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Hardcover. XVI 231 p., 4 b/w ill., 1 b/w tables, 160 x 240 mm, Languages: English, Including an index. Fine copy. ISBN 9782503523163. This volume discusses the key shift from manuscript to print culture in the history of books, taking The Canterbury Tales, The Book of Margery Kempe, and Piers Plowman as models of the way in which a medieval text's unique tradition influenced its transition from manuscript to print. The forces of the Reformation era did not produce the same effect across the varied textual legacy of the Middle Ages. Every text that made the transition from manuscript to print brought with it a set of concerns, a tendency to address a particular readership in particular ways, a physical presence developed in manuscript culture, all of which might shape the pathways by which a text might arrive in print, and what it might look like when it got there. This study follows The Canterbury Tales, The Book of Margery Kempe, and Piers Plowman from their circulation in manuscript to their presentation in print, in order to track how each of them survived the metamorphosis of the relationship between writers and readers as the new technology was introduced. Taken together, the three case studies demonstrate to scholars of any medieval literature the variety of possible impacts made when texts composed in manuscript culture were prepared for printing. The great force exerted by the technological and cultural developments of the English Reformation, not least the more centralized legislative regulation of the press, has long been central to the study of the history of books. This volume takes into account the ways in which individual textual traditions pushed back or accelerated the forces of early modern reform, producing their own plural reformations.
- 1945, 22x11,5cm, 8 feuillets foliotés. - Manuscrit autographe de l'auteur de 16 pages in-8 publié dans le numéro 8 (août 1945) de L'Arche sous le titre: Quelques réflexions sur le surréalisme. Manuscrit recto-verso complet, à l'écriture très dense, comportant de nombreux ratures, corrections et ajouts. Quelques réflexions sur le surréalisme constitue le premier texte important que Maurice Blanchot consacre au mouvement d'André Breton. Il réhabilite le surréalisme qui a mis au centre de son activité la question du langage et de l'expérience - aspects qui ne pouvaient laisser indifférent Blanchot -, sans oublier de faire toutefois les constats suivants : il porte en lui une part d'échec et sa « situation [...] reste ambiguë ». Affirmant désormais de plus en plus ses positions esthétiques, Blanchot reconnait pleinement la valeur poétique et expérimentale de l'écriture automatique, pour sa radicalité même : « L'écriture automatique est [...] une machine de guerre contre la réflexion et le langage. Elle est destinée à humilier l'orgueil humain, particulièrement sous la forme que lui a donné la culture traditionnelle. Mais, en réalité, elle est elle-même une aspiration orgueilleuse à un mode de connaissance et elle a ouvert aux mots un nouveau crédit illimité. » Blanchot poursuit sa réflexion et insiste sur les questionnements des écrivains et poètes surréalistes au sujet du discours : « Le surréalisme a été hanté par cette idée : c'est qu'il y avait, qu'il devait y avoir un moment [...] où le langage n'était pas le discours, mais la réalité même, sans toutefois cesser d'être la réalité propre du langage [...]. Les surréalistes ont tiré de cette "découverte" de brillantes conséquences littéraires, mais pour le langage les effets sont plus ambigus et plus variés. En ce domaine, ils semblent encore avant tout des destructeurs. Ils sont déchaînés contre le discours ; ils lui retirent le droit à signifier quelque chose ; comme moyen de [ ?] sociale, de désignation précise, ils le brisent férocement. Le langage paraît un peu seul anéanti ou sacrifié, mais humilié. En réalité, il s'agit de tout autre chose et même du contraire : le langage disparaît comme instrument, mais c'est qu'il est devenu sujet. De par l'écriture automatique, il a bénéficié de la plus haute promotion [...]. » Le texte sera repris dans La Part du feu (1949), non sans que Blanchot ait pris soin d'atténuer les réserves dont il faisait part dans l'article initial. Première étude monographique d'importance consacrée par Maurice Blanchot à la question du langage surréaliste. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
