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Schulze, Sabine. Leselust: Niederländische Malerei von Rembrandt bis Vermeer. Frankfurt: Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, 1993. [Representations of readers and reading in seventeenth-century Dutch painting.]

Schürer, Norbert. “Four Catalogues of the Lowndes Circulating Library, 1755-66.” Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 101 (2007), 329-57.

Schürer, Norbert E. "Lennox and Smollett in the Literary Marketplace: Authorship and Readership after Fielding and Richardson." Dissertation at Duke U., 2001. Pp. 299. DAI A62/10, (April 2002), p. 3406.

Schwarcz, Lilia Moritz, with Paulo Cesar de Azevedo and Angela Marques da Costa. A Longa viagem da biblioteca dos reis: Do terremoto de Lisboa à independência do Brasil. São Paulo: Companhia das Lettras, 2002. Pp. 554; illus. (some in color); index. [History of national library of Brazil.]

Schwarz, Christa. Ex libris a Guilelmo L. B. de Humboldt legatis: Das Legat Wilhelm von Humboldts an die Königliche Bibliothek in Berlin. Paderborn: Schöningh, 1993. Pp. 80; illus.

Schwarzbach, Bertram Eugene. “En leurs propres mots: Les Lectures hebraïques de Voltaire.” Cahiers Voltaire, 8 (2009), 51-60.

Schwarzbach, Bertram Eugene. "How to Read in the Eighteenth Century . . . The Bible and Other Books." Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 308 (1993), 323-48.

Schwarzbach, Bertram Eugene. “Les Incunables hébraïques du cardinal Mazarin et de la bibliothèque Mazarine.” Bulletin du Bibliophile (2011), 276-303.

Schwarzbach, Bertram Eugene. “Quand Voltaire étalait ses connaissances rabbiniques et traduisait Maïmonide.” Cahiers Voltaire, 13 (2014), 135-54.

Schwedt, Georg. "Goethe und seine Bibliotheken." Pp. 41-53 in "Göthe ist schon mehrere Tage hier, warum weiss Gott und Göthe: Vortäge zur Ausstellung "Der gute Kopf leuchtet überall hervor": Goethe, Göttingen und die Wissenschaft. Paulinerkirche, Historisches Gebäude der Niedersächsischen Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Göttingen, 6. Juni - 3. September 1999. Edited by Elmar Mittler and Elke Purpus. Göttingen: Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek, 2000. Pp. vi + 295.

Schweighaeuser, Jean. Tableau littéraire de la France dans le XVIIIe siècle. Edited with a Preface [pp. 17-32] by Bertrand Hemmerdinger. Introduction by G. Dotoli. Fasano: Schena; Paris: Didier Erudition, 1998. Pp. 250 + [xv]; "Catalogue d'une partie des livres de la bibliothèque de feu M. Jean Schweighaeseur [1830]" in facs. [151-248]. [Rev. by Wallace Kirsop in Australian Journal of French Studies, 37 (2000), 435-38.]

Scott, Alison M. “’These Notions I imbibed from Writers’: The Reading Life of Mary Ann Wodrow Archbald (1762-1841).” Ph.D. dissertation, Boston U., 1995. DAI, 56A, no. 4 (Oct. 1995), 1404.

Scott-Warren, Jason. “Reading Graffiti in the Early Modern Book.” Huntington Library Quarterly, 73, no. 3 (2010), 363-81; illustrations. [On marginalia and owners’ marks in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century books.]

Seale, William. The Alexandria Library Company. Alexandria, VA: Alexandria Library Company (distributed through New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press), 2007. Pp. xiv + 146; bibliography; historical essay on the library (founded in 1794, pp. 1-106); illustration; lists of sources, founders, subscribers, and annual lectures. [Founded in 1794. Rev. by Paul S. Koda in Library Quarterly, 80 (2010), 119-20; (fav.) by Jeffrey H. Richards in Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 102 (2008), 264-65.]

Searby, Peter. A History of the University of Cambridge. Vol. 3: 1750-1870. Cambridge: U. of Cambridge, 1997. Pp. xviii + 797; illus. [Rev. by W. C. Lubenow in Journal of British Studies, 39 (2000), 247-62. Part of a four-volume history that began publication in 1988.]

Sears, Albert C. "Male Novel Reading of the 1790s, Gothic Literature and Northanger Abbey." Persuasion, 21 (1999), 106-12.

