Præadamitæ. Sive exercitatio super versibus duode-cimo, decimotertio, et decimoquarto, capitis quinti Epistolæ D. Pauli ad Romanos. Quibus inducuntur primi homines ante Adamum conditi.[Men Before Adam, or, A Discourse upon the Twelfth, Thirteenth, and Fourteenth Verses of the Fifth Chapter of the Epistle of the Apostle Paul to the Romans]
Rare first edition of a work that was controversial from the moment of its publication, and of which Baruch Spinoza, a contemporary of the author, owned a copy in his personal library. Our copy is complete with its folding map of the Holy Land and its three texts, here bound in an order inverse to the usual: the Præadamitæ, which appears last, is in fact the first text.
Contemporary full brown calf, spine with five raised bands decorated with double gilt fillets and gilt fleurons, double gilt fillet to boards, all edges marbled.
Caps very skilfully restored, otherwise a very fine copy.
Dry stamp of the Gianni de Marco library on the first flyleaf. Early manuscript annotation on the title page: "Fait par le Sr de la Pebere en Hollande et bruslé à Paris" [Written by the Sr de la Pebere in Holland and burned in Paris].
Provenance: armorial bookplate of Balthazar-Henri de Fourcy (1669–1754), Abbé of Saint-Sever in the diocese of Coutances, subsequently of Saint-Wandrille and of the Priory of the Bons-Hommes.