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22x15cm. VIII+407 pages. Hardcover. Cover corners and edges worn. corners and edges slightly bumped. Spine slightly yellowing and rubbed. Ex-library copy with usual marks. Pen and pencil inscription on few pages - NO damage to text. Binding partly visible between few pages. Few pages slightly wavy. Pages slightly yellowing. Else in good condition.
1) 13 SS. auf 7 Bll. (num. 75-88). 8vo. 2) Titel und 14 SS. auf 10 Bll. 4to. 3) 2 SS. auf Doppelblatt. 4to. Mit zwei Beilagen (s. u.). 1) "Ein Fastnachtmärchen". Lyrische Dichtung in Versen. - 2) "Das Drama der Pohlen. Ein geschichtlicher Abriß seines Ursprungs sowie fernere Ausbildung seines Verfalls & seines Aufschwungs in die Gegenwart". Fragment auf 4 num. Doppelbll. (3,4,6,7). - 3) Gedicht in polnischer Sprache mit Auszeichnung des Versmaßes. - Beilagen: 1) "Das Jahr 1478, in V Abtheilungen. I. Fremde Fürsten. I --- XXV". 27 teils beidseitig beschriebene Bll. 4to und kl.-8vo. Urkundenabschriften von u. a. Schreiben des Herzogs von Venedig an Kaiser Friedrich IV., von Friedrich IV. an Kg. Christian von Dänemark, einer Erklärung von Kg. Matthias Corvinus von Ungarn, einer Erklärung von Friedrich IV. bzgl. einer an Kg. Matthias zu entrichtenden Geldsumme etc. - 2) "II. Deutsche Reichsstände. XXVI --- LXXXI". 67 teils beidseitig beschriebene Bll. 4to und kl.-8vo. Urkundenabschriften von u. a. einem Gunstbrief Friedrichs IV. für das Dominikanerkloster zu Gent, einem Schreiben Friedrichs an den Erzbischof von Salzburg, an den Kurfürsten von Brandenburg, an Erzherzog Sigmund von Österreich etc.
4to, xxxv,480pp., 16 plates, orig. cloth, a fine copy. An inquiry into the origins of the manuscripts in the Harleian Collection. The introduction provides a short history of the collection, but the bulk of the work consists of two lists: the first arranged alphabetically by previous owner, place of production, etc.; the second giving the same information in bridged form, but arranged numerically.
This work from three of the most-noted Dead Sea Scrolls scholars brings the ancient scrolls of Qumran vividly to life. Translating and deciphering virtually every legible portion of the fragmented scrolls, Michael Wise, Martin Abegg Jr., and Edward Cook provide commentary throughout the text that places the scrolls in their true historical context. In their introduction, they not only present an overview of the often surprising contents of the scrolls, but also discuss what is perhaps their greatest mystery: who authored them and why.513p. bibliography, index of MS. Slight scuffing to cover, else fine. Book
2 vols. illus., facsims., music, port. 28 cm. Paperback Very good condition "Enlarged and corrected republication of the work first published by Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J., in 1955." Bibliography: v. 1, p. 41-43.
