Strassburg
Martin Flach (printer of Strassburg)
1493
f°
Although attributed to Albertus Magnus, the probable author is Richardus de Sancto Laurentio (Sack(Freiburg))
Albertus MagnusLiber aggregationis, seu Liber secretorum de virtutibus herbarum, lapidum et animalium quorundam. De mirabilibus mundi
Imprint:
[Strassburg; [Speyer
Printer of the Breviarium Ratisponense (Georgius de Spira?); Johann and Conrad Hist
about 1479-82]; about 1484]
4°
On the printer see Schanze. Formerly attributed to Johann and Conrad Hist
Secundo folio: [a2r] pe habuerit devincet omnes hostes, omnes causas
Alliaco, Petrus deQuaestiones super libros Sententiarum Petri Lombardi. Add: Recommendatio S. Scripturae; Principium in cursum Bibliae; Quaestio in suis vesperiis; Quaestio de resumpta
Imprint:
Strassburg
[Printer of the 1483 Jordanus de Quedlinburg (Georg Husner)]
15 Apr. 1490
f°
AvicennaCanon medicinae [Latin] (Lib. I-V) (Tr: Gerardus Cremonensis)
Imprint:
[Strassburg
The R-Printer (Adolf Rusch)
after Feb. 1473]
f°
Dated by CIBN. GW and Goff date before 1473, but this edition probably follows the Milan, Lavagnia edition of 12 Feb. 1473 (GW 3115). In five parts
Bertrandus de TurreSermones de tempore et de sanctis, una cum quadragesimali epistolari
Imprint:
[Strassburg
Printer of the 1483 Jordanus de Quedlinburg (Georg Husner)
about 1500]-1502
4°
In four parts, only the first one possibly printed before 1501: P. I (Sermones de tempore, pars hiemalis) undated, P. II (Pars aestivalis) printed 9 May 1501, P. III (Quadragesimale) 13 Oct.1501, P. IV (Sermones de sanctis) 29 Jan. 1502.; For reasons for thinking P. I may in fact be after 1500 see V. Scholderer in BSA 46 (1952) pp.179-85 (reprinted in Fifty essays (Amsterdam, 1966) pp.240-43
Caracciolus, RobertusSermones quadragesimales de poenitentia
Imprint:
[Strassburg
Printer of Henricus Ariminensis (Georg Reyser?); [Heinrich Eggestein?]
not after 1473]
f°
Printed in type (1:120G) ascribed to Georg Reyser by Ohly, and tentatively to Heinrich Eggestein by Needham, Christie's, Doheny 19. A copy in Colmar BM carries the MS date 1473