Baronius Press: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 19:11, 4 August 2011
Baronius Press is a traditional Catholic book publisher with headquarters in London, England. It was founded in Glasgow, Scotland in 2003 by former St Austin Press editor, Ashley Paver and other young Catholics who had previously worked in publishing and printing.[1] The press takes its name from the Venerable Cardinal Cesare Baronius, a Neapolitan ecclesiastical historian who lived from 1538 to 1607. Its logo is a biretta, which together with a cassock forms the traditional image of a Catholic priest.
The original objective of Baronius Press was to raise the quality of traditional Catholic books in order to make them more appealing to a wider audience. Baronius Press aimed to achieve this goal by retypesetting classic Catholic books (rather than republishing facsimiles), and binding them using high quality coverings such as leather. The advantages of retypesetting are clearer text and the ability to use modern layouts.[2] However a few errors have crept into their books as a result.
The first publication of the Baronius Press was a new edition of the Douay-Rheims Bible. This was significant because no digitally typeset edition had been previously released. A pocket edition and a Psalms and New Testament edition followed, and in 2007 a giant size format was added to the range.[2] In 2008 their range of Bibles was expanded by a parallel Douay-Rheims / Clementine Vulgate, which included the appendix to the Old Testament which contained 3 & 4 Esdras and the Prayer of Manassah.
In 2004 Baronius Press published a new 1962 missal in cooperation with the Priestly Fraternity of St Peter, with an imprimatur from Bishop Fabian Wendelin Bruskewitz, for use at the traditional Roman mass. This was the first missal intended for use at the traditional mass with an imprimatur to be published in more than 35 years. A new edition coinciding with Pope Benedict XVI's motu proprio Summorum Pontificum was named the Motu Proprio edition of the 1962 Missal. It was noted in several Catholic newspapers and journals that, it is currently the only 1962 Missal published with a valid imprimatur. There has since been a revised edition in circulation, introduced in 2007.
Later that year, with the aim of expanding its range, Baronius released a series of leather bound Catholic classics. By the end of 2006, the company had over 40 titles in print with the release of a new paperback series called Christian Classics.
Baronius published a new edition of the Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary, complete with all Gregorian Chants in October 2007, being the first book to contain the complete music for the office. Websites complained that it contained several minor errors, and a revised edition correcting these was published at the end of 2008. In late March 2011 its much anticipated Latin-English Roman Breviary went to press, having been granted an imprimatur the previous December. The publisher expects the book to be available in early August 2011. The publication of the Breviary was hampered by numerous delays [3]. Both of the Breviary and Little Office conform to the editio typica of the Breviary of 1961.[2]
Hardback book list
- Douay Rheims Bible
- 1962 Roman Rite Missal (motu proprio edition)
- 1962 Little Office of the Blessed Virgin
- Way of Perfection by St Teresa of Avila
- Imitation of Christ by Thomas a Kempis
- Dolorous Passion by Anne Catherine Emmerich
- The Holy Mass by Dom Prosper Gueranger
- Rule of St Benedict by St Benedict
- Baronius is also publishing the Knox Version