6. Connected Sbornic (18th century manuscript) and "The New Testament" of Antim Ivireanul, from the time of Constantin Brâncoveanu, Bucharest, 1703, extremely rare, collector's piece
Начална цена
EUR 1.500
Продадено
EUR 3.500
Сесия
Чет, 3 октомври 2024 19:00
Препратки
BRV, I. p. 139
Размери
width 17 cm, height 24 cm
Информация от изследване
Antim Ivireanul, born in 1650, is of Georgian origin but his journey within Orthodoxism brought him to the mouths of the Danube, in Wallachia. Before this period, he lived near the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Constantinople, where he penetrated the mysteries of faith as well as those of the typographic craft in all its details, from writing, to paper making and xylography. Imbued in the erudite and cultivated atmosphere and environment patronized by the Orthodox Patriarchate, he learned several languages, Greek, Turkish-Ottoman and Arabic. The one who brought him north of the Danube was ruler Constantin Brâncoveanu who entrusted him with the development and management of the royal typography in Bucharest in 1691. Extremely active and dedicated to both books and the church, he held several ecclesiastical dignities crowned with that of Metropolitan of Wallachia in which he was installed in 1708. Using the authority that he had and the funds to which he had access, he developed the network of typographies in the country, with one in Râmnicu Vâlcea and one in Târgoviște. Through the numerous church works that he edited and supervised, Antim Ivireanul created the church language in Romanian and put into circulation the foundational works of orthodoxism transposed into a Romanian version. Exiled from the country as a result of his opposition to the Phanariot regime, he was assassinated on his way to Constantinople in circumstances still not fully elucidated. He was canonized by the Romanian Orthodox Church in 1992.
ДОПЪЛНИТЕЛНА ИНФОРМАЦИЯ
За разяснения относно процедурата по наддаване, разходите при спечелване, условията за гаранция, плащане и вземане на спечеления лот, препоръчваме внимателно четене/препрочитане на Правилника за наддаване.
За допълнителна информация относно лота и търга, моля свържете се с Отдела на арт консултантите.
Detalii
ДОПЪЛНИТЕЛНА ИНФОРМАЦИЯ
За разяснения относно процедурата по наддаване, разходите при спечелване, условията за гаранция, плащане и вземане на спечеления лот, препоръчваме внимателно четене/препрочитане на Правилника за наддаване.
За допълнителна информация относно лота и търга, моля свържете се с Отдела на арт консултантите.
Препратки
BRV, I. p. 139
Размери
width 17 cm, height 24 cm
Информация от изследване
Antim Ivireanul, born in 1650, is of Georgian origin but his journey within Orthodoxism brought him to the mouths of the Danube, in Wallachia. Before this period, he lived near the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Constantinople, where he penetrated the mysteries of faith as well as those of the typographic craft in all its details, from writing, to paper making and xylography. Imbued in the erudite and cultivated atmosphere and environment patronized by the Orthodox Patriarchate, he learned several languages, Greek, Turkish-Ottoman and Arabic. The one who brought him north of the Danube was ruler Constantin Brâncoveanu who entrusted him with the development and management of the royal typography in Bucharest in 1691. Extremely active and dedicated to both books and the church, he held several ecclesiastical dignities crowned with that of Metropolitan of Wallachia in which he was installed in 1708. Using the authority that he had and the funds to which he had access, he developed the network of typographies in the country, with one in Râmnicu Vâlcea and one in Târgoviște. Through the numerous church works that he edited and supervised, Antim Ivireanul created the church language in Romanian and put into circulation the foundational works of orthodoxism transposed into a Romanian version. Exiled from the country as a result of his opposition to the Phanariot regime, he was assassinated on his way to Constantinople in circumstances still not fully elucidated. He was canonized by the Romanian Orthodox Church in 1992.