Dietrich von Plieningen
The Brotherton Ovid
Incunabula – the first European printed books
The Brotherton Ovid
Condition and binding
Provenance - who owned the books?
Dietrich von Plieningen
Leonhard von Eck
Oswald von Eck
Georg Franz Burkhard Kloss
William Horatio Crawford
Edward Allen Brotherton
Other individuals associated with the books
Sebastian Linck
Philipp Melanchthon
Samuel Leigh Sotheby
J. Alexander Symington
Ovid the poet
The works of Ovid
Medieval and Renaissance reception
The annotations
Heroides
Amores
Art of Love and Cures for Love
Fasti
The drawings
List of illustrations to the Fasti
[Opera] Volume 1
[Opera] Volume 2
[Opera] Volume 3
Dietrich von Plieningen was born in 1453, probably in the town of Dillingen on the River Danube.
Dietrich began his studies at the University of Freiburg im Breisgau, but from 1473 he studied Roman civil law with his brother Johannes in Pavia.
The brothers moved to the University of Ferrara in 1476 and Dietrich obtained his PhD there in 1479. He married Anna von Memmersweiler, who, like him, had literary interests.
He lived chiefly at Heidelberg, at the Court of the Elector Palatine, and had a close relationship with local humanists and scholars.
Dietrich was responsible for illustrated first translations of Latin and Greek authors including Seneca, Sallust, Cicero, Juvenal, Horace and Lucian. These were important documents for the reception of classical antiquity in Germany.
After the death of his first wife in 1510, he married the much younger Felicitas von Freyberg. He died in Augsburg in 1520.