Posted 12 years ago
ho2cultcha
(5051 items)
i picked this up the other day and i don't know a wit of german, so i'm not sure of anything about it. can anyone tell me what it is and how old it is? thanks!
tiny little german [?] bible ? | ||
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Posted 12 years ago
ho2cultcha
(5051 items)
i picked this up the other day and i don't know a wit of german, so i'm not sure of anything about it. can anyone tell me what it is and how old it is? thanks!
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hmmm... thanks mustangtony and bellin68. i wonder why a german bible would be printed here in the usa?
Hi, all. Fascinating and beautiful work here. Wish I had time to work on this, but I don't. Must get back to Doniphan! Glad mustangtony's here on this. What a boon to have Tony working on this!
I did a very quick search and didn't find "baumgartlein" translated. I also couldn't open several interesting sites I found on the internet. These would have required me to download software, and I am not willing to do this. I don't have time to work on this one, but I have some observations to make....I can't enlarge the photos, so I really can't read the text well enough to work on it. If you would like more information on it, I suggest that you provide a better photos of the printed pages. : ) I think that this is perhaps a Catholic devotional work, not a bible. There are many Catholic Marian devotional works with titles like 'The Garden of Mary', etc. Notice the prominent image of Mary as the Queen of Heaven, surrounded by a wreath of flowers. I should dearly love to examine an enlarged image in better focus, one with the printed text beneath it legible. That could provide an important dating clue.
German immigrants tended to retain their German traditions and celebrate their native culture more than many other immigrant 'peoples' of this period, e.g., the Irish. Perhaps more than all other major immigrant groups. It would not be unusual to find a Catholic devotional work published in German in the USA during this period. If this were a copy of the divine office, I would expect it to be in Latin, or at least to feature a Latin text and a German transaltion of that text. Follows an interesting link that bears witness to the fact that German immigrants to the U.S. clung to their traditions and purchased German language devotional works published in the U.S.
http://aborer1962.blogspot.com/2009/11/this-never-made-it-to-print-either.html
Mustangtony, how sure are you that this is a Bible? I think that this might contain biblical text, but it doesn't look like a bible to me. Of course, I cannot read the title page!, and I am very ingnorant of German devotional works. Ho2cultcha, do you think that you could open up another Show and Tell entry for this item - and provide focused photos there of the title page, the illustration, and one page from the text? Also, you might examine the book for ackknowledgements and sources. Thanks! Good luck, guys! miKKo
Follows a link to a page that has a set of questions that elicit information important to dating an antique bible.
http://www.greatsite.com/appraisals/
Oh, Tony, thanks in very good part to your translation this morning, I was sure it wasn't a bible. It took me a long time to find out what Baumgartenlein meant - "Little Orchard". It is a prayer book. Yes, you are correct. I was ready for the 'B' not being a "B", and being careful with 'p', 'f', 'l', and the 'non-l-that-is-really-an-s', but it still threw me. Thank goodness for the online lettering guides - and thank goodness for the new photos. I must have missed your Czech prayerbook! I was just signing off tonight because I'm brain dead now, but I shall certainly give that book a good look tomorrow! I've never seen a Czech prayer book. : D Have a good evening, all! miKKo