A Noble Fragment: A Leaf from The Gutenberg Bible | 1450 - 1455, a fine leaf from the first printed Western book.
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'The chance to own a complete Gutenberg Bible is beyond legendary—no complete copies have surfaced since 1987, and all known examples now rest with museums and institutions. For the collector, these leaves (called Noble Fragments by the 1920s dealer Gabriel Wells) are as close as one will ever come to owning the world’s first printed Western book. This is potentially one of the rarest items I will ever encounter. A must for any collection that wants to be considered truly serious.' Oliver Bayliss (Owner & Founder of Bayliss Rare Books)
A fine leaf from the Gutenberg Bible, the first Western book printed with moveable type, being the end of Chapter 45 through the beginning of Chapter 48 of Isaiah.
The best example on the market and the best a collector could hope for. Finely framed to the highest museum grade standard.
Description and Condition:
Royal folio (390 x 285 mm). Single leaf (fol. 63) from vol.2, containing Isaiah 45:6-48:6. 42 lines, double column. Gothic type 1:140. 2-line Lombard initials supplied in blue and red, headlines and chapter numbers in alternating red and blue letters, capital strokes in red. Tipped-in to: A Noble Fragment: Being a leaf of the Gutenberg Bible, with a bibliographical essay by A. Edward Newton. New York: Gabriel Wells, 1921. Dark blue morocco gilt, by Stikeman and Co. (some spotting and light wear); original cardboard slipcase (defective). BMC I, 17 (IC.55); BSB-Ink. B-408; Chalmers Disbound and Dispersed 18; CIBN B-361; DeRicci/Mayence 53 (=78); GW 4201; Hain *3031; Needham P18; Norman, pp.253-258; Pr 56; Goff B-526.
Provenance:
Maria Elisabeth Augusta von Sulzbach (1721-1794), wife of Carl Theodore, Electoral Prince of the Palatinate, subsequently Electoral Prince of Bavaria; Mannheim, Hofbibliothek; Munich, Royal Library (their duplicate sale, 1832, sold for 350 guilders); Robert Curzon, Baron Zouche (1810-1873, and by descent until sold); Sotheby's 9 November 1920, lot 70, to Joseph Sabin; sold by him to; Gabriel Wells, who broke up the copy, dispersing it in single leaves, many of them accompanied by A. Edward Newton's essay, as here, and in larger fragments.