Giant snake [Plate 101 of Seba's Locupletissimi rerum naturalium thesauri accurata descriptio Volume II].

Seba, A.

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Amsterdam, Jansson-Waesberg, J. Wetsteen and William Smith, 1735. Very large oblong folio (51.2 x 63.2 cm). Double-sized engraved plate in fine, natural, contemporary hand-colouring = A fine herpetological plate from one of the most splendid and largest natural history works from the mid-18th century, fully titled: Locupletissimi rerum naturalium thesauri accurata descriptio et iconibus artificiosissimus expressio per universam physices historiam. Opus, cui, in hoc rerum genere, nullum par exstisit. Ex toto terrarum orbe collegit, digessit, descripsit, et depingendum curavit Albertus Seba, Etzela Oostfrisius, Academiae Caesareae Leopoldino Carolinae Naturae Curiosorum collega xenocratus dictus; Societatis Regiae Anglicanae, et Instituti Bonensis, sodalis. Seba's Cabinet of Natural Curiosities, as it is generally known, is regarded as one of the 18th century's greatest natural history achievements and remains one of the most prized natural history books of all time. Though it was common for men of his profession to collect natural specimens for research purposes, Amsterdam-based pharmacist Albertus Seba (1665-1736), who made a fortune working for the VOC (Dutch East India Company), had a passion that led him far beyond the call of duty. His collection of natural history objects was displayed in four very large volumes, which are now very rare. Most copies remained uncoloured. Single plates are regularly offered in, often fancy, modern colouring. This plate, numbered CI, of volume II, shows a Serpens, blanda, Ceilonica, Pologna, a snake from Ceylon (Sri Lanka) (see Landwehr, p. 547), currently known as the Indian rock python. Besides being contemporarily hand-coloured this copy is unusually wide-margined too. Very light toning in the outer margins, otherwise near fine. Adler I, p. 9; Landwehr, 178; Nissen ZBI, 3793. Seller Inventory # 77798

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Seba, A.
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Seller: Antiquariaat Schierenberg, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Seller rating 4 out of 5 stars 4-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

Amsterdam, Jansson-Waesberg, J. Wetsteen and William Smith, 1735. Large oblong folio (49.5 x 55.9 cm). Double-sized engraved plate. = A very rare, fine herpetological plate from one of the most splendid and largest natural history works from the mid-18th century, fully titled: Locupletissimi rerum naturalium thesauri accurata descriptio et iconibus artificiosissimus expressio per universam physices historiam. Opus, cui, in hoc rerum genere, nullum par exstisit. Ex toto terrarum orbe collegit, digessit, descripsit, et depingendum curavit Albertus Seba, Etzela Oostfrisius, Academiae Caesareae Leopoldino Carolinae Naturae Curiosorum collega xenocratus dictus; Societatis Regiae Anglicanae, et Instituti Bonensis, sodalis. Though it was common for men of his profession to collect natural specimens for research purposes, Amsterdam-based pharmacist Albertus Seba (1665-1736), who made a fortune working for the VOC (Dutch East India Company), had a passion that led him far beyond the call of duty. His collection of natural history objects was displayed in four very large volumes, which are now very rare. Seba's Cabinet of Natural Curiosities, as it is generally known, is regarded as one of the 18th century's greatest natural history achievements and remains one of the most prized natural history books of all time. This plate, numbered CI, of volume II, shows a Serpens, blanda, Ceilonica, Pologna, a snake from Ceylon (Sri Lanka) (see Landwehr, p. 547), currently known as the Indian rock python. Slight fraying and toning to the very outer margins; weak central, vertical fold; the left margin a bit uneven from previous binding; otherwise a very good, clean copy. Adler I, p. 9; Landwehr, 178; Nissen ZBI, 3793. Seller Inventory # 76716

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