He is named in the colophon as one of the publishers and Isaac is named on the title page as the printer. |
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This page, the colophon, contains the name of the artist, the date of completion, and the name of the person who commissioned the book. |
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A note in the colophon material states that this comes from a collaborative text-sound installation. |
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In his long commentary on that adage, Erasmus described the genesis and significance of the anchor and dolphin in the Aldine colophon. |
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According to the long colophon by the artist himself, this work is a stylistic exercise composed in the company of friends. |
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In bilingual, tumbled reports, the ISSN for English reports is used on both the English and French colophon pages. |
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Bilingual, side-by-side reports have no letter after the catalog number, and the ISSN for English reports is used on the colophon page. |
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The colophon at the end of the third volume provides the date of the manuscript without mentioning the copyist's name. |
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The colophon of the Qur'an mentions the deed of gift by the governess of Prince Badis to the Great Mosque of Kairouan. |
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In the circle the text from the colophon is written in a golden cursive script, which stands out against a red background. |
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The correct citation is located at the bottom of the colophon page and above the abstract and the résumé. |
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A frame on the colophon page divides the space into three: two rectangular bands and a square containing a circle. |
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The zoomorphic and anthropomorphic letters in the artist's colophon are a manifestation of his rich imagination. |
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When the two were combined, the term colophon was retained. |
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From this grew the printer's colophon, or tailpiece, which gave the title of the book, the date and place of printing, the name and house device of the printer, and a bit of self-advertisement. |
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The colophon indicates that Eliezer b. Samuel served as proofreader, this being the only mention of a co-worker in the books printed by Gershom Soncino. |
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A colophon to the KEBRA NAGAST states that it is a translation from an Arabic version made in A. D. 1225 from a Coptic original in the patriarchal library of Alexandria. |
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By about 1480, the information of the colophon began to appear at the front of the book as a title page, along with the title itself and the name of the author. |
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In his colophon he recorded the names of the four men who produced the Lindisfarne Gospels. |
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Luttrell, a wealthy land owner, felt his death was coming and wanted to account for all his actions, as is stated in the colophon of the psalter. |
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Ultimately, by about 1480, part of the contents of the colophon was transferred to the blank cover page at the front of the book, thereby initiating the title page as it is now known today. |
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In most countries, the colophon now appears on the page opposite the title page and consists of a one-sentence statement that the book was printed by a given printer at a given location. |
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A sampling of topics turns up birth and death statements, colophon, letterforms or allographs, primitive codicology and palaeography, quire, scribal etiquette, and vignette. |
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The colophon of Codex 66 of Merton College, Oxford says that Scotus was also at Cambridge, but we do not know for certain if this is true, or, if it was, when he was there. |
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A colophon at the end declares that no one is able to recite the work in full without a book, the level of detail being too much for the memory to handle. |
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He comes to the creation of man, and makes him the Colophon, or conclusion of all things else. |
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