3 371 résultats
ix + 355pp., 28cm., softcover, good condition, C99980
First Edition, large 8vo, xiv,361pp.,12 plates, orig. cloth. Describes some 662 items in detail (525 of which are books).
First edition, viii,442pp., from the library of Professor Birrell, orig. cloth.
First Edition, 4to, [iv],188pp., from the Birmingham Law Society, with stamps, library buckram. The collection of 499 manuscripts was purchased of the representatives of Francis Hargrave, together with his library of books, by a Vote of the House of Commons, passed July 1st, 1813. It consists almost exclusively of Law.
First Edition, 4to, [iv],188pp., a British Library duplicate with a couple of their small faint stamps, orig. boards, upper cover detached, uncut. The collection of 499 manuscripts was purchased of the representatives of Francis Hargrave, together with his library of books, by a Vote of the House of Commons, passed July 1st, 1813. It consists almost exclusively of Law.
First Edition, 2 vols., folio, half-titles, 2 fine engraved portraits of Harley, [ii],16,21-29pp., leaf (numbered vii-viii), [515] leaves; [ii],[455] leaves, recent green morocco, five raised bands, ruled in gilt, leather labels. Harley was one of the greatest collectors of his day. He began collecting in about 1705 and by the time of his death in 1724 he had built up a magnificent library containing over 40,000 books and 6,000 manuscripts. In this he was greatly assisted by his librarian, Humphrey Wanley, whose diary for the years 1715-26 contains much interesting detail about the growth of the library. Harley's collection passed on his death to his son Edward Harley, 2nd Earl of Oxford, who continued to add to it during his lifetime. Like his father he was a keen collector and was a ready and often over-generous buyer. By the time of his death he had increased the library to a total of over 50,000 books, 41,000 prints, 350,000 pamphlets, and 7,639 manuscript volumes. The books, prints, and pamphlets were bought in 1742 by Thomas Osborne the bookseller for ?13,000. The manuscripts were sold to the nation in 1753 for ?10,000, and now form the Harleian Collection in the British Library. This catalogue was begun in 1708, by Humphrey Wanley, and on his death in 1726, after an interval of some years, it was resumed by Mr. Casley, continued by Mr. Hockley, and completed by the succeeding librarians of the British Museum.
Large folio, First Edition, some moderate age-staining, a handful of leaves expertly remargined; strongly bound in early twentieth-century terracotta buckram, gilt back, uncut, a very good, bright, clean, crisp copy. Sold from an institution with its bookplate on front paste-down and small, neat stamp on title verso. The Lansdowne MSS are a significant named collection forming part of the holdings of the British Library. They include State papers and correspondence of Lord Burghley, Papers of Sir Julius Caesar, Papers of Dr. White Kennett (his manuscripts passed to James West and so to Lansdowne), historical papers from the 15th-18th centuries, William Petyt's parliamentary papers and papers of legal interest, and topographical and heraldic collections of great importance. The MSS were purchased by the british Museum at Sotheby's auction in 1807. The catalogue comprises: Part I: The Burghley Papers; Part II: the remaining papers (each part having its own separate index), together with a transcript of the Commons Address, the Royal Commission with Caley's Order and a detailed contectural Preface by Henry Ellis. A REMARKABLY FRESH, CRISP COPY OF AN INVALUABLE AND EXTREMELY SCARCE WORK.
