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Adam Clarke's
Bibliographical Dictionary (1802-1806)
Francesco Cordasco
ADAM CLARKE (1762?-1832), the theologian and orientalist, is remembered for his monumental Commentary on the Holy Scriptures (8 vols., 1810-1826), and for the Arabic bible he prepared for the Foreign Bible Society.[1] His oriental studies were assumed for the scriptural studies that lay ahead, and as he progressed in his investigations he interrupted his labors between 1802-1806 for a bibliographical dictionary whose scope is best indicated by the reproduction of its cumbersome title:
The Bibliographical Dictionary, itself, is in one author alphabet, and the usual entry includes anecdotes of the author (sometimes with source), notices of the best edition (s) of the works and, if available to Clarke, price of editions and recent auction sale records. Occasionally the author-alphabet is broken for the alphabetical inclusion of series of volumes (e.g. the Aldine Classics), or for a collective heading e.g. "Bible." This was recommended, and some of these collective entries achieve an amazing length and quality. The collective entry "Bible" occupies pp. 185-288 in volume I, and is continued in an appendix of 15 pp. (II, 1-15). The fullness of Clarke's references remain unmatched. Neither Watt in his Bibliotheca Britannica (4vs. Edinburgh, 1824) nor Lowndes in the Bibliographer's Manual (10vs. rev. Bohn, 1858-64) under their listing for "Bible" even approach Clarke's entry. Yet both Watt and Lowndes had used Clarke as a source. Within the area that it has defined (and its title is the best guide to this area) the Bibliographical Dictionary is unrivalled. Take for further illustration the entry for Cicero (II, 187-235). The logical point of comparison would be Harwood, but it is deficient alongside Clarke. Perhaps T. F. Dibdin's An Introduction to the knowledge of rare and valuable editions of the Greek and Latin Classics (Gloucester, 1802), which went through four editions, the last in 1827, might be adjudged, but it too does not equal the wealth of information found under Clarke's "Cicero," and at times Clarke even exceeds the expectation, as for example his quotation of the complete colophon for the Vindelin de Spira edition of the Ciceronian Epistolae (folio 1471):
Has Cicero claris mittere patriciis,
Marco respondet multa quos arte notarant,
Eloquiam priscis summo in honore fuit.
Clarke reserved the 7th and 8th parts of his Bibliographical Dictionary for a Bibliographical Miscellany which contains an invaluable "Catalogue of Authors and their Works on Bibliography and Typography divided into four Classes".[4] Here, in the absence of a history of bibliography, is an important working tool which the modern bibliographer can use as the grundriss for 17th- and 18th-century bibliographical history. The entries once again are in an author-alphabet, with occasional interruption, and the calendar of names is, in effect, a history. With the retention of Clarke's four classifications these names are subjoined:
- Giovanni Andres, Robertus Bellarminus, Gulielmus Cave, Jo. Augustinus Ernestus, Jo. Albertus Fabricius, Gottlieb Christ. Harles, P. Jacobus Le Long, Andreas Gottlieb Masch, Jo. Gothofr. Olearius, Casimirius Oudinus, Christophorus Saxius, Girolamo Tiraboschi.
LITERARY AND CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY
- P. Ireneo Affo, P. Jo. Bapt. Audifredi, Girolamo Baruffaldi, Michael Denis, Franciscus Kaverius Laire, Michael Maittaire, Pellegrino Antonio Orlandi, Georgius Wolfganus Panzer, Angelus Maria Card. Quirini, Jo. Ger. Schelhornius, Joannes Bern. de Rossi, March. Giacomo Sardini, Joseph Ant. Saxius, Joseph Vernazza, Leopoldo Camillo Volta, Stephanus Alexander Wurdtwein.
ANNALS OF TYPOGRAPHY, GENERAL AND PARTICULAR
- Angelus M. Bandinius, Cornelius Beughem, Mauro Boni, Bartholommeo Gamba, Placidus Braun, Guillaume Francois De Bure, Cailleau, David Clement, Pierre Antoine Crevenna, T. F. Dibdin, Joannis Vogt, Jo. Matthaeus Frankius, Edward Harwood, Wilhelm Heinsius, Francois de los Rios, Jacobus Morellius, J. B. L. Osmont, Renouard, Niclaus Rossius, Sebastianus Seemiller, Joseph Smith, D. Gaetano Volpi.
GENERAL AND PARTICULAR BIBLIOGRAPHICAL CATALOGUES
- Joseph Ames, William Herbert, Bowyer, M. de Boze, S. Gottlieb Breitkopf, Camus, Juan de la Caille, André, Chevillier, François Ignace Fournier, Baron d'Heinecken, Lambinet, Bernardus Mallinckrot, Prosper Marchand, Gherardus Meermanus, Mercier, Joannes Benedictus Mittarelli, Giacomo Maria Partoni, G. Peignot, Christ. Gottlieb Schwartz, Daniel Schoepelinus, Christianus Wolfius, Francesco Antonio Zaccaria.
CRITICAL DISSERTATIONS ON ANCIENT TYPOGRAPHY
When Adam Clarke turned away from his completed bibliographical labors in 1806, he turned away with some reluctance. It is interesting to see that his Memoirs of the Wesley Family (1823) was more concerned with the bibliography of Methodism than with the history of enthusiastic piety.
Notes
Clarke's Miscellaneous Works appeared in 1836 (13 vols.). A memoir by his son, J. B. B. Clarke (3 vols. 1833) contains a bibliography of the writings.
Clarke's oriental collection was sold 15 June 1836 by Sotheby. It realized £1,804 5s., and was largely purchased by Henry G. Bohn and for the British Museum by the booksellers Payne and Foss.
Edward Harwood, A view of the various editions of the Greek and Roman Classics, with remarks. London 1775. Editions also in 1778, 1782, 1790. Harwood's work was translated into German and Italian, and listed some 2000 titles.
The Miscellany also includes an account of English translations of all the Greek and Roman classics; a list of Arabic and Persian grammars; remarks on the origin of language; a history of printing; an account of the perfection of printing in Italy; a list of 15th century towns where printing was carried on; an essay on bibliography and bibliographical systems wherein Clarke expands the system of Peignat's Dictionnaire de Bibliologie (Paris 1802); and accounts of the Olympiads, the Roman Calendar, the Mohammedan Era and the Khalifs.
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