12pp., br.orig., non coupé, bel état, extrait de la "Revue de Bibliothèques" 1897
1 vol. in-12 format à l'italienne cartonnage percaline, s.d. [ circa 1900-1920 ] 417 pp. manuscrite et 3 ff. de tables. Rappel du titre complet : Recueil manuscrit de partitions musicales [ Plus de 130 morceaux chantés ] Chanson arabe (Godard) ; O Gué Landériloulette ; Coupe du Roi de Thulé (Diaz) ; Ici bas (T. Dejean) ; Envoi de Fleurs (Delmet) ; La Sauge (Le Jongleur) ; Les Armaillis (Koebi) ; L'Omnibus funéraire ; L'Amour (Holmès) ; Miseremini (Steenmann) ; O Salutaris (Albert Dejean) ; ça fait peur aux oiseaux [ etc. etc... ] Intéressant manuscrit musical bordelais, précédé de deux petits billets manuscrits de l'auteur : "A Mademoiselle Monique Ch..., Bordeaux. Je suis très heureux, ma chère Monique, de vous laisser "In Memoriam" le Cher Cahier Rouge, comme nous l'appelions, jadis, rue d'Eysines où nous l'avons si souvent feuilleté, vos tantes et moi, et où il nous a fait passer de si agréables moments !... Bien que presque tous les morceaux qui le composent soient écrits pour voix d'homme, et en dehors de quatre ou cinq qui ne devraient pas y figurer, j'espère que vous en trouverez un certain nombre capables de vous intéresser et qu'il m'eut été si doux de vous entendre "Interpréter", suivant la locution aujourd'hui consacrée !! [ ... ] Etat très satisfaisant (usures sur couv., des ressauts parfois forts). Français
Complete in 2 volumes: xviii,224 + xviii,153pp., 24cm., édition originale de 1929, dans la "Bibliothèque du Muséon" vol.I, brochures originales, non coupé, bon état, C58609
Complete in 2 tomes (le tout paru), reliés en un volume physique: xviii,224 + xviii,153pp., 24cm., édition originale de 1929, dans la "Bibliothèque du Muséon" vol.I, reliure cart., cachet, bon état, [RELIÉ AVEC: VAN LANTSCHOOT Arn. O.Praem., Le Muséon - Tables des années 1882 à 1931, Louvain, 1932, 143pp., dans la série "Bibliothèque du Muséon" tome 4], poids: 1.2kg., C107438
1 vol. grand in-8 reliure de remploi de l'époque plein vélin, Cherbourg, 1799-1800, 186 pp. Beau manuscrit rédigé par un rédacteur anonyme, lors de ses deux années à la pension de M. Pépin, à Cherbourg. D'une belle écriture très lisible, on peut y découvre tous les genres rhétoriques, avec une multitude d'acrostiches, des bouts-rimés, des cantiques, des charades ("plat-eau", "corne-muse", "thé-atre", "mit-an", etc...), de contes ("Le Chapelier et les Singes", Gils Blas en voyage", etc...), des distiques latins traduits en vers, des Discours ("Discours d'un précepteur à la rentrée des classes"), un drame ("Le Bon Coeur"), un éloge, des Epigrammes et des Epitaphes, des Fables sur sujet imposé, ou imitées de Phèdre, de nombreux Logogriphes, des odes et poèmes, des sentences et des traductions... Bon état (mouill. aux ff. en tête n'affectant pas le texte Français
Un fort volume de format in 4° de 500 pp., environ dont 400 contiennent des pièces diverses et une vingtaine de pp., en fin, les tables et index. Reliure en plein maroquin vert empire; dos lisse uniformément passé; riche décor au dos ; triple encadrement de filets dorés sur les plats; pièce de titre en maroquin rouge, titre doré. Entièrement doré sur tranches. La charnière du premier plat est fendue discrètement sur 1/3 du plat; au même endroit une discrète trace de mouillure qui n'affecte pas le corps de l'ouvrage qui est très frais. Imposant recueil calligraphié, parfois discrètement décoré , constitué d'épitres; de parodies; d'épitaphes d'oraisons de chansons... On y retrouve les noms de Voltaire, du Cardinal de Fleury; de Mme de La Tournelle; Le Maréchal de Saxe... et de multiples informations sur les évènements marquants, la vie quotidienne aussi, du milieu du XVIIIe siècle. Voir les photos.
ICT. Non daté. In-4 Carré. Relié. Etat d'usage. Couv. défraîchie. Dos fané. Intérieur frais. Env. 300 pages. Texte manuscrit. Etiquette de code sur le dos. Tampons et annotations de bibliothèque en page de garde et en 1re page. Reliure à dos et coins parcheminés. Dos muet. Plats très frottés. Petites galeries d'insecte en haut de certaines pages, sans altération de la lecture. Institut Catholique de Toulouse. 'Scrisse Don Leone Cirbone' (?). De Vita et Honestate Clericorum. De Cohabitatione Clericorum et Mulierum. De Poenis contra Concubinarios. De Clericis Conjugatis. De Regulis Collationis...