8vo. Latin manuscript (brown ink) on paper. Title-page, (3), (1 blank), 115 (not 111), (1 blank) pp., (4 blank leaves), (6) pp. of index. With 8 hand-drawn pen-and-ink, grey wash plates (some folding). Contemporary full calf chipped at extremeties with remains of a giltstamped spine label "...me Pueper". All edges red. Unpublished obstetrics manual, handwritten and fully illustrated by a German physician of the 1740s. The meticulous calligraphy of the headlines, the justified margins and precise paragraph indentations imitate a book printed in a classical Roman typeface, while the text is written in an easily legible, educated and appealingly regular round Latin hand. - The book is arranged in two separate sections, or "treatises": the first, longer one includes all of the illustrations and is more overtly didactic, following a question-answer pattern, while the second one (entitled "De regimine gravidarum, puerperarum, nec non infantum, recens natorum; item, de morbis et affectibus illorum"), provides a more scholarly discussion of specific ailments and treatments of the mother and baby, including medical prescriptions. The various chapters are concerned with signs of pregnancy, how to turn breech babies, caesarean sections, stillbirth, teratology, but also morning sickness, piles, sciatica, and lactation; the fine illustrations include cross-sections of the womb showing the fetus in various positions, the placenta, and the female genital organs as well as a grown-up hermaphrodite displaying ambiguous genitalia, conjoined twins and other freaks of nature. - Franz Adam Wolfgang von Winter was born in Dingolfing, Southern Bavaria, likely some time before 1720. Already equipped with a degree in philosophy, he apparently practised as a physician at Landsberg, some 20 miles distant, before deciding to take the degree of Medical Doctor at the University of Altdorf near Nuremberg. Without previously having studied there, he matriculated on 10 December 1744 as a doctoral candidate and passed his viva five days later (cf. Die Matrikel der Universität Altdorf [Würzburg 1912], p. 582, no. 17465). His inaugural dissertation "De Cautione in Observationibus Physico-Medicis Adhibenda", an investigation of the caution that must apply in medical observations, was printed that same year by J. G. Meyer in Altdorf, with a congratulatory poem by professor Johann Jacob Kirsten. The examination would appear to have been little more than a formality; at least it does not seem to have overly preoccupied the medical student who almost simultaneously found the time to prepare the present manuscript: a long, lovingly illustrated manual abounding with a sort of practical detail quite absent from the same author's very generally worded 17-page dissertation. In the manuscript, Winter calls himself "Phil. & Med. Doct. Phys. t. t. & Practic. in Landsperg, Anno MDCCXLIV", which would date at least the completion of this text within the last two weeks of 1744 following his graduation from Altdorf. Winter's further career must remain the subject of further research: he is not recorded in the biographical dictionaries of noteworthy physicians such as Hirsch & Hübotter and may have died before the middle of the century. - Spine-ends chipped; corners bumped; hinges weak. First gathering loosened; insignificant brownstains to a few leaves, but very well preserved. A charming survival.
3 Folded sheets making up 2pp., of printed text and 2pp., of plates, loose in grey printed wrappers as issued, a nice copy.
pp. (12), 555. Illustrated with numerous folding tables, plans and diagrams. Very dampstained. Inked ownership of Sam Carpenter, Dec. 2nd 1803. Samuel Carpenter, was born in 1765, at Lancaster County, PA. He was a farmer for many years. In 1807 he moved to Lancaster for the purpose of having better opportunities for the education of his children. Here he engaged for some years in the business of inn-keeping. Lancaster at the time being the seat of the State government, and a great resort for strangers from all parts of the State, he developed wealth and influential connections. He was appointed an Alderman, and not long thereafter was elected Mayor of the City of Lancaster, a position to which he was frequently reelected. 205mm. Original full leather binding, very worn. Front board fragile. Sixth Edition. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! VERIA BX 1
229pp.with numerous illustrations in bl/w and in colour, 35cm., hardcover (editor's green cloth with gilt lettering at spine), illustrated dustwrapper, good condition, S84544
Complete in 2 volumes: xviii,846 + viii,991 pp., text in Latin, 30cm., solid uniform hardcover bindings in black cloth, original softcovers preserved and bound in, small stamp on title page, text and interior are clean and bright, in the series "Bibliotheca Apostolica Vaticana Codices Manuscripti recensiti" vol.34, good condition, weight: 6.3kg., [Contains the description of 500 codices from the collection of queen Christina of Sweden (1626-1689), which the Vatican purchased from her heirs in 1690], R107219
Oblong folio, 61pp., one of 55 copies, 22 facsimile plates, cont. green velvet-backed buckram, uncut. Provenance: Ownership ink signature of 'Mrs Astley Cooper, Bentley, Burnham, Bucks' to front endpaper; bookplate of John H. Baker.
