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The Ferrell-Vogüé Machaut MS, vols 1 & 2 (seconds) without slipcase

The Ferrell-Vogüé Machaut MS

£420.00

Description

DIAMM FACSIMILES
No. 5
The Ferrell-Vogüé Machaut MS -- SLIGHTLY DAMAGED COPIES

THIS ITEM IS STILL AVAILABLE, BUT SALES ARE CURRENTLY SUSPENDED WHILE OUR STOCK IS BEING RELOCATED

Bulk discounts are available on this title. Please contact [email protected] directly if you would like to arrange a special discount either for yourself or for students on a course you are teaching.

These copies were damaged in transit and may have minor bumps. They do not have slipcases. Rather than attempt to price each copy individually these are being sold at a fixed discount on a pot luck basis; no refunds or returns unless the copy is actually incomplete.

**Winner of the American Musicological Society 2015 Claude V. Palisca Prize for the most outstanding scholarly edition or translation in the field of musicology published in 2014**

Volume 1: Introductory study (232 pp. colour and b/w)

Volume 2: Full size facsimile (796 pp. Full colour)

This publication weighs in excess of 7 kilograms. Postage and packing to the United Kingdom is free, normally to all other destinations £45.

 

Detailed Description

THIS ITEM IS STILL AVAILABLE, BUT SALES ARE CURRENTLY SUSPENDED WHILE OUR STOCK IS BEING RELOCATED

 

This is one of the most important sources for the works of Guillaume de Machaut, and thanks to the generosity of its owners, James E and Elizabeth J Ferrell, it has gone from being the most secret and enigmatic of the Machaut sources to the most accessible, and is the first to be produced in facsimile. It is a very large manuscript and the introduction and full-size facsimile have been produced in two volumes, introductory study (vol. 1: 232 pp. colour and b/w) and facsimile (vol. 2: 796 pp. Full colour). The introduction is a multi-author work, with extensive new content and contextual study by Prof Lawrence Earp revealing hitherto unknown information about the provenance of the book in the library of the Duc du Berry together with a comprehensive history of its ownership up to the 20th century. Domenic Leo has provided a detailed discussion of the art-historical aspects of the book, and Carla Shapreau contributed an explosive chapter about the plunder and restitution of the manuscript during WWII. Christopher de Hamel, Fellow Librarian of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge has contributed a preface covering the recent history and present ownership of the book. Shipping costs are high (for non-UK customers only) due to the packed weight of the publication, which is over 7Kg.