Seichepine, François. “Des chanoines et des livres: L’enrichissement et la gestion de la bibliothèque capitulaire de l’Insigne collégiale Notre Dame de Beaune au cours du XVIIIe siècle.” Revue française d’histoire du livre, 130 (2009), 97-150.

Seidl, Edith. “Sammeln als existenzielle Notwendigkeit.” Archiv für Geschichte des Buchwesens, 67 (2012), 145-68. [On the collecting practices and library of Georg Wilhelm Zapf (1747-1810), of Augsburg, who bought much on the history of printing.]

Seifert, Siegfried. “’. . . wie in der Gegenwart eines großen Capitals’: Die Göttinger Universitätbibliothek und der Ereignisraum Weimar-Jena um 1800” Bibliothekarische Wirkungen am Beispiel Johann Wolfgang Goethes.” Bibliothek und Wissenschaft, 41 (2008), 103-30. [In an issue entitled “Forschungsbibliothek im Aufbruch.”]

Sekulski, Jerzy. "Polonika w ksiegozbiorze Jana Daniela Hoffmanna." Rocznik Elblaski, 12 (1991), 85-114; illus.

Selva, M. C. "La Biblioteca Universitaria di Pavia nella seconda metà del Settecento: Acquisizioni e cataloghi." Bolletino della Società Pavese di Storia Patria, 46 (1994), 195-228.

Seminario de Historia de la Educación en México. Historia de la lectura en México. 2nd ed. Mexico, DF: Colegio de México, Centro de Estudios Históricos, 1997. [First edition, 1988 (pp. 383), was reviewed in English within Pedagogica Historica, 27 (1991), 122-24 by Antonio Viñao Frago, noting nine conference papers arranged chronologically on the history of reading in Mexico]

Senior, Nancy. "A Controversy in Eighteenth-Century France: The Teaching of Reading." Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 296 (1992), 181-205; bibliography [202-05].

Senior, Nancy. "Un Nouveau jour brille sur l'horizon: Le temps dans la pédagogie de la Révolution." Lumen, 18 (1999), 119-34.

Senior, Nancy. "Spelling Reform and the Revolution." Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 314 (1993), 275ff.

Senior, Nancy. "The Teaching of Reading during the Revolution." Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 302 (1992), 379-407; bibliography [405-07]; 7 plates.

Sermain, Jean-Paul. “Les Contes de fées du XVIIe siècle: Lecture en amont ou en aval?” Pp. 105-17 of La Littérature, le XVIIe siècle et nous: Dialogue transatlantique. Edited by Hélène Merlin-Kajman. Paris: Sorbonne Nouvelle, 2008. Pp. 354.

Serrai, Alfredo. Breve storia delle biblioteche in Italia. (Il sapere del libro.) Milan: Sylvestre Bonnard, 2006. Pp. 150; illustrations. [Rev. (mixed) by Neil Harris in Library, 7th series, 8 (2007), 465-66; by Paolo Traniello in Bibliotheca, 6, no. 1 (2007), 223-27.]

Serrai, Alfredo. Domenico Passionei e la sua biblioteca. (Biblioteche private.) Milan: Sylvestre Bonnard, 2004. Pp. 702; illus. (some in color). [On Passionei (1682-1761), diplomat, scholar, and librarian; and on his books, now at the Angelica Library.]

Serrai, Alfredo. "Due utopie bibliografiche: Dalla 'rivoluzionaria' di Louis Sébastien Mercier alla 'democratica' di Louis-Aimé Martin." Accademie e biblioteche d'Italia, 65, no. 4 (1997), 17-30.

Serrai, Alfredo. "Francesco Antonio Zaccaria e Girolamo Tiraboschi sui due versanti della bibliografia: Dalla storia letteraria alla storia della letteratura." Il bibliotecario, 13, no. 2 (1996), 5-200.

Serrai, Alfredo. “Iconografia di Storia delle Biblioteche: Dalla invenzione della stampa all’Illuminismo.” Il Bibliotecario, 3rd series, 2011, no. 3 (September-December 2011), 15-19.