88pp.of which 8pp. plates out of text, 22cm., softcover, dustwrapper, bilingual: Malayam-English, very good condition, X85008
Folio, First Edition, on laid paper, some minor spotting (mainly marginal) and some light offsetting in the text; mid-nineteenth century half calf, marbled boards with some shelf-scuffing to paper surfaces, sprinkled edges, back tooled in gilt and blind with five raised bands, very neatly rebacked with old backstrip laid down, a very good, clean copy. THIS COPY WAS FORMERLY IN THE LIBRARY OF SIR ANTHONY WAGNER, ARGUABLY THE TWENTIETH CENTURY'S MOST EMINENT GARTER KING OF ARMS. ITS BEARS HIS SIGNED HOLOGRAPH INSCRIPTION 'Anthony R. Wagner, Portcullis Pursuivant of Arms, 4 Oct 1933' ON FRONT FREE ENDPAPER. In the late eighteenth century, the BM thoroughly revised the previous Cottonian catalogue (Smith, 1696) under the principal editorship of Planta. The mammoth revision was completed in 1800 and published on the instructions of the Royal Commission on public records. It remains the best published catalogue. Joseph Planta (1744-1827) succeeded his father as assistant librarian at the BM in 1773, was promoted to Keeper of Manuscripts in 1776 and finally to Principal Librarian from 1799-1827. See CDNB: III, 1397. Interestingly the printer, Luke Hansard, began printing the 'House of Commons Journal' in 1774; it is commonly known as 'Hansard' to this day. A SPLENDID ASSOCIATION COPY. Gross/Graves, 994.
First Edition, 4to, xvi,148pp., some light foxing to first and last few leaves, frontis., portrait, 27 illustrs., buckram, spine lettered in gilt. Pfaff, pp.288-91. The last of MRJ's catalogues of medieval MSS to be published.
First Edition, 4to, xvi,148pp., some light foxing to first and last few leaves, frontis., portrait, 27 illustrs., orig. buckram, gilt. Pfaff, pp.288-91. The last of MRJ's catalogues of medieval MSS to be published.
4to, xii, 102pp., 161 illustrs., orig. cloth, d.w.
Very Good Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928) Original manuscript unpublished four autograph letters signed (ALS) by Hikmet Turhan Daglioglu to Halide Nusret Zorlutuna, (1901-1984), who was a Turkish poetess, and his husband Aziz Vecihi Zorlutuna who was a Turkish soldier. Three letters in Ottoman script, one is in modern Turkish with Latin letters. Dated 1943 with different periods of this year. Full. Approx. 20 lines on each paper. Daglioglu was a Turkish author, intellectual, museologist, specialist on Aleppo history, and deputy of Antalya city. A greetings content about his promotion to brigadier general in one letter which was written to Halide Nusret's husband, and interesting literary discussions on other three letters to Halide Nusret.
8vo (150 x 251 mm). Arabic (and Persian) manuscript on paper. 123 leaves. 19 lines, written in Naskhi script in black ink in more than one hand, some underlinings in red; some commentaries written diagonally in outer margins. Illustrated with numerous diagrams, mostly coloured, and one illuminated headpiece in colours and gold. Near-contemporary citron morocco with stamped central medallions of gilt leather onlay decorated with floral ornaments, doublures with gilt-painted central medallions incorporating intertwining floral and vegetal motifs on a dark green ground. Baha’ al-Din Muhammad ibn Husain al-'Amili (1547-1622) was an astronomer, mathematician and philosopher who was born in Baalbek, Lebanon and studied in Persia. He became Sheikh al-Islam under the Safavid Shah 'Abbas I (reigned 1587-1629) in Isfahan. The first treatise in the present collection is his "Khulasat al-hisab" (Essence of Arithmetics). The Arabic text was composed ca. 1600 CE and was dedicated to Prince Hamza, grandson of the Safavid Shah Tahmasp I (reigned 1524-75). - The second treatise, in Arabic, is entitled "Tashrih al-aflak" (Explanation of Celestial Spheres). The third treatise, in Persian, is entitled "Risalah fi’l-astrulabi" (Treatise on the Construction of the Astrolabe); the fourth treatise, in Arabic, is a super-commentary on Jaghmini's "Sharh al-haya'", itself a commentary on astronomy. - Some minor mostly marginal dampstaining, occasional stains and small repairs. Provenance: from the property of Dr. Eugene L. Vigil (b. 1941), of Lynden, Washington, USA. GAL II, 546f. & S II, 595-597. Cf. also B. A. Rosenfeld & E. Ihsanoglu, Mathematicians, Astronomers and Other Scholars of Islamic Civilisation and their Works (7th-19th C.) (Istanbul, 2003), pp. 348-350, no. 1058.
