A third collection of tracts, . proving the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the only true God. And disproving the doctrine of three almighty real subsisting persons, minds or spirits. Giving also an account of the nominal Trinity; that is, three modes, subsistences, or somewhats in God, called by schoolmen persons; and of the judgment of the Fathers and Catholick Church for the first 150 years. Of which tracts the following pages give the titles.
Thomas Firmin (1632-1697)
Category
Books
Date
1695
Materials
Measurements
201 x 162 x 31 mm
Place of origin
England
Collection
Wimpole, Cambridgeshire
NT 3144930
Summary
Full description
Orientation: Vertical Text Substrate: white, handmade, laid, paper Ink/Pigment: black printing ink Type: BOUND BOOKBinding Type: Inboard binding, raised supports Date of Binding: contemporary Binder's Name: BritishEnd Leaves: sewn single fold within an outside hook of plain, white, handmade, laid paper, the stub and outermost full leaf pasted to the boardStructure: BritishEdges: plain-cut, sparsely sprinkled with red and brown pigment, polished Spine Lining: moderate round, quadrant joints, no visible liningsEnd Bands: sewn L-R 2x2 in blue and white thread over a rolled paper core, the slips cut off at the joints. Bookmark: NoneBoards: 3 mm paper couched laminate rope fibre millboards, no back corneringCovering: Full brown tanned polished calf, the outer frame sprinkled with large drops of black pigmentTooling Spine: blind-tooled 2-line tool at head and tail of each panel; Tooling Sides: blind-tooled 2-line border frame with single inner frame with external corner tools, gold-tooled roll on board edgesFurniture: NoneEnclosure: NoneBinding Notes:
Bibliographic description
[4],68,20,35,[1],36,23,[1],47,[1],78,[2],40p. . 4to.. Former shelfmarks: Tt [pencil]; Qq1.8 [brown ink]; Tt.6.26 [black ink].. Provenance: Armorial bookplate (between 1733 and 1754): Philip Lord Hardwicke Baron of Hardwicke in ye County of Gloucester [i.e. Philip Yorke, 1st Earl of Hardwicke (1690-1764), created Baron Hardwicke, 1733, and Earl of Hardwicke, 1754].. Binding: Seventeenth-century Cambridge panelled style calf binding, sewn onto five raised bands.
Makers and roles
Thomas Firmin (1632-1697) Stephen Nye (1648-1719) Thomas Smalbroke Matthew Tindal (1653-1733) Matthew Tindal (1653-1733)