Serrai, Alfredo, and Fiammetta Sabba. Profilo di storia della bibliografia. (L'ordine dei libri.) Milan: Sylvestre Bonnard, 2005. Pp. 374; illustrations; index. [An "epitome" synthesizing information and ideas in Serrai's eleven volumes on bibliography and intellectual history, beginning with Bibliografia e cabala (1988) and concluding with Indici dei volumi I-X (2001). Rev. (briefly) by Neil Harris in Library, 7th series, 7 (2006), 223; (favorably) by Angela Nuovo in Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 101 (2007), 249-52.]

Seth, Catriona. “The Circulating Library.” L’esprit créateur, 43, no. 4 (winter 2003), 73-82.

Seymour, Terry L. Boswell’s Books: Four Generations of Collecting and Collectors. Preface by James J. Caudle. New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press, 2015. Pp. c. 400; illustrations; 3 indices: provenance, title, and booksellers & printers. [With 4500 titles owned by Boswell or members of his family. Seymour draws on family inventories and four auction sales, as well as the Boswell papers and records by auction houses and booksellers over the centuries. A number of booklists are transcribed (including those by Boswell himself and his wife).]

Sgarbossa, Rino (ed.), Federica Benedetti, and others. La Biblioteca di S. Francesco della Vigna e i suoi fondi antichi, Venezia, Biblioteca S. Francesco della Vigna, 18 marzo 2008. Venice: Regione del Veneto, 2009. Pp. 171; catalogue; illustrations. [The book begins with historical accounts of the library by Elena Boaga and the editor; there follow several essays, including Federica Benedetti’s “I fondi antichi, recentemente acquisiti, conservati presso la Biblioteca di S. Francesco . . . con uno sguardo particolare al fondo della Biblioteca del Santissimo Redentore di Verona (25-53). A catalogue, by Benedetti, occupies most of the volume (75-171).]

Sgard, Jean. “Françoise de Graffigny lectrice de Prévost.” Travaux de Littérature, 9 (1996), 127-35.

Shapira, Yael, and Miranda M. Yaggi. “Introduction. Notes on a Margin: British Women Writers and Acts of Annotation.” Partial Answers, 8, no. 2 (2010), 229-34.

Sharpe, Kevin. Reading Revolutions: The Politics of Reading in Early Modern England. New Haven, CT: Yale U. Press, 2000. Pp. xiv + 358; 11 illustrations; index. [A sometimes self-reflexive and often theoretical discussion of reading and book history anchored to the 54-volume commonplace book of Sir William Drake (1606-1669). Rev. by Michael G. Brennan in Notes and Queries, n.s. 49 (2002), 293-94; by Cyndia Susan Clegg in Renaissance Quarterly, 54 (2001), 233-38; by James Egan in Analytical and Enumerative Bibliography, 12 (2001), 61-64; (with another book) by C. Herrup in Shakespeare Studies, 31 (2003), 288-95; by Mary Ellen Lamb in Seventeenth-Century News, 59 (2001), 71-74; by David Loewenstein in Modern Language Review, 97 (2002), 383-85; (fav., with reservations) by David Norbrook in TLS (July 28, 2000), 22; by W. Brown Patterson in Sewanee Review, 109 (2001), xl-xlviii; by Genelle Gertz-Robinson in SHARP News, 10, no. 2 (2001), 14.]

Sharpe, Kevin, and Steven N. Zwicker (eds.). Reading, Society and Politics in Early Modern England. Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, 2003. Pp. ix + 363; illus.; index. [Papers from a 2003 conference at the Huntington Library. The editors' introduction offers a good survey of scholarship. The volume's 11 essays include contributions by Sharpe ("Reading Revelations: Prophecy, Hermeneutics and Politics in Early Modern England"), Seth Lerer ("Errata: Print, Politics, and Poetry in Early Modern England"), Richard Wendorf ("Off with their Heads: Abandoning the Capital in Eighteenth-Century London"), Heidi Brayman Hackel ("Boasting of Silence: Women Readers and the Patriarchal State"), Joad Raymond ("Irrational, Impractical and Unprofitable: Reading the News in Seventeenth-Century Britain"), Adrian Johns ("Reading and Experiment in the Early Royal Society"), and Joseph Loewenstein ("Martial, Jonson, and the Assertion of Plagiarism"). Rev. by Peter Clark in Albion, 36 (2004), 500-02; (fav.) by Andrew Hadfield in TLS (February 20, 2004), 26; by Anne Henry in SHARP News, 13, no. 2 (Spring 2004), 8-9; by Jeffrey Johnson in Seventeenth-Century News, 62 (2004), 57-62; by Judith Tyner in Imago Mundi, 57 (2005), 94.]