Manuscript signed discourse written at the onset of the Panic of 1837, concerning the ethics and obligations of the Mechanics' and Manufacturers' Bank in Trenton which had been established less than three years earlier, by respected Trenton attorney and Whig politician William Halsted (1794-1878) who had recently been elected a Member of the United States Representatives to represent New Jersey, signed and dated in the original by the author. 8vo. 8 pages in manuscript, penned recto and verso, each leaf affixed to the next with two spots of glue to upper margin, measuring approximately 20 x 25 cm, and featuring an embossed cameo of a three-masted barque. Some creasing, otherwise in very good condition. At the request of the Directors of the Mechanics' and Manufacturers' Bank of Trenton, from a legal standpoint, Halsted answers three specific questions regarding the bank's refusal (inability) to redeem paper currency into specie (silver or gold coins). His erudite assessment surely resulted in careful deliberation by the members of the board, while it provides for us now a scarce period perspective of the historic financial crisis. Halsted's discourse is dated 8 June 1837. A financial assessment of the Mechanics' and Manufacturers' Bank in Trenton was reviewed at the Legislature's General Assembly of 24 October 1837. Following the publication of a detailed banking statement, as seen in the volumes of the Legislature, the State Gazette of 22 December 1837 published this remark, "The condition of The Mechanics Bank is now before the Community and it is proved to be worthy of great confidence." William Halstead (1794-1878) was an American Whig Party politician who represented New Jersey at large in the United States House of Representatives from 1837-1839. Halstead was elected as a Whig to the Twenty-Fifth United States Congress (4 March 1837 to 3 March 1839). Manuscript
Very Good English Original autograph letter signed (ALS) 'W. Gifford Palgrave', to "Dear Joseph", regretting he is unable to make the journey William Palgrave Gifford. Speaker's Court, the Palace, Westminster, undated. 15x10 cm. In English. 2 pp. in good condition, with a separate photographic portrait of Palgrave. William Gifford Palgrave was an English priest, soldier, traveller, and Arabist, author of A Personal Narrative of a Year's Journey through Central and Eastern Arabia (1862-1863). Palgrave was born in Westminster. He was the son of Sir Francis Palgrave and Elizabeth Turner, daughter of the banker Dawson Turner. His brothers were Francis Turner Palgrave, Inglis Palgrave and Reginald Palgrave. He was educated at Charterhouse School, then occupying its original site near Smithfield, and under the head-mastership of Dr Saunders, afterwards Dean of Peterborough. Among other honours he won the school gold medal for classical verse, and proceeded to Trinity College, Oxford, where he obtained a scholarship, graduating First Class Lit. Hum., Second Class Math., 1846. He went straight from college to India and served for a time in the 8th (The King's) Regiment of Foot, Bombay Native Infantry, H.I.C. Shortly after this, he became a Roman Catholic, was ordained a priest, and joined the order of the Jesuits, (Society of Jesus), and served as a member of the order in India, Rome, and in Syria, where he acquired a colloquial command of Arabic. He convinced his superiors to support a mission to the interior of Arabia, which at that time was terra incognita to the rest of the world. He also gained the support of the French emperor, Napoleon III, representing to him that better knowledge of Arabia would benefit French imperialistic schemes in Africa and the Middle East. Palgrave then returned to Syria, where he assumed the identity of a travelling Syrian physician. Stocking his bags with medicines and small trade goods, and accompanied by one servant, he set off for Najd, in north-central Arabia. He travelled as a Christian. The service he would do for the Society of Jesus and the French empire would be as a spy, not a missionary. Palgrave became friendly with Faisal bin Turki bin Abdullah Al Saud while in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Faisal's son, Abdul Rahman bin Faisal, asked Palgrave to get him strychnine. Palgrave believed that Abdul wanted to poison his father. Palgrave was accused of espionage and was almost executed for his Christian beliefs.
Very Good English Original autograph letter signed (ALS) by Ainsworth. Ravenscourt Villa, Hammersmith, 6 August 1878. 2 p. 18x12 cm. folds, occasional light soiling. William Francis Ainsworth, (1807-96), geologist, surgeon, and Eastern traveler, was an original Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and published various works, including Observations on the Pestilential Cholera (1832).
