<oai_dc:dc xmlns:oai_dc="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd"><dc:title>Here in thys boke afore ar contenyt the bokys of haukyng and huntyng with other plesuris dyuerse as in the boke apperis and also of cootarmuris a nobull werke. ...</dc:title><dc:creator>Berners, Juliana, 1388?- author</dc:creator><dc:date>[1486]</dc:date><dc:language>eng</dc:language><dc:description>BEIN Zi +9828: Imperfect: Fol. 12 (2d count, blank) wanting; fol. 45 mutilated and restored.</dc:description><dc:description>BEIN Zi +9828: Provenance: Bookplate of Alfred Barmore Maclay; armorial bookplates of the Earl of Carrysfort (Elton Hall) and David Wagstaff. Gift of David Wagstaff, December 1950.</dc:description><dc:description>BEIN Zi +9828: Binding: 19th-century(?) brown gold-tooled leather armorial binding. With arms of the Duke of Roxburghe.</dc:description><dc:description>Comprising four treatises--on hawking, hunting (in verse), the rules for forming coats of arms, and "the blasyng of arms" (the last an explication of existing heraldic devices).</dc:description><dc:description>Title from colophon, ²f9v, which continues: And here now endyth the boke of blasyng of armys translatyt and complylyt togedyr at Seynt albons the yere from thincarnacion of owre lorde Ih[es]u Crist. M.CCCC.lxxx vi.</dc:description><dc:description>Known as the Book of St. Albans.</dc:description><dc:description>Attributed to Juliana Berners, whose name appears in the colophon on leaf ¹f4r. It is likely that Berners was not responsible for the entire work; she probably contributed only a few observations to the sections on hunting and hawking.</dc:description><dc:description>The first British work to contain illustrations printed in more than one color; the first book on hunting to be printed in England; and the first known book attributed to an English woman. Also thought to be the earliest printed description in English of the properties of a good horse. Most of the information on hunting is culled from William Twiti's 14th-century treatise on venery.</dc:description><dc:description>Printed in red and black in two fonts of Gothic type; 117 woodcut armorials, for the most part printed in red, blue, black, and yellow; initials and paragraph marks printed in red or blue; the printer's mark (white on red) on recto of last leaf.</dc:description><dc:description>Signatures: a-c⁸ d⁴ e-f⁸; ²a-b⁶ ²c-e⁸ ²f¹⁰.</dc:description><dc:description>The first leaf is blank.</dc:description><dc:description>Text commences on a2r: In so moch that gentill men and honest persones haue grete delite in haukyng and desire to haue the maner to take haukys .</dc:description><dc:description>"Here in thys booke folowyng is determyned the lynage of coote armuris" begins new register.</dc:description><dc:description>BAC CR1614 .B47 1486+ Copy 1: Imperfect: lacks leaves 83, 88, and 90, which are supplied in pen-facsimile. Leaf 89 is partially supplied from another copy, the fragment inlaid and the missing text extended in pen-facsimile. Pen-facsimile may be by John Harris; "F.S. by J.S." is noted in graphite on the recto of the final leaf. Bound in 19th-century brown morocco, with gilt edges; binding by Clarke and Bedford. Bookplates: Littlecote, John Pierpont Morgan, Richard Bennett. The recto of the initial blank has manuscript notes in pen in two contemporary hands.</dc:description><dc:description>BAC CR1614 .B47 1486+ Copy 2: Imperfect: a single, fragmented leaf, mounted on card. Heavily wormed and possible evidence of being used as binding waste. From a collection of fifteenth- and sixteenth-century printed leaves compiled by Frederick Werther, with his enumeration stamped in ink.</dc:description></oai_dc:dc>