In Europe and Europeanness Isabella Walser-Bürgler offers an account of the formation of early modern Europe (c. 1400–1800) based on the most common source material of the time, Neo-Latin texts.
VITA Divi Hieronymi, presbyteri, a Marco Marulo edita: with an abridg-
ment of his miracles collected by Cyril, Bishop of Nazareth. Vellum;
XVIth cent. Small Quarto. [Add. 18,029.]
1.° Albii Tibulli elegiarum libri quatuor. — 2.° Sexti Aurelii Propertii elegiarum libri quatuor. — 3.° Valerii Catulli , Veronensis, liber epigrammatum variorumque poëmatum. — 4.° Epistola Sapphus ad Phaonem. — 5.° Petronii Arbitri fragmenta, quae edita sunt. — 6.° Moretum, carmen quod Virgilio tribuitur. — 7.° Claudiani carmen de phoenice - 1401-1500 - manuscrits
Cornelius Nepos: Vitae imperatorum, sive De vita illustrium virorum. Venice: Nicolaus Jenson, 8 Mar. 1471. Double page opening of text ([5v-6r]) with washed out marginal annotations; some faintly printed letters are over-written in ink. Sp Coll Hunterian Be.3.2.
Marulic, Marco, 1450-1524
Marci Maruli Spalatensis Evangelistarium
Venetiis : industria ac summa digentia Francisci de Consortibus... in aedibus Jacobi Leuci impressorum... : impensis vero Melchioris Sessae, 1516
In hoc volumine habentur haec Cornucopiae : sive linguae Latinae commentarii diligentissime recogn. atque ... emendati, .. / [Niccolo Perotti] Venetiis : Manutius & Torresanus, 1513
Eyb, Albrecht von (1420-1475) - Oratorum omnium, poetarum, istoricorum, ac philosophorum eleganter dicta ([Reprod.]) / per clarissimum virum Albertum de Eiib in unum collecta - 1475 - monographies
This project on the textual hand-with-pointing-finger symbol--what I will call the "manicule" for reasons to be explored below--grows out of a book-in-progress called Used Books: Reading Renaissance Marginalia, which is the product of my long-standing interest in the marks that readers make in books, particularly during the first century or two after the invention of printing.
Nicolaus Signorilis Romanus, Poggius Florentinus, Cyriacus Anconitanus, Dalmatius Berardencus Subalpinus (1), Fclix Felicianus Veronensis, Michael Ferrarinius Regiensis, Joannes Marcanova Paduanus, Laurentius Pehem Germanus (2), Jucundus Veronensis, Marcus Marulus Spalatensis (3), Hartmannus Schedel Norimbergensis (4), alii, quos nominare omitto, ab extremo saeculo XIV ad initia decimi sexti veteres inscriptiones describere vel ab aliis descriptas colligere aggressi sunt.
PETRARCA I PETRARKIZAM U HRVATSKOJ KNJIŽEVNOSTI -- Zbornik radova s međunarodnog simpozija, Split: Književni krug, 2004. Traduzione: Nicoletta Russotti Babić
Neven Jovanović, From Croatian into Latin in 1510: Marko Marulić, Regum Delmatię atque Croatię gesta. A paper for the Cambridge Society for Neo-Latin Studies symposium Neo-Latin and Translation in the Renaissance (Clare College, Cambridge Monday 20 - Tuesday 21 September 2010)
Dictorvm factorvmqve memorabilivm libri sex, sive de bene beateqve vivendi institutione [Digitalna reprodukcija izd. Institucije Coloniae Agrippinae, 1609]
Hic et Hildeboldus diaconus pisciculos, quos de flumine reticulo traxerant in solitudine assaturi, ignem concinnabant, cum interim ursus mirae magnitudinis <qui> propius accedens diaconum quidem terruisset, iubente Gallo, ut ligna igni inferret, obedivit, ut Marcus Marulus Spalatensis[9] memoriae prodidit. Quod sane hic referendum duximus, ut qui praepositis suis reniti audent, tali exemplo magis confundantur, quando, et sylvestres ferae iussa sanctorum revereantur, et observent.
Julio César Santoyo, "Autotraducciones: Una perspectiva histórica",
Meta : journal des traducteurs / Meta: Translators' Journal, Volume 50, numéro 3, Août 2005, p. 858-867
URI : http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/011601ar
M. Marulić, und B. Glavičić. Hrvatski latinisti, knj. 7 Academia Scientiarum et Artium Slavorum Meridionalium ; Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti, Zagrabiae = Zagreb, (1974)