Sharpe, Richard. “Selling Books from the Sheldonian Theatre 1677-1720.” Library, 11, no. 3 (2010), 275-320.

Sharpe, Richard. "Thomas Tanner (1674-1735), the 1697 Catalogue, and Bibliotheca Britannica." Library, 7th series, 6 (2005), 381-421.

Shattock, Roger. Forbidden Knowledge: From Prometheus to Pornography. New York: St. Martin's, 1996.

Shaw, David J. (ed.). Books and Their Owners: Provenance Information and the European Cultural Heritage. (CERL Papers, 5.) London: Consortium of European Research Libraries, 2005. Pp. xiv + 104. [Papers presented at the CERL conference in Edinburgh, 12 November 2004, including David Pearson's "Provenance and Rare Book Cataloging: Its Importance and its Challenges"; James Knowles's "Towards a National Provenance Project?: The Database of Book Owners and Collectors in Early Modern Scotland"; Marianna Czapnik's "Provenance Research as a Method for the Reconstruction of Historical Collections"; Marina Venier's "The Computerised Archive of Owners in the Older Publications Database of SBN: The Experience of the National Central Library of Rome"; Jürgen Weber's "Provenance Finder--Preparing a Search Engine for the Retrieval of Provenance Data."]

Shaw, David J. (ed.). Imprints and Owners: Recording the Cultural Geography of Europe: Papers Presented on 10 November 2006 at the CERL Seminar hosted by the National Széchényi Library, Budapest. (CERL Papers, 7.) London: Consortium of European Research Libraries [CERL], 2007. Pp. 84. [Includes Tony Curwen and Gunilla Jonsson’s “Provenance and the Itinerary of the Book: Recording Provenance Data in On-Line Catalgues. Rev. by Paolo Pedretti in L’Almanacco bibliografico, no. 12 (December 2009), 29.]

Shaw, David J.(ed.). Linking the World of Script and Print: Catalogues of European Manuscripts and Early Printed Books. Papers Presented on 7 November 2008 at the CERL Seminar Hosted by the Bibliotheque nationale de France, Paris, and on 18 June 2009 at the CERL Seminar hosted by the Academic Library of Tallinn University. London: Consortium of European Research Libraries, 2009. Pp. 77; illustrations. [Includes four papers in English and two in French. Of greatest relevance are Otfried Czaika’s “Reading Melanchthon in Sixteenth and Seventeenth-Century Sweden”; Helle Maaslieb’s “Digitisation of the Old Book Collection at the Archival Library on the Website of the Estonian Literary Museum”; and Larisa Petina’s “Early-Printed Russian Books in Estonian Libraries.”]

Shaw, John T. “The Origins of a State Library: New Jersey, 1704-1824.” Information & Culture: A Journal of History [formerly entitled Libraries & the Cultural Record], 48 (2013), 8-25. [Prior to the establishment of an official New Jersey state library in 1796, there was, from 1704 on, a reference collection serving the general assembly, described here by Shaw.]

Shelford, April G. Transforming the Republic of Letters: Pierre-Daniel Huet and European Intellectual Life, 1650-1720. Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 2007. Pp. 264; bibliography [239-56]; index. [Rev. by Robert A. Schneider in Intellectual History Review, 20 (2010), 292-95.]

Sher, Richard B. “Transatlantic Books and Literary Culture.” Pp. 10-27 in Transatlantic Literary Studies, 1660-1830. Edited by Eve Tavor Bannet and Susan Manning. Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, 2012. Pp. xiii + 281.

Sherbo, Arthur. "Another of Alexander Pope's Books." Notes and Queries, n.s. 51 (2004), 400.

Sherbo, Arthur. "Bibliotheca Boswelliana, the Sale Catalogue of the Library of James Boswell, the Younger." Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 97 (2003), 367-78.

Sherbo, Arthur. The Birth of Shakespeare Studies: Commentators from Rowe (1709) to Boswell-Malone (1821). East Lansing, MI: Colleagues Press, 1987. Pp. xvi + 203.

Sherbo, Arthur. “Dean thomas Gaisford’s Copy of Robert Dodsley’s Collection of Poems (1758).” Modern Philology, 86 (1988), 53-55.

