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Bibliographical Catalogue Of Books Privately Printed



This is a bibliographical catalogue of privately printed books, originally published in 1834. The catalogue is the work of John Martin, an antiquarian who later became librarian to the Duke of Bedford at Woburn Abbey. The catalogue covers a period of more than two centuries of small-scale British publishing, and is enlivened by an eye for curious detail. The catalogue also documents the books, bil... more details
Key Features:
  • A catalogue of privately printed books from 1834
  • Includes books, bills and pamphlets from regional presses of the time
  • Records the early membership and output of the Roxburghe, Maitland and Bannatyne clubs


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Description
This is a bibliographical catalogue of privately printed books, originally published in 1834. The catalogue is the work of John Martin, an antiquarian who later became librarian to the Duke of Bedford at Woburn Abbey. The catalogue covers a period of more than two centuries of small-scale British publishing, and is enlivened by an eye for curious detail. The catalogue also documents the books, bills and pamphlets which emerged from the regional presses of Martin's own day, and records the early membership and output of the Roxburghe, Maitland and Bannatyne clubs, which would in time become the foremost bibliophilic societies of Victorian Britain.

Reissued in its first edition of 1834, this catalogue gives a valuable insight into bibliographical activity in early nineteenth-century Britain. It is the work of the former bookseller John Martin (1791-1855), an antiquary who would later become librarian to the Duke of Bedford at Woburn Abbey. Martin's aim was to assemble a catalogue of books which were never intended for the open market, circulating only among the 'friends and connexions' of those who produced them. Spanning more than two centuries of small-scale British publishing, the resulting work is an extraordinarily eclectic resource, enlivened throughout by an eye for curious detail. The latter portion of the work documents the books, bills and pamphlets which emerged from the regional presses of Martin's own day, and records the early membership and output of the Roxburghe, Maitland and Bannatyne clubs, which would in time become the foremost bibliophilic societies of Victorian Britain.
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