Domsa Károlyné, Fekete Gézáné, Kovács Mária (szerk.): Gondolatok a könyvtárban / Thoughts in the Library (A MTAK közleményei 30. Budapest, 1992)
KÖNYVTÁR ÉS HAGYOMÁNY – LIBRARY AND TRADITION
Rozsondai Marianne táblák a Magyar Tudományos Akadémia Könyvtárában és ezek könyvtörténeti vonatkozásai. 1985. (Kandidátusi értekezés) 20-23. p. 9. Rozsondai Marianne: Beiträge zu Württembergischen Renaissance-Einbänden mit slavischen Drucken des Primus Trüber. In: Gutenberg Jahrbuch 1972, 353-359. p. 10. Rozsondai Marianne: Anton Koberger működése és a Koberger-kötések problémája. Bp. 1978. 148 p. 75 tábla (A MTAK Közleményei 6[81.]) - Ehhez kapcsolódó előbbi publikációk: Über die Koberger-Einbände. In: Gutenberg Jahrbuch 1974; Beiträge zu den Koberger-Einbänden. In: Acta Musei Nationalis Pragae, Series C, Historia litterarum 1975; Anton Koberger és a 15. századi kiadói kötések. In: Magyar Könyvszemle 1977/2; Drei Kobergersche Makulaturblätter. In: Gutenberg Jahrbuch 1977. 11. Ocho siglos de encuademación Española. Huit siècles de reliure en Espagne. Spaanse boekbanden uit acht eeuwen. [Europalia 85 España.] (Bruxelles, Bibliotheca Wittockiana 1985.) 12. Rozsondai Marianne: Ein spanischer Einband im Mudéjar-Stil, ca. 1480. Beiträge zur Eibandkunde XI. In: Philobiblon. Eine Vierteljahrsschrift tur Buch- und Grafiksammler (35) 1991, Heft 3, 237-240. p. 13. Dennis E. Rhodes: Battista Guarini and a book at Oxford. In: Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, vol. 37, 1974, p. 349-353. 14. Rozsondai Marianne: A Hungárián Renaissance binding in Oxford and its counterpart in Budapest. In: The Book Collecter, vol. 40, No 3, Autumn 1991, p. 371-381. Summary M. Rozsondai: Bookbinding research in the Library of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences A systematic study and cataloging of historic bookbindings in the Department of Manuscripts and Rare Books of the Library began in 1969 and has resulted in about forty publications. The binding increases the value of the book, making it individual even in the age of printing, and may inform on its owner(s), on its place of use etc. Thus, e.g., the original bindings (54) on the works by the Franciscan friar Pelbartus de Themeswar (died 1504), the Hungarian author most widely-read abroad ever, witness his popularity throughout Europe. - A group of Gothic bindings (15) could be assigned to the Dominican monastic workshop in Vienna. 27 Gothic leather bindings in the Academy Library were linked to Anton Koberger, the printer, publisher, and bookseller in Nuremberg between 1470-1513. Some of the rarities are: a Gothic binding from Rebdorf, a Renaissance binding with a portrait of the Slovenian reformer Primus Truber, and a Spanish binding in mudejar style. An autograph letter from 1499 by Battista Guarini to a Hungarian bishop is pasted in an inclinable now in Keble College, Oxford.-Investigation of its binding 'revealed its Hungarian origin, which was supported by a related binding found in the Academy Library. 90 Thoughts in the library"