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According to Schelhorn Johann Georg Schelhorn (1694–1773) was a German theologian and bibliographer mentioned on the previous page., from the beginning it belonged to the Hohendorf library The library of Baron Georg Wilhelm von Hohendorf (c. 1670–1719), a celebrated book collector whose collection was eventually acquired for the Imperial Library in Vienna., but truly it has now reached our Imperial Library in Vienna original: "bibliothecam Caesaream Vienae" — The Imperial Library of the Habsburgs, now the Austrian National Library..
According to Vogt Johann Vogt (1695–1764) was the author of a famous catalog of rare books., copies are also preserved in the Mencken, Uffenbach, Krafft, and Schalbruck libraries, as well as the University Library of Wittenberg. Finally, it is also found in the Mosheim and Lilienthal libraries of Königsberg original: "Regis montium" — literally "King's Mountain," the Latin name for the city of Königsberg, now Kaliningrad..
This famous book was printed by the printer Oporinus Johannes Oporinus (1507–1568) was a renowned Basel printer who published works by reformers and humanists, including the first Latin translation of the Qur'an and Vesalius's anatomy textbook.. See Schelhorn, Literary Delights, page 1106.
The author was Caelius Secundus Curio Caelius Secundus Curio (1503–1569) was an Italian humanist, educator, and Protestant reformer who fled to Switzerland to escape the Inquisition.. See David Clément, Volume VII, page 369. Regarding the "History of Caelius Secundus Curio and his Family," find it in Schelhorn’s Literary Delights, Volume XIV, pages 325–402.