Sherbo, Arthur. “The Earliest (?) Critic of the Ireland Shakespeare Forgeries.” Notes and Queries, 35 [233] (1988), 498-500.

Sherbo, Arthur. "From the 1818 Sale Catalogue of the Greater Portion of the Library of the Late Edmond Malone, Esq." Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 97 (2003), 89-91.

Sherbo, Arthur. "From the Sale Catalogue of the Library of James Boswell, the Younger (1778-1822): Did Boswell Play the Pianoforte?" Notes and Queries, n.s. 51 (2004), 60-63.

Sherbo, Arthur. "From the Sale Catalogues of the Libraries of Dr. Richard Farmer, George Steevens, and Isaac Reed." Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 96 (2002), 381-403.

Sherbo, Arthur. Richard Farmer, Master of Emmanuel College, Cambridge: A Forgotten Shakespearean. Newark: U. of Delaware Press, 1992. Pp. 223

Sherbo, Arthur. “The Sale Catalogue of the Library of Samuel Rogers [1763-1855].” Notes and Queries, n.s. 52 [250] (2005),

Sherbo, Arthur. “The Sale Catalogue of Mrs. Piozzi’s Library: A Bibliographical Tool.” Notes and Queries, n.s. 54 [252] (2007), 497-504.

Sherbo, Arthur. "An Unnoted Book Society in Eighteenth-Century Derby." Notes and Queries, n.s. 44 [244] (1997), 212-13.

Sherman, Sandra. "'The Whole Art and Mystery of Cooking': What Cookbooks Taught Readers in the Eighteenth Century." Eighteenth-Century Life, 28, no. 1 (Winter 2004), 115-35.

Shevlin, Eleanor F. (ed.). The History of the Book in the West. Vol. 3: 1700-1800. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2010. Pp. lix + 529; illus.; index. [With a lengthy and valuable introduction and bibliography and containing 25 previously published essays of recognized importance, gathered into headings on “The Physical Book,” “Matters Authorial,” Trade Matters: Practice and Practitioners,” “Periodicals and Newspapers,” and “Reading and Related Matters.” Volume 2: 1455-1700, 568 pp., with 17 previously published essays, is edited by Ian Gadd and has similar divisions (Typography, Impact of Print, Practice, Selling, and Reading); Volume 3: 1800-1914, 554 pp., with 21 previously published essays, is edited by Stephen Colclough and AlexisWeedon (Weedon is the general editor and also the volume editor of Vol. 5); this 19C volume includes the categories “National Publishing Structures” and “International Trade,” before such groupings as “Publishing Practices” and “Reading.” Many essays in Vols. 2 and 4 (all published late spring 2010, each $250) are relevant to our period, as D. F. McKenzie’s “Printers of the Mind” in Vol. 2 and Scott Bennet’s “John Murray’s Family Library and the Cheapening of Books in the Early 19C Britain.” Rev. (favorably) by Margaret J. Ezell in Eighteenth-Century Studies, 44 (2011), 555-57; (favorably) by James E. May in Scriblerian, 44, no. 1 (Autumn 2011), 75-77.]

Shields, David S. Civil Tongues and Polite Letters in British America. Williamsburg, VA: Institute for Early American History and Culture (distributed Chapel Hill, NC: U. of North Carolina Press), 1997. Pp. xxiv + 348; illus; index.

Shipperbottom, Roy. "Books Enchained." Quadrat: A Periodical Bulletin of Research in Progress on the British Book Trade (Newcastle-upon-Tyne), 4 (October 1996), 3-5; 1 of illus. [On charges for chains for books at the Chetham Library in 1724, noting payments for chaining as late as 30 December 1742; also on presence of chains in church libraries as late as 1814.]

Sibylová, Michaela. “Mechnizmus získavania kníh do šl’achtický kniznic v 2. polovici 18. storocia” [The mechanism of book acquisition in aristocratic libraries in the second half of the eighteenth century]. Studia Bibliographica Posoniensia [Slovak e-journal from Bratislava], 2011 (2011), 86-98; bibliography; illustrations; summary in English. [Employing eight letters dated 1764-1765, held by the National Archives in Bratislava, of the Viennese bookseller Johann Paul Krauss (1700-1776) and Count Ridolf Pálfi (1719-1768, of Slovakia). The Count bought 47 titles from the bookseller in 1764-1766.]