Geillustreerde kartonomslag in kleur,160 x 240mm., 228pp., 31 afbeeldingen in kleur en z/w. ISBN 9789072474834. KANTL-colloquium 30 november. 2007 is geredigeerd en ingeleid door Frank Willaert en bevat studies van Herman Brinkman, Ad Leerintveld en Henk Porck, Renee Gabriel en Johan Oosterman, Karl Kugle, Ike de Loos, Joris Reynaert en Noel Geirnaert. Nieuw boek.
Two volumes, complete. The standard monograph and catalogue. An important collection. Dozens of manuscrits described in great detail. Large 4to. Original wraps. LIKE NEW.
Hardback, XVI 240 p., 23 b/w ill. 14 colour ill., 156 x 234 mm, Languages: English. ISBN 9782503545493. Materially engaged readings of medieval manuscripts that build up such concepts as the philology of smell and touching the past through sensitivity to the handling of books. This collection of essays makes an original contribution to medieval manuscript studies through deep engagement with the material side of book creation. The volume brings together major scholars of medieval manuscripts with leading contemporary book artists. The result is a ground-breaking collection which will be of interest both for its methodological implications and for the insights that the case studies provide. In a sequence of interconnected essays, experts in the field of literature, history, art, and manuscript studies enact readings of medieval manuscripts that incorporate extreme attention to the materiality of the object of their study. While the digital revolution has provided unparalleled visual access to medieval manuscripts, these essays are attentive to what has got left behind-not just the aura of the original, but also the engagement of the other senses, such as the feel of the binding, the heft of the volume, the smell of the parchment, or the sound of the pages. By bringing together experienced medievalist scholars with practicing book artists of today, this volume brings back an artisanal sense of the complete book to an understanding of medieval manuscripts.
Small 4to, [ii],250pp., 12 chromolithography plates of bindings (2 stuck to the preceding page), orig. printed wrappers, re-backed, 2,347 lots. Nixon, Five Centuries of English Bookbinding. "Important sources for the history of bookbinding...". De Ricci, p.177.
- Grasset, Paris 1998, 14x22,5cm, broché. - Nouvelle édition, strictement hors commerce, pour laquelle il n'a pas été tiré de grands papiers. Dos et plats marginalement et légèrement insolés. Envoi autographe daté et signé de François Weyergans à son amie Ulrike Bergweiler, alors secrétaire d'Antoine Gallimard : "Exemplaire d'Ulrike B. offert par l'auteur. François. 27.2.98." [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
Alphen a.d.Rijn, C.Haasbeek 1937, (xii +) 148pp.+ 3pp.ills., bit used & some spots on cover, rare, [dissertation - doctoraatsthesis in de letteren en wijsbegeerte aan de R.U.Leiden, 22/10/1937]
FIRST AND ONLY EDITION of this extremely early catalogue of Sanskrit manuscripts on palm leaves and on paper. 80 pp. Lengthy scholarly introduction. Dozens of manuscripts described. Wesdin (1748-1806), a Carmelite, was sent to Malabar as a missionary in 1774. After returning to Europe in 1789, he wrote many important works introducing India to the West. Printed on fine laid paper. Sanscrit types appear sporadically throughout. 4to. Attractively bound in recent marbled boards. ENTIRELY UNCUT. FINE AND BRIGHT. An important and very rare book.
TWO VOLUME SET. The Sarajevo Haggadah is a 14th-century illuminated manuscript which is considered by many to be the single most beautiful and elaborate manuscript of the Sephardic tradition, and one of the most prized articles of Jewish art in general. The first volume contains the full facsimile edition of the manuscript, complete with the numerous illustrations and decorations for which it is famous. The second volume, a small booklet written in English, serves as an appendix for the English-speaking reader and contains a short introduction to the text, page-by-page translation of the Hebrew text and a short explanation for each illustration. [FACSIMILE]: 237x167mm. 105 facsimile pages. Brown leather Hardcover laid in marbled board slipcase. Embossed lettering on front cover. Slipcase edges and spine wrinkled/bumped. Spine upper edge slightly wrinkled. [APPENDIX]: 235x170mm. 44 pages. Illustrated Softcover. Cover corners and rear cover upper edge worn. [SUMMARY]: Both volumes, containing a facsimile and an English appendix to the celebrated Sarajevo Haggadah, are in very good condition.