf. Gay, Bibl. de l'Afrique et l'Arabe 2690.
  • A proposito di opere artista
    Luis de Urreta (ca. 1570, Spagna - 1636) era un monaco domenicano spagnolo. Fu professore di teologia a Valencia e scrisse due volumi che glorificano le realizzazioni del proprio ordine in Etiopia mentre sminuiscono quelle dei Gesuiti, Historia ecclesiastica…de la Etiopia (1610) e Historia de la Sagrada Orden de Predicadores, en los remotos Reynos de la Etiopia (1611). Entrambi i volumi sono un tardo esempio di un flusso di fantasie geografiche in cui l'Etiopia è stata presentata come il meraviglioso regno utopico di Prete Gianni, e Urreta sostiene un'antica presenza domenicana nel paese, precedente a quella dei gesuiti nel paese. Riferisce l'esistenza in Etiopia di una copia del libro 'perduto' di Enoch, sostenendo di aver trovato il titolo in una lista fatta da due frati, Antonio Greco e Lorenzo Cremonese, per il bibliotecario della Biblioteca Vaticana, il cardinale Guglielmo Sirleto. Il secondo volume tratta specificamente della presenza domenicana in Etiopia e della storia dei santi etiopi.

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