From the holdings of the John Hay Library at Brown University
The José Toribio Medina Collection of Latin American Imprints, 1500-1800 is a most unusual treasure and is one of the rarest collections of Latin American and European imprints about Latin America. Itcomprises Latin American printed material published before 1800 selected from the great bibliographies of colonial Hispanic-American printing and European Americana compiled by José Toribio Medina. When the Brown University filmed these publications from the Biblioteca Nacional de Santiago de Chile and other South American libraries, it sought to capture only those publications that were absent from their extensive holdings. As result, the material presented here is remarkably rare and unlikely to be owned by any research library in the United States. The bulk of the collection includes imprints from colonial presses in Spanish America and is particularly strong in those areas that represent the earliest centers of publishing in Latin America: Mexico, Peru, and Guatemala. Imprints from the City of Mexico, the earliest center of printing in the Western Hemisphere (1539), occupy the nucleus of the collection with over 900 titles dating from 1554 through 1800. Peru, the second Spanish colony to acquire a printing press, is represented by roughly 240 imprints that date from 1592, while the140 imprints from Guatemala start in 1663. The majority of titles are related to religious matters (liturgy, devotions, theology), regulations (royal orders, viceregal decrees, pastoral letters, monastic rules) and lawsuits.
The collection also comprises a number of rare European American titles with Spanish imprints predominating. Dating from 1500 to 1800, the over 400 titles printed in various cities in Spain relating to the Americas or by American authors include chronicles, navigation manuals, natural history and sciences, literature and poetry, grammar, law suits, and relations of merits and services.
The Medina Collection contains an already established complete MARC record set that will become available from OCLC making this rare and important material particularly accessible for students and scholars. This collection is organized into 7 parts. With the exception of part 7, titles within each part are in chronological order of publication:
Part 1: Mexican Imprints, 1554-1750
30 reels
Part 2: Mexican Imprints, 1750-1800
35 reels
Part 3: Spanish Imprints, 1530-1646
34 reels
Part 4: Spanish Imprints, 1647-1692
31 reels
Part 5: Spanish Imprints, 1692-1788
48 reels
Part 6: Guatemalan Imprints: 1663-1800
9 reels
Part 7: Imprints from Peru, and Los Angeles with Additional Titles from Mexico, Spain, and Other Regions
61 reels
Complete Collection: 248 reels