Sibylová, Michaela. “Súcasny stav a vyskum slachtickych kniznic na Slovensku” [Current Status and Research of Aristocratic Libraries in Slovakia]. Studia Bibliograhica Posoniensia, 2009 (2009), 183-200; table; bibliography; summary in English. [Includes a survey of Aristocratic libraries in Slovakia with comparisons to Hungary’s. Sibylová notes that there were 45 aristocratic libraries in Slovakia at the end of the 19th century, only seven of which have been researched. A table lists aristocratic libraries from Slovakian territory, drawing on a 1886 governmental report (a table lists name, location, titles, volumes).]

Siegert, Reinhart. "Die Lesegewohnheiten des 'gemeinen Mannes' um 1800 und die Anfänge von Volksbibliotheken." Internationales Archiv für Sozialgeschichte der Deutschen Literatur, 8, Supplement (1997), 40-61. [On public libraries in Germany, 1780-1800.]

Siegert, Reinhart, with Peter Hoare and Peter Vodosek (eds.). Volksbildung durch Lesestoff im 18. und 19. Jahrhundert: Voraussetzungen, Medien, Topographie / Educating the People through Reading Material in the 18th and 19th Centuries: Principles, Media, Topography. (Philanthropismus und populäre Auklärung, 5; Presse und Geschichte, n.b., 48.) Bremen: Edition Lumière, 2012. Pp. 386. [On the materials (almanacs, books, newspapers, etc.) and reading practices instrumental in the “Popular Enlightenment, including essays by experts such as Holger Böning. Rev. (briefly, favorably) by John L. Flood in Library, 7th series, 14 (2013), 233; (favorably) by John L. Flood in Library and Information History, 29 (2013), 142-43.]

Siemers, Jeff. "From Generation to Generation: The Story of the Stockbridge Bible." Book Collector, 56 (2007), 49-66. [A two-volume folio printed by John Baskett of Oxford, 1716-1717; Siemers focuses on the copy's relation to its owners, the Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohican Indians, who keep it in a museum on their reservation in Wisconsin.]

Siess-Krzyszkowski, Stanislaw. “Pierwsza Biblioteka Ordynacka w Nieswiezu i jej znaki wlasnosciowe (na podstawie bazy danych: ‘Katalog starych druków Biblioteki Ordynacji Nieswieskiej Radziwillów. Druki polskie XVI-XVIII wieku’).” Rocznik Biblioteki Narodowej, 41 (2011), 135-60. [On books (their bookplates, bindings, etc.) of Karol Stanislaw Radzil and Michal Kazimierz Radziwill held by the Academy of Science Library and in the Radziwall Library in Nesvizh.”]

Silver, Joel. "Thomas Jefferson as a Book Collector." AB Bookman's Weekly, 100 (1997), 586-94.

Silver, Joel. "Malone and Kemble: Two Drama Collectors." A B Bookman's Weekly, 92 (1993), 2375-77.

Simon, Melinda. "Egy XVII. századi erdély értelmiségi család könyvmuveltsége" [The book culture of an intellectual family of Transylvania in the seventeenth century]. Magyar Könyvszemle, 114 (1998), 1-12.

Simon, Melinda, and Péter Perger (eds.). Crescit eundo: Tisztelgõ tanulmányok V. Ecsedy Judit 65. születésnapjára. Budapest: Argumentum; Országos Szécgényi Könyvtár, 2011. Pp. 276; illustrations.[The festschrift honors Judit Vizkelety Ecsedy, with many articles on book history, reading, and publishing.. It includes Ileana Dâria’s “Batthyány Ignác kiadványai” (translated by Mária Szávuly) (45-54); Sándor Dörnyei’s “Nyomdában készült régi hazai ex librisek: XVI-XVIII. század” (63-73; illustrations); András Emodi’s “Nagyváradi könyves kalászat” (75-86); István Monok’s “Város és könyvkultúra Magyarországon: A megközelítés szempontjai” (163-70); and Ilona Pavercsik’s “Weber Simon Péter nyomdájának alapitásáról” (171-82; illustrations).]

Simon, Monika. “Deux lectures de Platon au XVIIe siècle: Claude Fleury et André Dacier.” Études de lettres, 2, no. 253 (1999), 77-86.


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