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[image courtesy of Sokol Books] |
I recently received a copy of a catalogue of incunabula offered by Sokol Books (
link to full PDF), in which no. 33 is described as having the bookplate of Hercules de Silva (not reproduced in the catalogue).
A couple of years ago I wrote
a long post about the library of Donato and Ecole de Silva, and so I suspected that the "bookplate" was in fact the ink-stamp discussed in that post.
An exchange of emails and a request for an image showed that the Sokol description was quite correct in describing it as a bookplate (shown above); and that it clearly refers to the same man who used the ink-stamp, as the heraldry is essentially the same:
Turning back to the reference works cited in the original post, including Bertarelli,
Gli ex libris italiani, I see that the bookplate is indeed described (no. 3):
I am dubious about the dates suggested by Bertarelli, however. The two ink-stamps are so similar that I would expect them to be close in date rather than "Circa 1715" (Donato) and "Circa 1785" (Ercole) as suggested. On the other hand, the ink-stamp and the bookplate of Ercole are so different from each other that I would expect them to be further apart in date than the "Circa 1785" that is suggested for both of them. I would have thought the bookplate to be 19th-century; Ercole would only have been about 19 years old in 1785, and I would guess it dates from somewhat closer to his death in 1840.
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