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IN THE course of my researches for a series of articles on the early bibliography of Southern Italy which are to be published in the Florentine journal La Bibliofilia, I have paid particular attention to a rare and handsome book, the Operette of a man calling himself 'II Parthenopeo Suavio,' printed at Bari in 1535. Few copies are recorded today, but the book has never been lost sight of: a copy featured in the Catalogue des livres de la Bibliothèque de feu M. Ie Duc de la Vallière in Paris in 1788, and the volume has been described by Giustiniani (1793), Panzer (1793-1803), Minieri Riccio (1844), and several more modern bibliographers, such as Fumagalli. The especial interest of the book lies in the fact that it is not only the first book printed in Bari, but it is also the only book ever printed in the sixteenth century in the whole of Apulia, with the probable exception of the village of Copertino near Lecce, where one Giovanni Bernardino Desa almost certainly printed between 1583 and 1591 a number of books. Copies of the Operette exist today in the British Museum (King's Library, 81.k.18), the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris (Rés. Yd. 579), and the Biblioteca di storia
I give a description of the British Museum copy:
OPERETTE DEL PAR/thenopeo Suauio in uarij tempi & per diuersi
/ subietti
composte, Et da Siluan Flammineo / insiemi raccolte, Et alla amorosa & /
moral
sua Calamita / intitulate.
Colophon: Stampato in Bari per Mastro Gilliberto / Nehou Francese
in le case de San/to Nicolo a di 15 de / Ottobre / Ne lanno de la
Natiuita del / Signore / M.D.XXXV.
Quarto. 192 leaves, A-Z8Aa8. The
printed register occurs on Aa7
recto.
The British Museum copy is without the last (blank?) leaf. The titlepage has
a
woodcut showing a musician playing the mandolin or guitar, and a winged
Cupid
shooting arrows. There are woodcuts in the text on D4 verso, 18 verso and
R1
verso. The preliminaries contain addresses by the author to Ferrando di
Capua,
Duke of Termoli (A2 recto) and to the famous Neapolitan humanist Jacopo
Sannazaro (A3 recto). All the book's obvious connections, therefore, are
with
Naples, and, as was natural, that city represented by far the greatest
printing centre south of Rome throughout the sixteenth century. Why then
were
the Operette not printed at Naples, but instead at Bari, a town
on the
remote Apulian coast, where as yet no printing-press had ever been set up
? To
attempt an answer to this question, we have to consider the identities of two
mysterious personages: 'il Parthenopeo Suavio,' the author, and Gillibert
Nehou, the printer. Only recently does the true identity of the
pseudonymous
author seem to have been satisfactorily explained. There is a whole chapter
devoted to the book and entitled "Il primo libro a stampa" in Armando
Perotti's Bari ignota (Trani, 1907, pp. 101-108), but this is
rather in
the nature of a romantic speculation than a scientific investigation of the
bibliographical evidence. The candidates whom Perotti puts forward for the
authorship of the Operette include unlikely and obscure
characters such
as Crisostomo Colonna, Federico Crivello, Girolamo de la Penna, and
Spinetto
Ventura. All of these he eventually rejects except the last, a Lecce
baron.
But present-day scholars seem at last to have hit upon the truth when they unanimously affirm that the 'Parthenopeo Suavio' was one Niccolò Antonio
Now what of the printer, Gillibert Nehou the Frenchman ? Absolutely nothing is known of him, for in no other book has his name been recorded. The surname Nehou seems to belong to Normandy, since a certain Quentin Nehou was 'procureur' at Rouen on 19 November 1579,[5] and a Lucas de Néhou, who flourished about 1688, is believed to have been born in Normandy.[6] But who Gillibert Nehou was, and how he came to print one book in Bari in 1535, I have been unable to discover. That his stay there was not a long one seems certain: he may even have accompanied the Queen's entourage from Naples. At least there is no need to doubt the authenticity of the colophon. The 'houses of Saint Nicholas,' where Nehou had his shop, tell us nothing precise: for Nicholas is the patron saint of all Bari, and these houses might have been located anywhere in the old quarter of the town. This much seems clear-that the book was printed at Bari rather than Naples because the author's allegiance to Bona Sforza had caused him to take up residence there, and this is why, on historical grounds, Carmignano is the most likely candidate for the identity of 'Il Parthenopeo Suavio.' He still liked to call himself a Neapolitan in provincial Bari.
The woodcuts in the volume deserve especial consideration, but they, too, raise some unusually puzzling problems. Sander[7] describes the titlepage woodcut as having been borrowed from an edition of Tibaldeo, Venice, 25 June 1507, while the cut on 18 verso is of Florentine origin, copied from an edition of the Vendetta di Vespasiano; but, says Sander, "on le trouve aussi dans Grisedio, S., Aquila, 1493." Unfortunately none of these three books is in the British Museum, and I have been unable to compare the woodcuts with their prototypes. Paul Kristeller, in Early Florentine Woodcuts (London, 1897), has a
After the curiously isolated episode in typographical history in which a handsome book produced by an otherwise unheard-of press makes its solitary appearance in 1535, no other book was printed in Bari for the next sixty-eight years. We should like to know details of the career of Gillibert Nehou, but we seem destined to remain in complete ignorance.
Addendum: Since this article was written, I have had the fortune to meet Signor De Marinis, who informs me that the copy of the Operette now in Bari is the same one which he formerly owned and which he donated to Laterza some years ago. He assures me that Sander has in error reproduced a cut which comes not from the Bari book at all, but from some earlier volume (possibly a Neapolitan incunable) which at present I am unable to identify. Sander's explanatory text is correspondingly at fault in the description of the De Marinis copy.
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