O’Sullivan Beare, Ph:Natural history of Ireland.
- used book 2009, ISBN: 9781859184394
[PU: Cork: Cork University Press], 296 p. Original cloth with dust jacket.
From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the International Journal of the Classica… More...
[PU: Cork: Cork University Press], 296 p. Original cloth with dust jacket.
From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT). - Very slightly scuffed dust jacket, otherwise in very good condition. - Content: Denis O’Sullivan’s translation of the first book of Philip O’Sullivan-Beare’s Zoilomastix is a landmark. For many years, the Latin writings of the Irish of the early modern period have lain neglected, whether they appeared in printed texts (like Peter Lombard’s Commentarius of 1631) or, like the Zoilomastix, in manuscript. At UCC, the Centre for Neo-Latin Studies has, since 1999, been undertaking the collection and study of this lost literature of Ireland. Between 1500 and 1750, when Latin was the medium of European intellectual discourse, more than 300 Irish writers produced more than 1000 printed works, and probably as many, if not more again, which, like Zoilomastix, never reached print (though this may not have stopped them circulating and having their own influence). I am pleased to be asked to write a foreword to the first of (we hope) a very large number of such translations (some with Latin text) which will appear in various places over the next few years. Zoilomastix is a very difficult manuscript. It is hard to read and its many marginal annotations seem almost designed to baffle the editor. However, Denis has fought manfully to bring order to this chaos and has produced a clear version of a text that is at many places a revision and correction of O’Donnell’s transcription and can be well defended as what O’Sullivan-Beare intended to be read. He has written a fairly literal rendition of the Latin, which serves to convey succinctly the information proffered by the text. Denis has had a remarkable career. A career as a medical man was followed by the completion of a degree in Greek and Latin (with first-class honours) at UCC upon his retirement. "The work before you is both the product of the skill acquired during that period and also a labour of love. For who better to present to the world a celebration of Ireland by O’Sullivan-Beare than an O’Sullivan, and at that an O’Sullivan from the same clan that produced one of the most important, and most neglected, Latin writers of the early modem period? This unique contribution to the understanding of Ireland’s natural history is part of the Zoilomastix, a manuscript held in the University of Uppsala in Sweden. It was originally written in Latin by an Irish nobleman in exile in Spain. The author did not set out to write about the flora and fauna of Ireland, rather it was part of a wider attempt by him to correct the blackening of Ireland s reputation by the medieval writer Giraldus Cambrensis in his Topographia Hiberniae. This Renaissance treatment of Ireland's natural history, which owes much to classical precedents, is here brought to the attention of a modern audience in a complete English translation for the first time. Its author was Philip O’Sullivan (1590-1636) from West Cork and it has its origins in the destruction of Gaelic Ireland in the aftermath, DE, [SC: 4.50], gebraucht; sehr gut, gewerbliches Angebot, [GW: 608g], Banküberweisung, Offene Rechnung, PayPal, Internationaler Versand<
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O’Sullivan Beare, Philip:Natural history of Ireland.
- hardcover 2009, ISBN: 1859184391
[EAN: 9781859184394], Gebraucht, guter Zustand, [SC: 11.44], [PU: Cork: Cork University Press], Jacket, 296 p. From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the I… More...
[EAN: 9781859184394], Gebraucht, guter Zustand, [SC: 11.44], [PU: Cork: Cork University Press], Jacket, 296 p. From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT). - Very slightly scuffed dust jacket, otherwise in very good condition. - Content: Denis O’Sullivan’s translation of the first book of Philip O’Sullivan-Beare’s Zoilomastix is a landmark. For many years, the Latin writings of the Irish of the early modern period have lain neglected, whether they appeared in printed texts (like Peter Lombard’s Commentarius of 1631) or, like the Zoilomastix, in manuscript. At UCC, the Centre for Neo-Latin Studies has, since 1999, been undertaking the collection and study of this lost literature of Ireland. Between 1500 and 1750, when Latin was the medium of European intellectual discourse, more than 300 Irish writers produced more than 1000 printed works, and probably as many, if not more again, which, like Zoilomastix, never reached print (though this may not have stopped them circulating and having their own influence). I am pleased to be asked to write a foreword to the first of (we hope) a very large number of such translations (some with Latin text) which will appear in various places over the next few years. Zoilomastix is a very difficult manuscript. It is hard to read and its many marginal annotations seem almost designed to baffle the editor. However, Denis has fought manfully to bring order to this chaos and has produced a clear version of a text that is at many places a revision and correction of O’Donnell’s transcription and can be well defended as what O’Sullivan-Beare intended to be read. He has written a fairly literal rendition of the Latin, which serves to convey succinctly the information proffered by the text. Denis has had a remarkable career. A career as a medical man was followed by the completion of a degree in Greek and Latin (with first-class honours) at UCC upon his retirement. "The work before you is both the product of the skill acquired during that period and also a labour of love. For who better to present to the world a celebration of Ireland by O’Sullivan-Beare than an O’Sullivan, and at that an O’Sullivan from the same clan that produced one of the most important, and most neglected, Latin writers of the early modem period? This unique contribution to the understanding of Ireland’s natural history is part of the Zoilomastix, a manuscript held in the University of Uppsala in Sweden. It was originally written in Latin by an Irish nobleman in exile in Spain. The author did not set out to write about the flora and fauna of Ireland, rather it was part of a wider attempt by him to correct the blackening of Ireland s reputation by the medieval writer Giraldus Cambrensis in his Topographia Hiberniae. This Renaissance treatment of Ireland's natural history, which owes much to classical precedents, is here brought to the attention of a modern audience in a complete English translation for the first time. Its author was Philip O’Sullivan (1590-1636) from West Cork and it has its origins in the destruction of Gaelic Ireland in the aftermath of the battle of Kinsale (1602). ISBN 9781859184394 Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 608 Original cloth with dust jacket., Books<
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(*) Book out-of-stock means that the book is currently not available at any of the associated platforms we search.