- Dentu, Paris 1857, 11x18cm, relié. - Troisième édition en partie originale. Reliure en demi basane vert bouteille, dos à quatre nerfs comportant des traces de frottements en tête et en pied orné de double caissons à froid. Envoi de Gustave Nadaud à l'un de ses amis à qui il adresse le premier exemplaire de cette nouvelle édition qu'il a reçu récemment. Coiffes usées. Agréable état intérieur quasi exempt de rousseurs. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
295x210mm. XV+293 pages. Gilt hardcover and spine. Spine edges bumped. Else in good condition.
Mézin, 1762. 4 pp., manuscrites, sur papier vergé filigrané; timbre royalde la généralité de Bordeaux. Bon état.
Condom, Mézin, 1763. 4 pp., manuscrites, sur papier vergé filigrané, timbre de la généralité de Bordeaux. Bon état.
1910, cahier In-8 entièrement manuscrit de 118 pages, avec table des matières. Porte la mention "manuscrit de concours pour le prix Vilmorin" Un tampon du Touring Club de France, Secrétariat Général portant la date du 21 janvier 1910 et le N° enregistrement 41223. Quelques dessins. Des annotations, d'une autre main, en marge pertinentes et parfois amusantes. Ecriture fine et très lisible. Une curiosité qui aborde aussi le problème des incendies et des crues. Bon état.
- Nouvelles éditions Oswald , Paris 1982, 22,5x30,5cm, broché. - Nouvelle édition. Petits manques de film pelliculé en marges des plats qui sont également insolés. Amusant envoi autographe signé de Léo Malet qu'il a signé sous son pseudonyme de Frank Harding à Régine Deforges : "A Régine Deforges, cordialement. Frank Harding american of Montmartre." Provenance : de la bibliothèque de Régine Deforges. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
7pp., br., extrait du "Bulletin de la Société de l'histoire de Paris et de l'Ile-de-France" T.34 (1907), non coupé, bel état
Copia manuscrita, fechada en Zaragoza a diez y nueve de Diciembre de 1769. Un pliego en folio, de 5 hojas. Cubiertas mudas en cartulina.
San Ildefonso, 8 de Agosto de 1773. Folio; 2 hojas manuscritas por ambas caras. Cubiertas mudas en cartulina.
Titel, 11-130 (recte: 129), (1) SS. (Lagen 9 und 10 hinter 12 verbunden; S. 66 in der Zählung übersprungen). Marmorbroschur um 1880. 4to. Zeitgenössische Abschrift von Vincent Basiles illyrischer (kroatischer) Übersetzung von Baudrands erbaulicher Meditation "L'Ame Penitente" (erstmals Lyon 1778). Der sizilianische Jesuit Basile (1811-82) wurde 1840 von seinem Orden nach Albanien und anschließend nach Dalmatien und die Herzegowina versetzt. Er gab mehrere Jesuitenschriften im südslawischen Idiom heraus; die vorliegende erschien erstmals 1844 in Rom und erlebte mehrere Auflagen. - Etwas braunfleckig und angestaubt. Vgl. de Backer/Sommervogel I, 1000, 1 & 1040. OCLC 55609485.
"For Improvements in Fire-Arms" [England], 25 July 1872. Manuscript Victorian patent document on vellum, folded and docketed, a rare and excellent example of a patent of invention for a guns, granted to William Edward Blake of New York City. Large printed document completed in manuscript and measuring approximately 76 x 51 cm, with original blue paper revenue stamp for five pounds, and a double-sided yellow wax seal measuring 16 cm in diameter. Small perforation at fold, age-toning to verso, otherwise in very good and original condition, a lovely and bright document, as issued, with a scarce large Victorian wax seal in its original round tin case. A round black tin container houses the massive double-sided yellow wax seal, diameter 16 cm (6.25 inches), attached to the document by original red plaited cords, one side being the Great Seal of the Realm, the other being Queen Victoria seated on a fully caparisoned royal horse. Diminutive fissures to sides of seal, otherwise in very good original condition, with vivid and crisp wax impression. The Commissioners of Patents' Journal, September 1872 issue, records this patent, no. 2224, being granted provisional protection for six months, as also stated in the document itself. Rare official patent document for an invention for "improvements in fire-arms" valid for fourteen years and issued to William Edward Blake, an inventor from New York City. Patent number 2224 was valid in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the Channel Islands, and Isle of Wight, with the condition that the specified stamp duty payments were remitted at the times specified, one hundred pounds being payable in the seventh year after the initial patent issue date, for example. Excerpt from the patent: "... Whereas William Edward Blake of the City of New York, United States of America, hath by his petition humbly represented to Us that he is in possession of an Invention for Improvements in Firearms, which the inventor believes will be of great public utility, that he is the first and true inventor thereof... that the same is not in use by any other..." End Excerpt In the following year, 1873 William Edward Blake would receive at least one patent from the United States Patent Office, "for improvements