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expensive book

buschmasterbuschmaster Member Posts: 14,229 ✭✭✭
edited October 2011 in General Discussion
with my interest in studying the foundations of religions (pagan, jewish, christian, muslim and various egypto-indio-greco-roman cults) I have found that a basic knowledge of astrology and astronomy is essential. through the times of the Roman empire astrology was applied to everything, it was unbelievable how much it permeated people's beliefs, religious or otherwise. that went away for a thousand years, limited to religious monastics of the christian and muslim world who had little use in telling laymen.

interest in the stars returned in the 1500's and continued through the reformation, renaissance and enlightenment. at one time "there were 30,000 astrologers in Paris in the sixteenth century, all ready to cast a horoscope for a coin". interest ended at the close of the 1700's with scientific advancement explaining most things that were important.

so during that time scholars had made an attempt to recover lost knowledge- including the most ancient, dating back to Babylonian times, Egyptian times, and we find that astrology/astronomy started even before that, with the Ethiopian kingdom, from which the Egyptians modeled their civilization as the Romans had done with the Greeks. loooong long looooooong ago.

but little interest after the 1700's.

so a compendium of the different variations of this "knowledge", the proto-science which practically made up all the systems of belief which ran through the entirety of human existence, made during this time when they had access to ancient texts that are now lost, and had the most modern scholars knowledgeable on the subject, would be... quite valuable. more than any blabberings about government, philosopy, etc.

ran across one printed in 1775. Jean-Sylvian Bailly was the curator of paintings at the Louvre, had his own observatory, wrote stuff for the Acad?mie des Sciences, was the first elected Mayor of Paris, and had the honor of being guillotined.

this book he wrote is described as "one of the most important histories of ancient astronomy ever published and a milestone in post-revolutionary French scientific literature".

right. so how much does it cost? $33,465.

for a book.

21506_1.jpg

http://www.forumrarebooks.com/Bailly-Jean-Sylvain-Histoire-de-ancienne-depuis-son.html

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    JasonVJasonV Member Posts: 2,480 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Somewhere on a book forum there are some guys dumbfounded we would pay so much for a gun.
    formerly known as warpig883
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    buschmasterbuschmaster Member Posts: 14,229 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    quote:Originally posted by JasonV
    Somewhere on a book forum there are some guys dumbfounded we would pay so much for a gun.[:D] YEP
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    CrittergitterCrittergitter Member Posts: 2,554 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    quote:but little interest after the 1700's.

    Until President and Nancy Reagan...
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    He DogHe Dog Member Posts: 50,958 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    quote:Originally posted by Crittergitter
    quote:but little interest after the 1700's.

    Until President and Nancy Reagan...


    Beat me to it.[:)]
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    Alan RushingAlan Rushing Member Posts: 9,002 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    To each their own ... se le ve. [:0] [;)] [:D]
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    mrseatlemrseatle Member Posts: 15,467 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Astronomy was my minor in universitat. I even made the deans' list[:)]

    But My most expensive book is that Big two-volume Dead Seas Scrolls.
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    nononsensenononsense Member Posts: 10,928 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Really expensive book:


    Fox News.com

    http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/12/07/rare-audubon-birds-america-auctioned-1017150811/

    Rare Audubon 'Birds of America' to Be Auctioned

    Published December 07, 2010

    LONDON - To some it's just a bunch of bird drawings. To others, John James Audubon's 'Birds of America' is a rare blend of art, natural history and craftsmanship, unique enough to be the world's most expensive book, expected to fetch more than $9.5 million at a London auction Tuesday.

    Some of the world's wealthiest book collectors have been anticipating this auction for months: it represents a chance to own one of the best preserved editions of Aubudon's masterpiece, with its 435 revered, hand-colored illustrations.

    Audubon was part frontiersman, part artist, and possessed a rare, almost unequaled ability to observe, catalog and paint the birds he observed in the wild. Experts say the book he produced is unmatched in its beauty and also of considerable scientific value, justifying its stratospheric cost.

    Pom Harrington, owner of the Peter Harrington rare book firm in London, said it has been 10 years since the last complete edition of 'Birds of America,' with all of the illustrations, has been auctioned - and that was sold for $8.8 million by Christie's auction house in 2000, a record for a printed book at auction.

    The quality of the edition being offered Tuesday by Sotheby's is extremely high, Harrington said, and it is unusual to find one not in a museum or academic institution.

    'If you want to buy an example of a rare work of art, this is one of the best,' he said. 'It is valuable in its artistic nature because it is so well drawn.'

    The plates were printed in black and white and hand colored afterward. That made the production process extremely expensive, especially since it was carried out by 'the best artists of the time,' Harrington said.

    The collection of 435 hand-colored prints, made from engravings of Audubon's watercolors, measures more than 3 feet by 2 feet (90 centimeters by 60 centimeters) because Audubon wanted to paint the birds life size.

    The size of the illustrations makes them extremely valuable as standalone pieces of art, which makes the complete edition vulnerable to being broken up so the individual prints can be sold one-by-one.

    Harrington said the wild turkey that is depicted in the first big plate of the book can be sold for $200,000.

    But Mark Ghahramani, a rare book specialist at Classic Bindings in London, said it is unlikely the 'Birds of America' will be divided up for resale because it is probably more valuable if left intact.

    'There are very few copies left of the entire book, so I would think that whoever bought it at the auction would be quite interested in keeping it whole,' he said. 'Anything to do with American natural history is quite valuable.'

    Audubon, who died in 1851, represents a unique figure in American history, a renaissance man with shades of Huckleberry Finn - like Mark Twain's fictional character, Audubon made an epic voyage down the mighty Mississippi - but with a scientist's inquisitive nature.

    He made his trip, after his dry-goods business failed, with only a rifle, an assistant, and a drawing pad, making illustrations of as many birds as he could find.

    He did not find a printer in the United States willing to take on the book, with its oversize illustrations, but sailed to England, eventually finding printers in Edinburgh, Scotland, and in London.

    The volume is seen as a vital piece of American history, Harrington said.

    'It is the most important natural history book for America,' he said. 'That is the main point. It screams Americana. For an American patriot, it is the greatest book on American heritage - there is no competition.'
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    SpartacusSpartacus Member Posts: 14,415
    edited November -1
    i bet the paperback version is cheaper..
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    Removed at users request.Removed at users request. Member Posts: 3,027
    edited November -1
    quote:Originally posted by Spartacus
    i bet the paperback version is cheaper..


    I got it on my Kindle for 99 cents.
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