O’Sullivan Beare, Philip:Natural history of Ireland.
- hardcover 2009, ISBN: 1859184391
[EAN: 9781859184394], Gebraucht, guter Zustand, [SC: 11.29], [PU: Cork: Cork University Press], Jacket, 296 p. From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the I… More...
[EAN: 9781859184394], Gebraucht, guter Zustand, [SC: 11.29], [PU: Cork: Cork University Press], Jacket, 296 p. From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT). - Very slightly scuffed dust jacket, otherwise in very good condition. - Content: Denis O’Sullivan’s translation of the first book of Philip O’Sullivan-Beare’s Zoilomastix is a landmark. For many years, the Latin writings of the Irish of the early modern period have lain neglected, whether they appeared in printed texts (like Peter Lombard’s Commentarius of 1631) or, like the Zoilomastix, in manuscript. At UCC, the Centre for Neo-Latin Studies has, since 1999, been undertaking the collection and study of this lost literature of Ireland. Between 1500 and 1750, when Latin was the medium of European intellectual discourse, more than 300 Irish writers produced more than 1000 printed works, and probably as many, if not more again, which, like Zoilomastix, never reached print (though this may not have stopped them circulating and having their own influence). I am pleased to be asked to write a foreword to the first of (we hope) a very large number of such translations (some with Latin text) which will appear in various places over the next few years. Zoilomastix is a very difficult manuscript. It is hard to read and its many marginal annotations seem almost designed to baffle the editor. However, Denis has fought manfully to bring order to this chaos and has produced a clear version of a text that is at many places a revision and correction of O’Donnell’s transcription and can be well defended as what O’Sullivan-Beare intended to be read. He has written a fairly literal rendition of the Latin, which serves to convey succinctly the information proffered by the text. Denis has had a remarkable career. A career as a medical man was followed by the completion of a degree in Greek and Latin (with first-class honours) at UCC upon his retirement. "The work before you is both the product of the skill acquired during that period and also a labour of love. For who better to present to the world a celebration of Ireland by O’Sullivan-Beare than an O’Sullivan, and at that an O’Sullivan from the same clan that produced one of the most important, and most neglected, Latin writers of the early modem period? This unique contribution to the understanding of Ireland’s natural history is part of the Zoilomastix, a manuscript held in the University of Uppsala in Sweden. It was originally written in Latin by an Irish nobleman in exile in Spain. The author did not set out to write about the flora and fauna of Ireland, rather it was part of a wider attempt by him to correct the blackening of Ireland s reputation by the medieval writer Giraldus Cambrensis in his Topographia Hiberniae. This Renaissance treatment of Ireland's natural history, which owes much to classical precedents, is here brought to the attention of a modern audience in a complete English translation for the first time. Its author was Philip O’Sullivan (1590-1636) from West Cork and it has its origins in the destruction of Gaelic Ireland in the aftermath of the battle of Kinsale (1602). ISBN 9781859184394 Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 608 Original cloth with dust jacket., Books<
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(*) Book out-of-stock means that the book is currently not available at any of the associated platforms we search.
O’Sullivan Beare, Philip:Natural history of Ireland.
- hardcover 2009, ISBN: 1859184391
[EAN: 9781859184394], Gebraucht, guter Zustand, [SC: 4.0], [PU: Cork: Cork University Press], Jacket, 296 p. From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the Int… More...