to gun-stocks and spades, patent number 135,624." Blake described this dual-purposed instrument to be especially useful to American soldiers, in particular the Corps of Royal Sappers, Miners, and Engineers, by reducing the weight and number of tools carried over long distances. In essence he devised a two-in-one gun and spade by affixing a small shovel to the gun-stock which served dually as the shoulder rest when firing. It is conceivable that the present patent, valid in the United Kingdom, was for the same apparatus. Little is revealed about Mr. Blake in the present document, apart from his American citizenship and skill in manufacturing firearms for improved efficiency. Further research, however, may find the inventor to be a relation or even a partner of other Blake family gun makers. For example, John Henry Blake, was the manufacturer of a bolt action 7-shot revolving magazine sporting rifle, which was similar to a military type tested by an Ordnance Board of Governor's Island, New York, in July 1891. Blake, P. & E. W. of New Haven, Connecticut, manufactured Model 1821 muskets; the two partners are believed to have been the nephews of Eli Whitney Sr., and also to have been the trustees of the Whitney Armory from 1823 until Eli Whitney Jr. came of age in 1842. And earlier, the firm French, Blake and Kinsley, musket makers, secured a contract for 4,000 stand of arms on 20 October 1808, having delivered at least 2,175 units by 7 October 1812. The Great Seal of the Realm or Great Seal of the United Kingdom (prior to the Treaty of Union the Great Seal of England, then until the Union of 1801 the Great Seal of Great Britain) is a seal that is used to symbolize the Sovereign's approval of important state documents. Sealing wax is melted in a metal mould or matrix and impressed into a wax figure that is attached by cord or ribbon to documents that the monarch wishes to make official. Queen Victoria had to select four different Great Seal designs during the sixty-three years of her reign. England's patent law began to be criticized in the 1850s, for obstructing research and benefiting the few at the expense of public good. According to historian Adrian Johns, the campaign "remains to this day the strongest ever undertaken against intellectual property", coming close to abolishing patents altogether. Despite much public debate, the system wasn't abolished, though it was reformed with the Patent Law Amendment Act of 1852. This simplified the procedure for obtaining patents, reduced fees and created one office for the entire United Kingdom, instead of different systems for England and Wales and Scotland. Around the same time, however, an anti-patent movement began to take shape, and would continue until the early 1870s, spirred by inventors, entrepreneurs, and radical laissez-faire economists. Prominent activists included Isambard Kingdom Brunel, William Robert Grove, William Armstrong and Robert A. MacFie. A new sequence for numbering patents also began in October 1852. Patents applied for between October and December 1852 were numbered from 1-1211. For each subsequent year patents were numbered in annual sequences beginning with the number 1. This system was in place until 1915. Manuscript
A numbered (278) and printed document granting financial compensation to a slave owner in Suriname, by the Dutch government, signed in the original by numerous parties including the Gouverneur de Kolonie Suriname [Governor of Suriname] Van Lansberge, the Administrateur van Financienvan Het Ministerie van Kolonien te s-Gravenhague [Finance Administrator for the Ministry of the Colonies, at The Hague], and the recipient of the funds who is not only a slave owner but well-known chirurgeon A.D. Charlouis. Text is in Dutch. With steel engraved colonial coat of arms, official ink stamps, the embossed stamp of the "Klein Kolonie Suriname" government. Single leaf measuring approximately 26,5 x 13 cm. Very good condition, beautifully preserved, a scarce and historical slavery document with notable signature. The present document is interesting, as is was made almost two years after the official abolition of slave ownership in Suriname, which reveals the lengthy time period over which this process was stretched. The government's primary concern was not the freedom of the enslaved people; it was the preservation of the plantation economy, lest there be a mass exodus of workers leaving the plantations. The latter was cited as the reason and justification for the mandatory employment contract which accompanied 'free status' of a slave. Chirurgeon Andries Daniel Charlouis (Emden, Lower Saxony 1820 - Paramaribo, Suriname 1880) is the recipient of this compensation. Historical evidence reveals that he had more slaves than what is represented with this document, and that he released them gradually. He was well-known in the field of medical science, particularly for his studies on medicinal matters and the indigenous people of South America; his name appears in numerous medical journals of the period. Reinhart Frans Cornelius van Lansberge (1804-1873), whose signature authorizes this document, was the Governor-General of Suriname from 1 August 1859 to 29 June 1867. Slavery was abolished in the Dutch West Indies during his governorship. Previous to this post, he was Governor of Curacao from 1855 to 1859, and formerly Dutch Consul-General Venezuela. Doctor Charlouis, whose original signature is found to verso, received 1935 guilders with this promissory note effective 15 August 1865. This figure represents the release of approximately 6 slaves. A manuscript annotation to upper left margin, penned in a West Germanic language, refers to the abolition act: "Opheffing der slavernij... 