Cavalarice, or the English Horseman: Contayning all the Art of Horse-manship, asmuch as is ... Cavalarice, or the English Horseman: Contayning all the Art of Horse-manship, asmuch as is ... Cavalarice, or the English Horseman: Contayning all the Art of Horse-manship, asmuch as is ... Cavalarice, or the English Horseman: Contayning all the Art of Horse-manship, asmuch as is ...

Cavalarice, or the English Horseman: Contayning all the Art of Horse-manship, asmuch as is necessary for any man to understand, whether hee be Horse-breeder, horse-ryder, horse-hunter, horse-runner, horse-ambler, horse-farrier, horse-keeper, Coachman, Smith, or Sadler.

MARKHAM, Gervase.

Published by London, Edward Allde for Edward White, [1616–] 1617., 1616
Used Hardcover

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8 parts in one vol., 4to in 8s, pp. [16], 88; [4], 209, '230-231', 212-213, '234-264' [i.e. 244]; [4], 84; [4], 57, [1]; [4], 58; [4], 67, [1]; [4], 86; [4], 37, [1] (register continuous); title within an elaborate equestrian woodcut border to each part (the first as a general title, pts ii-iii dated 1616), woodcut initials, ornaments, and illustrations; bifolia I3.6 and I4.5 misbound, minimal paperflaws to C2 and 2A5 touching text but not affecting legibility; a beautiful copy, clean and crisp, in contemporary British calf, borders and spine roll-tooled in blind, board-edges roll-tooled in gilt, edges speckled red and with horizontal lines in ink to mark the 8 parts, a leaf of printer's waste at each end folded once to form 2 stubs (rubbed through by the sewing supports, otherwise well-preserved); a few light marks, small chip to first band, neat repair to headcap and subtle repair to corners; upper margin of title neatly inscribed 'John Marsham D.' in contemporary ink, large pencil shelfmark ('DD.4') to front endpaper.A beautiful copy of the second edition, 'corrected and augmented', of Markham's Cavalarice, exceptionally well-preserved in a contemporary binding, from the library of the antiquary Sir John Marsham. Among Markham's many published works on equestrian subjects, Cavalarice is no doubt the most comprehensive and substantial. Likely written during his agricultural exile in the aftermath of Essex's execution in 1601 and first published in 1607, the work divides the knowledge of horses into eight books, among them breeding, training, stabling, and farriery, as well as books on hunting- and racing-horses. Of these the first and second books, on breeding and training respectively, are most extensive, and proved particularly influential in dismissing superstitions of earlier authors and rejecting the crueller practices suggested by Italian writers on horsemanship. Markham's Cavalarice remained popular throughout the seventeenth century, and his work on farriery, Markham's Maister-Peece (1610), was revised and reprinted well into the nineteenth. These works undoubtedly owed much of their success to his clear style, extensive experience, and scholarship. It was presumably out of opportunism that Markham published the present work as eight parts, allowing him to include dedications to seven potential patrons, prime among them Charles, Prince of Wales (originally written for Charles's elder brother, Henry). Markham's career is far broader, however, than might be suggested by the numerous works on horsemanship. He is known to have lived as a farmer for several years after the fall of his patron the Earl of Essex, to have seen military service in the Netherlands, and to have published poetry, prose, and plays with some success, leading to speculation that he is the poetic rival mentioned in Shakespeare's sonnets (Gittings, Shakespeare's Rival, 1960). Ever ostentatious, he entertained Elizabeth I with his feats of horsemanship and, for his final venture, tried to raise funds by walking from London to Berwick without bridges, nor 'boats, Shippe, or other Ingin for water more than an ordinarye Leape staffe or staffe to leape with all neither shoulde swyme any water whatsoever' (ODNB). He died, nonetheless, in poverty. Provenance: The present copy is inscribed by the noted antiquary John Marsham (1602 1685). BOO observes that, although Marsham's will does not mention any books, there are two early bookplates attributed to him (cf. Franks and Lee), 'one of which was also used as an engraving in a book of 1649'. We note one other book with his inscription, dated 1647, presented to him by John Donne Jr, which appeared at auction (Christies, 3 March 2004, lot 27). The two leaves of printer's waste, used here as guards for the endpapers, are taken from the King James Bible. We have not been able to identify this particular edition, though it is remarkably close to other settings mostly dating to around 1630. The texts present are 1 Jo. Seller Inventory # E5533

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Bibliographic Details

Title: Cavalarice, or the English Horseman: ...
Publisher: London, Edward Allde for Edward White, [1616 ] 1617.
Publication Date: 1616
Binding: Hardcover

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Gervase Markham
Published by Edward White, London, 1617
Used Hardcover