[EAN: 9781859184394], Gebraucht, guter Zustand, [SC: 4.0], [PU: Cork: Cork University Press], Jacket, 296 p. From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT). - Very slightly scuffed dust jacket, otherwise in very good condition. - Content: Denis O’Sullivan’s translation of the first book of Philip O’Sullivan-Beare’s Zoilomastix is a landmark. For many years, the Latin writings of the Irish of the early modern period have lain neglected, whether they appeared in printed texts (like Peter Lombard’s Commentarius of 1631) or, like the Zoilomastix, in manuscript. At UCC, the Centre for Neo-Latin Studies has, since 1999, been undertaking the collection and study of this lost literature of Ireland. Between 1500 and 1750, when Latin was the medium of European intellectual discourse, more than 300 Irish writers produced more than 1000 printed works, and probably as many, if not more again, which, like Zoilomastix, never reached print (though this may not have stopped them circulating and having their own influence). I am pleased to be asked to write a foreword to the first of (we hope) a very large number of such translations (some with Latin text) which will appear in various places over the next few years. Zoilomastix is a very difficult manuscript. It is hard to read and its many marginal annotations seem almost designed to baffle the editor. However, Denis has fought manfully to bring order to this chaos and has produced a clear version of a text that is at many places a revision and correction of O’Donnell’s transcription and can be well defended as what O’Sullivan-Beare intended to be read. He has written a fairly literal rendition of the Latin, which serves to convey succinctly the information proffered by the text. Denis has had a remarkable career. A career as a medical man was followed by the completion of a degree in Greek and Latin (with first-class honours) at UCC upon his retirement. "The work before you is both the product of the skill acquired during that period and also a labour of love. For who better to present to the world a celebration of Ireland by O’Sullivan-Beare than an O’Sullivan, and at that an O’Sullivan from the same clan that produced one of the most important, and most neglected, Latin writers of the early modem period? This unique contribution to the understanding of Ireland’s natural history is part of the Zoilomastix, a manuscript held in the University of Uppsala in Sweden. It was originally written in Latin by an Irish nobleman in exile in Spain. The author did not set out to write about the flora and fauna of Ireland, rather it was part of a wider attempt by him to correct the blackening of Ireland s reputation by the medieval writer Giraldus Cambrensis in his Topographia Hiberniae. This Renaissance treatment of Ireland's natural history, which owes much to classical precedents, is here brought to the attention of a modern audience in a complete English translation for the first time. Its author was Philip O’Sullivan (1590-1636) from West Cork and it has its origins in the destruction of Gaelic Ireland in the aftermath of the battle of Kinsale (1602). ISBN 9781859184394 Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 608 Original cloth with dust jacket., Books<
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(*) Book out-of-stock means that the book is currently not available at any of the associated platforms we search.
O?Sullivan Beare, Philip:Natural history of Ireland.
- used book 2009, ISBN: 9781859184394
Cork, Cork University Press, 296 p. Original cloth with dust jacket. From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the International Journal of the Classical Trad… More...
Cork, Cork University Press, 296 p. Original cloth with dust jacket. From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT). - Very slightly scuffed dust jacket, otherwise in very good condition. - Content: Denis O?Sullivan?s translation of the first book of Philip O?Sullivan-Beare?s Zoilomastix is a landmark. For many years, the Latin writings of the Irish of the early modern period have lain neglected, whether they appeared in printed texts (like Peter Lombard?s Commentarius of 1631) or, like the Zoilomastix, in manuscript. At UCC, the Centre for Neo-Latin Studies has, since 1999, been undertaking the collection and study of this lost literature of Ireland. Between 1500 and 1750, when Latin was the medium of European intellectual discourse, more than 300 Irish writers produced more than 1000 printed works, and probably as many, if not more again, which, like Zoilomastix, never reached print (though this may not have stopped them circulating and having their own influence). I am pleased to be asked to write a foreword to the first of (we hope) a very large number of such translations (some with Latin text) which will appear in various places over the next few years. Zoilomastix is a very difficult manuscript. It is hard to read and its many marginal annotations seem almost designed to baffle the editor. However, Denis has fought manfully to bring order to this chaos and has produced a clear version of a text that is at many places a revision and correction of O?Donnell?s transcription and can be well defended as what O?Sullivan-Beare intended to be read. He has written a fairly literal rendition of the Latin, which serves to convey succinctly the information proffered by the text. Denis has had a remarkable career. A career as a medical man was followed by the completion of a degree in Greek and Latin (with first-class honours) at UCC upon his retirement. "The work before you is both the product of the skill acquired during that period and also a labour of love. For who better to present to the world a celebration of Ireland by O?Sullivan-Beare than an O?Sullivan, and at that an O?Sullivan from the same clan that produced one of the most important, and most neglected, Latin writers of the early modem period? This unique contribution to the understanding of Ireland?s natural history is part of the Zoilomastix, a manuscript held in the University of Uppsala in Sweden. It was originally written in Latin by an Irish nobleman in exile in Spain. The author did not set out to write about the flora and fauna of Ireland, rather it was part of a wider attempt by him to correct the blackening of Ireland s reputation by the medieval writer Giraldus Cambrensis in his Topographia Hiberniae. This Renaissance treatment of Ireland's natural history, which owes much to classical precedents, is here brought to the attention of a modern audience in a complete English translation for the first time. Its author was Philip O?Sullivan (1590-1636) from West Cork and it has its origins in the destruction of Gaelic Ireland in the aftermath of the battle of Kinsale (1602). ISBN 9781859184394Geschichte 2009<
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