1863" [Elimination of slavery... 1863]. Red ink annotations reveal that this document was registered on 16 September 1865, and signed by a Geregistreerde referendaris J.C. Jaunen [registered secretary]. Additional annotations to the upper margin suggest that the funds were cashed in on 16 October 1865 "Betaalbaar te Amsterdam" [paybale to Amsterdam]. Also interesting to note, two of the signed annotations to verso, those of Charlouis and a witness, make reference to German plantation owner, banker Wilhelm Eduard Ruhmann at Paramaribo. As such, this transaction was most likely transacted at Surinaamsche Bank which had been founded earlier the same year, and the funds dispatched from there to the Dutch government in The Netherlands. The Netherlands abolished the Atlantic slave-trade in 1814. However, localized slavery continued for over half a decade. Slavery was finally abolished in Suriname and the Dutch West Antilles on 1 July 1863 with the Emancipation Act. On that day, about 35,000 slaves in Suriname and 12,000 slaves on the Dutch islands in the Caribbean were given their freedom, or rather a modified version of freedom. Freed men in Suriname come under state supervision for ten years with a mandatory employment contract on the plantations. The slave owners received financial compensation from the government upon releasing their slaves to this system. The Dutch government paid 300 guilders per slave to the owner for the "lost property". (In the Dutch East Indies, payments were far lower, 50 to 350 guilders depending on the age of the slave). The abolition of slavery was referred to as 'emancipation'. Parties were organized in which King William III was presented as a key figure and benefactor of the freed slaves.
Manuscript record of the unexpected arrival of the British HMS Mariner led by Commander Charles Mitchell Mathison in Japan, in 1849, with interest in making surveys around Edo (Tokyo), four years prior to Commodore Perry's arrival, and during Japan's period of isolation (Sakoku) during which most foreigners were prohibited entry in to the country and locals prohibited exit; containing also a description of Japanese castaway Otokichi who was on the British vessel, disguised as a Chinese to evade capital punishment, who later assisted Admiral James Stirling in establishing the 1854 Anglo-Japanese Friendship Treaty. Text is in Japanese. 8vo. 44 pages in manuscript, plus title page, on 23 unpaginated double leaves. Traditional karitoji binding ("semi-bound" meaning title page and contents without a book cover) string-stitched at spine, fukurotoji style ("bound-pocket" with folded leafs bound into spine), and opening from left to right. Complete in a single volume, measuring approximately 24 x 17 cm. A scant few ink marks to rear leaf margin, indication of some burrowing, unobtrusive to legibility, otherwise in very good condition, beautifully preserved, clean and bright, an exceedingly scarce work. Certainly an assertive manoeuvre, for the British to show up unannounced in the harbour of Edo, Japan was in the state of Sakoku ("locked country"), the isolationist foreign policy of the Tokugawa shogunate under which relations and trade between Japan and other countries were severely limited, and nearly all foreign nationals were barred from entering Japan, while common Japanese people were kept from leaving the country. The long-standing policy had been in place for over two centuries, since 1603, and would last a few more years after the departure of HMS Mariner. It was Commodore Perry in 1853, and his equally brazen arrival with his American Black Ships, that would force the opening of Japan to American trade through a series of treaties called the Convention of Kanagawa, ultimately ending the island's declaration of Sakoku, and facilitating other trade relations with Western nations. On 14 October, 1854, the first limited Anglo-Japanese Friendship Treaty was signed by Admiral Sir James Stirling and representatives of the Tokugawa shogunate (Bakufu). Yamamoto Otokichi (1818-1867), who was onboard HMS Mariner disguised as a Chinese interpreter during the ship's attempted entry in Japan, later played an instrumental role in establishing this treaty, providing Stirling with intel on language and culture during the negotiations. On 26 August 1858, the Anglo-Japanese Treaty