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Incunabula

Incunabula are books, pamphlets, or broadsides printed during the earliest phase of European printing, conventionally up to the year 1500. The term derives from the Latin incunabula, meaning “cradle” or “swaddling clothes,” while the German equivalent Wiegendrucke carries the same sense of “cradle prints.”

The designation “incunabula” appears to have first been used in bibliographical scholarship in the 17th century. The commonly accepted cut-off date of 1500 remains a convention in modern bibliography rather than a reflection of a clear historical break. In practice, it is somewhat arbitrary, since there was no single technological or cultural shift in printing precisely at that date that would justify a strict boundary.

Because printing was a brand new technology, incunabula often show a strong “transition” look to manuscripts. Early printers imitated the appearance of handwritten manuscripts. They often also left blank spaces for rubrication or hand-painted initials and illustrations to be added later. Early Incunabula often do not feature book elements such as title pages or pagination yet.

In their physical make-up, these books were typically printed on high-quality, thick rag paper or vellum and were often bound in heavy leather over wooden boards, frequently secured with metal clasp

Incunabula in the LBI Library Rare Book Collection

The LBI Library Rare Book collection features six complete incunabula related to German Jewry printed in German lands between 1475 and 1500. These works include primarily Christian anti-Jewish polemical literature, alleged conversion accounts, and a legal text specifying the administration of the Jewish oath .

1) 1475: Petrus Nigri: Tractatus contra perfidos judeos. Esslingen, Konrad Fyner, 6. VI. 1475. LBI Library || GW M27101 || ISTC in00257000

2) 1477: Petrus Nigri: Stern des Meschiah. Esslingen, Konrad Fyner, Eve of St. Thomas [20 Dec.] 1477. LBI Library || GW M27104 || ISTC in00258000

3) 1484: Reformacion der Stat Nueremberg. 1484. Contains the Jewry Oath from 1484. LBI Library, r (q) DD 901 N94 R4 || GW M27333 || IST ir00037000

4) 1493: Rationes breves magni Rabi Samuelis. Cologne: Heinrich Quentell, 1493. LBI Library, r 1089 || GW M39861 ||IST is00110000

5) 1494/1500: Pharetra fidei catholice sive idonea disputatio inter Christianos et Judeos. Cologne: Heinrich Quentell, between 1494 and 1500. LBI Library, r 1389|| GW M45799 || ISTC ip00576000

6) 1500: Iohannes Baptista Gratia Dei: Liber de confutatione hebraice secte. Strassburg : Martin Flach, 1500. LBI Library, r BM 585 G73 || GW 11346 || ISTC ig00354000

Incunabula leaves in the LBI Collections

7) 1493: Several individual leaves from the The Nuremberg Chronicle are also part of the LBI Collections. The Nuremberg Chronicle (Liber chronicarum / Schedelsche Weltchronik) is a lavishly illustrated world history by Hartmann Schedel, published in 1493, that chronicles the history of the world from Creation to the Last Judgment, structured in seven ages. It is a landmark work of early printing, featuring nearly 2,000 woodcuts, including city views, biblical scenes, and portraits, and was a major community project funded by Nuremberg merchants.

The murder of Simon of Trent, woodcut, 1493. LBI Collections 78.75

Jerusalem, woodcut, 1493. LBI Collections, 78.76

The Burning of the Jews, woodcut, 1493. LBI Collections, 78.73

Biblical Scene, woodcut, 1493. LBI Collections, 78.74

Danse Macabre, woodcut, 1493. LBI Collections, 78.1506a

References

The principal databases for incunabula are the Gesamtkatalog der Wiegendrucke, a monumental bibliographic project initiated in 1925 and still being compiled at the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, and, in the Anglo-American world, the Incunabula Short Title Catalogue (ISTC), established in 1980 and hosted by the British Library. The ISTC incorporates Frederick R. Goff’s Incunabula in American Libraries as well as numerous other reference works.

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