Seller: Rooke Books PBFA, Bath, United Kingdom

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Leather. Condition: Very Good. Not Stated (illustrator). The second edition of this immensely important work on Arabian horses, written by the man, Robert Markham, who brought the now common breed to England for the first time. Illustrated with in-text woodcuts throughout. A very important work. The second edition of this work.ESTC citation numberS112112.Illustrated with a cartoucheto the title page, seven cartouches for each section of the book, and sixty-seven in-text woodcuts.Register runs as [1], [A1], A2-A8, B-I5, [-I6],I7-Aaa8, Bbb7, [-Bbb8]. Register is continuous, but each book has a separatepagination.Collated, bound without leaves I6 and Bbb8, both leaves of text, however other thanlacking these two leaves the work is complete.Publishing information is taken from the ESTC, no publisher or location is listed to the title page.Dedication leaf A3 is printed in duplicate.Leaves V4 to Y1 with some errors to pagination. The text is continuous with correctly corresponding catch-words.Rebound in a fine panelled speckled calf binding with decorative gilt to the spine.An important work, one of the earliest works on horses and horsemanship, and written by the firstBritishowner and dealer in Arabian horses.This is an important work, first published in 1607, as the author's work breeding and dealing in Arabian horses led to the huge popularityof the breed; Arabian bloodlines are found in almost every modern breed of riding horse today, so Markham's importance cannot be stressed in his importance of horse breeding in the Western world. This work shows his passion and belief in the superiority of the Arabian horse breed.The first Arabian stallion was imported by Markham and King James I to England in 1616.Markham praises both Turkish and Barb horses, and their virtues, stating that they are beyond all other types of horses, and it is clear to see his reasoning in this work.This work featured the secrets of William Bankes, who was the master of the performing horse Marocco, a performing horse who was popular during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. Marocco was able to walk on two and three legs, play dead, was able to distinguish between colours, and pull out particular audience member on Bankes' commands. He was also trained to bow to Queen Elizabeth I. He and Bankes were two of the most popular entertainers of London.The second edition of this very important work. Rebound in a panelled speckled calf binding. Externally, fine. Internally, firmly bound. Pages are lightly age-toned, some leaves are more heavily age-toned, and generally clean with some scattered spots and scattered handling marks. Minor edgewear to textblock, not causing any loss, but just a small amount of edgewear. Small puncture marks to the gutter of gatherings N to Cc, and Ff to Rr. The eight cartouches are a little trimmed to the fore edges, close cropping affecting the image of the cartouches for Books 4 and 6, though not affecting the images a large amount. Central text panel of the engraved title page has been tipped in with a little heavier age-toned paper to the rest of the title page, however the original title page does not appear to have any loss to this panel, so it's unclear why it was tipped in. Clear tape repair to the margins to the reverse of the title page, repairing some very small chips. Clear tape repair to the margin of leaves A1 and A2, and to the tail of leaf A8. Prior owner's ink inscription to leaf A2, both A3 leaves, leaves A4, A7, and A8, inscription to the second A3 is smudged. Small chip to the second A3, affecting one word only. Small tidemark to the head of leaves A3 to A6. Leaf D1 is misprinted as being leaf C1, however it is leaf D1 and the text is continuous. Very small closed tear to the head of leaf E5 with no loss and not affecting text. Leaves F3 to F7 with a small tidemark to the tail. Very small scorch mark to G6, affecting 2 words very minimally. Tape repair to leaf I1, with a small amount of the clear tape over the image. Small tape repair to the edges of leaves I2 and I3. Bound without leaf I6. Small ink splatter to leaf I8. Small tidemark to the tail of gatherings K and M. Small closed tear to the margin of leaf L4. Leaf L6 with a prior owner's ink annotation, not pertaining to text, but simply random words and letters. Leaves Q1, Q2, and Y1 with a small tidemark to the tail. Very small wormhole to the tail of leaves T4 to T8, not affecting text at all. Small tape repairs to leaves T6, T7, and T8. Small ink splatter to leaf Bb3. Random prior owner's ink inscription to leaf Dd6. Gatherings Ee and Ff with a small ink mark to the tail of the leaves. Leaf Tt2 with a small closed tear to the tail, not affecting text. Chip to the fore edge of leaf Yy1, a large chip that does not affect text at all. Leaves Yy6 and Yy7 with a small tidemark to the tail. Leaves Zz2 to Zz8 with a small diagonally cut chip to the bottom and fore edge, not affecting text at all, though it is affecting the cartouche for Book 8, affecting the image only a very small amount. Reverse of leaf Aaa5 with a smudged ink inscription. Ink inscription to leaf Aaa7. Tape repairs to the edges of leaves Bbb6 and Bbb7, with leaf Bbb7 being worn with repaired chips to the extremities, with no loss of text to either leaf. Small scorch marks to the margin of leaves Bbb4 to Bbb7, not affecting text at all. Bound without leaf Bbb8. Leaf L4 and L5 are detached but present. Very Good. book. Seller Inventory # 722P19

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