Antiquae Linguae Britannicae, Nunc vulgo dictae Cambro-Britannicae, a suis Cymraecae vel Cambricae, ab aliis wallicae, et Linguae Latinae, Dictionarium Duplex [DAVIES John] 1567-1644 (of Mallwyd). WILLIAMS Thomas 1550?-1620? Publisher: R Young, Joan Davies Publish Year: 1632 Publish Place: London Illustrator: Unknown Category: Miscellaneous, Foreign Travel, Antiquarian Book, History, Reference Book No: 007210 Status: For Sale Book Condition: Very Good Size: 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall Jacket Condition: Binding: Hardcover Book Type: Unknown Edition: 1st Edition Inscription: Unknown £950.00 Add to Basket Ask a question Refer to a friend Additional information VG, 1st ed, 1632. In contemporary speckled calf, blind edge tooling, corners bumped. Re-backed, raised bands, gilt tooling, gilt titles to red calf labels, edges worn. Internally, [1], *2-*4, **-**4, A-P4. Aa-Iii6, device on title, royal coat of arms to verso, title soiled, slightly browned, 2V4 to end small worm hole, Pp1 corner torn away, bound without the inserted leaf of commendatory verses after 2*4, three columns to the page, armorial coat of arms to fpd (Gaddesden). Edited, and the first part compiled, by John Davies; the second part compiled by Thomas Williams, edited by Davies. (286*186 mm). (Rees 1551. Bohn 392. STC 6347). His published work belongs to the years 1620-1 and 1632-3. The 1620 edition of the Welsh Bible is known as Richard Parry's Bible, but it is thought today that much of the credit for the uniformity and correctness of the language used should be given to John Davies; he may have had something to do with the 1621 edition of the Welsh Book of Common Prayer as well. In 1621 too John Davies's own Welsh grammar, Antiquae Linguae Britannicae . Rudimenta, appeared. This was followed in 1632 by the Dictionarium Duplex, a dictionary (in two parts), the Welsh - Latin section being original work begun in 1593, while the Latin - Welsh section is an abridgement of a larger work by Thomas Wiliems of Trefriw, which is still in manuscript (Pen. MS. 228); John Davies himself spent almost a year in London when the dictionary was in the press. He was also the translator of Llyfr y Resolusion, 1632, and the editor of Y Llyfr Plygain a'r Catechisme, 1633. The Articulau, 1664, and Flores Poetarum Britannicorum, 1710, were not published until after his death. NLW DWB