38 holograph & typed letters, plus typed transcript by family, ca.1950. Addressed to Antoinette S. Carr, Saratoga Springs, NY Unbound Good condition
An exhibition "To commemorate the 50th. anniversary of the dramatic discovery of the 2,000 year old scrolls found in a cave near the Dead Sea, we have chosen to present the everyday life of the members of the Judaean Desert Sect" Displayed at the Shrine of The Book.Jerusalem 1997. Bilingual with Hebrew and English texts presented dos-a-dos. [A] Hebrew section. Fine, 71p. map illus + BIBLIOGRAPY [B] English section, 71p. G-VG,but a few pages sightly wrinkled [12 copies noted in WorldCat] Book
First Edition, 2 vols., large 4to, xxvii, [1], 328; viiipp., loosely inserted is an invoice from Winifred A. Myers Ltd. made out to Miss Jean Preston (formerly of the Department of Manuscripts at Henry E. Huntington Library), 187 full-page photogravure plates, orig. buckram, a fine set. A most important catalogue. 118 of the 183 manuscripts described in these volumes were acquired from two outstanding collections, those of Earl Spencer, with the Althorp Library in 1892, and from the Earl of Crawford and Balcarres collection, formerly at Haigh Hall, in 1901. "Physically the Rylands catalogue is probably the most sumptuous of the published - as opposed to privately printed - catalogues." ? Pfaff.
First edition, 2 vols., 4to, [2], viii, 86; [4], [87]-162pp., with an additional general title-page, from the reference library of Professor T. A. Birrell with pencil notations on a inserted sheet and rear endpaper, cont. half calf, rubbed, covers detached.
4to, l, 472pp., 20 plates in photogravure, one leaf with an old repair to a closed tear, recent cloth, a nice copy. Pfaff, pp.180-181. "The great work - a fair assessment, despite imperfections - among the 1895 catalogues is that of the Fitzwilliam MSS... Being at the Fitzwilliam most days of the weeks must have given him constant access to the codices and allowed him to continue elaborating and refining his descriptions."
First Edition, large 8vo, x,87,[1]pp., a very good ex-library copy, blind-stamp to title-page and library label on rear endpaper, buckram, spine lettered in gilt.
4to, xxxii,410pp., 108 photogravure plates, orig. buckram, gilt, spine faded otherwise a nice copy. Pfaff, pp.272-3. From the library of Dr C.E. Wright (former Senior Deputy Keeper Department of Manuscripts, British Museum).
[… with a collation of the other mss. And the printed edition of 1534/5 (STC 13608) together with notes on the mss. Language and contents], CLXXIX + 294pp.+ frontispice + 3pp.stellingen, Academic dissertation [Academisch proefschrift ter verkrijging van de graad van doctor in de letteren en wijsbegeerte aan de R.K.Universiteit te Nijmegen… 8 april 1960, promotor: prof. T.A. Birrell], VG
Two volumes in one. pp. xxxi, 558; 255. Misbound with some signatures repeated. Maybe missing one or two leaves of text in title 10. Mixed signatures and pagination. Signed twice with the manuscript autograph of the original owner, Garret Dorset Wall (1783-1850). Wall was an attorney who commanded a New Jersey regiment in the War of 1812. In 1829 he was elected Governor of New Jersey, but declined to serve. He was U.S. Senator for New Jersey form 1835-1841. Foxed. Damp stain. 240 mm. Original worn full polished roan binding with scroll on edges of boards. Original leather spine label. Spine very worn with loss. Extremely important text on the law of Real-Estate issued for an American audience. This edition (two volumes in one) seems to be quite scarce and much rarer than the (five volume?) edition issued in the same year by Alsop, Brannan and Alsop. S&S/AI 14804; Cohen 9459. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! AI BX 7
Contains b&w plates. 34.5x25 cm. 40+48 pages. Hardcover. Cover and spine edges slightly worn. Else in good condition.
xvi + 321pp., hardcover (editor's blue cloth, corners slightly bumped), dustwrapper, 25cm., good condition, C79184