Reprint of the 1709 Regensburg edition by the heirs of Mathias Kerner, published under a false imprint (actually printed in Rouen). This copy illustrated with 10 plates (numerous portraits), including 2 folding plates (the procession of the League and the estates of the League) and one in-text illustration. Title pages printed in red and black. Frontispiece repeated in all 3 volumes. Contemporary bindings in full polished calf. Spines with raised bands, richly decorated. Red morocco lettering-pieces and brown morocco volume numbering-pieces. Headcap of volume III restored. Split at head of upper joint of volume I. Paper browned to varying degrees throughout. A handsome, decorative copy. 18th-century armorial bookplate of Louise de Vivier.
Reprint of the early edition, augmented for the first time with Jean Godefroy's notes. It incorporates all previous additions, including those from Duchat's edition.
Among the foundational texts of this late 16th-century collection, the Catholicon is attributed to Pierre le Roy, the verses to Jean Passerat and Pierre Rapin, and the harangues to J. Gillot. This gathering of distinguished and talented men of letters confers considerable literary value upon the pamphlet (the Satire enjoyed successful editions into the 19th century). "At once a comedy, a pamphlet, and a coup d'état, the Satyre Ménippée paved Henry IV's way to the throne" (P. Larousse). The collection of historical, polemical, satirical, and literary texts assembled in the 18th-century editions constitutes the richest testimony to the history of the League.