of Amity and Commerce was signed by the Scotsman Lord Elgin and representatives of the Tokugawa shogunate for Japan, after the Harris Treaty was concluded. Britain obtained extraterritorial rights on Japanese with the British Supreme Court for China and Japan, in Shanghai. A British iron paddle schooner named Enpiroru was presented to the Tokugawa administration by Bruce as a present for the Emperor from Queen Victoria. A scarce compilation of records from the Japanese perspective on a pre-Perry interaction between Bakufu authorities and a British ship, with references to Otokichi. This manuscript collates four Japanese reports of the British ship the HMS Mariner, which arrived in Japan from Shanghai in May of 1849 to make a topographical survey of the area around Edo (modern-day Tokyo), led by Commander Charles Mitchell Mathison, who had entered the Royal Navy on 5 August 1819. The event marks a very early British appearance at Japan, also pre-dating by four years the imposing arrival of Commodore Perry and his American Black ships also intent on making surveys. The first record briefly describes the layout of the Mariner and the aim of its visit to Japan. It also mentions the considerable Japanese language abilities of the Chinese interpreter on board who explained things in a way that is easy to understand, he in fact being the Japanese castaway Yamamoto Otokichi (1818-1867). The second section records foreign ship sightings from daimyo with guardhouses on the Miura Peninsula. [daimto were the most powerful landholding magnates holding the largest sections of land] The third report describes the meeting of Commander Mathison and the Bakufu intendant Egawa Tarozaemon (1801-1855), a dispute over a map of Japan, and Japanese observations of the ship and the crew. The last report is a copy of Isenokami Abe's (Masahiro Abe: 1819-1857) message to the bugyo (magistrates) and metsuke (censors/inspectors) in which, with HMS Mariner in mind, he expresses concern about the increase in the number of foreign ship arrivals in recent years and the abandoning of the Edict to Repel Foreign Ships. Abe notes that if the edict is enforced again, while there is no illegality on the part of the foreign ships, a dispute could arise, thus cautioning the noble families on the coast to prepare defenses. [Only a few years after the arrival of HMS Mariner, Isenokami would play a major role in the signing of the Convention of Kanagawa, as a result of pressure from the Perry Expedition.]
Exceedingly rare and historically significant manuscript complete with manuscript drawings, made circa 1792, transcribing the banned controversial work by Hayashi Shihei which attributed coveted geographical regions to non-Japanese sovereigns, and which led the author to house arrest and his works destroyed by the Shogun. This work centers largely around the indigenous Ainu people and the people living in the Joseon Dynasty (Korea), thus being a very early account of Korea. All text is in Japanese. Author-published. 89 pages in manuscript including title page and end leaf. Indication of once being string-stitched at spine, opening from left to right. Leafs measure approximately 19 x 26 cm. SIGNIFICANT AMOUNT OF WORM BURROWING, some leaves lightly fused together as a result, MAPS NOT PRESENT, nonetheless a valuable historic addition for any library, being an exceedingly scarce surviving manuscript of the famous "Sangoku Tsuran Zusetsu" by Hayashi Shihei. One of the earliest attempts to define Japan's outer boundaries, and distinguish it from the neighboring nations, the book deals with Joseon Dynasty (Korea) and the Kingdom of Ryukyu (Okinawa), and Ezo (Hokkaido) and the Ogasawara Islands (Bonin Islands). The content of this work is as controversial today as it was when it was released by the author 235 years ago. A statue of Hayashi Shihei stands in his honour, however, in Kotodai Park, Sendai. This work was emphatically criticized, immediately banned, and destroyed by the shogunate, all but a very scant few copies, that is, which were kept in hiding by scholars who took it upon themselves to secretly transcribe the important writings, with the original in hand. This is one of those surviving secret manuscripts, which were so very few in number and are exceedingly scarce. Hayashi Shihei (1738-1793) was a Japanese military scholar, political theorist, military strategist, writer, and a retainer of the Sendai Domain. He was a samurai of the Sendai clan issued in 1785 (Tenmei 5). His name is sometimes transliterated, according to the Sino-Japanese reading, as Rin Shihei’'. Hayashi is known as one of the "Three Excelling Men of the Kansei Period" (Kansei no san-kijin). Circa 1785 he wrote the highly controversial "Sangoku Tsuran Zusetsu" [Illustrated General Survey of the Three Countries] which consisted of five maps and one text volume which detailed the customs of Korea, Ryukyu Kingdom, and Ezo country (Hokkaido), recounting an exploratory geographical survey of the regions that were then the frontiers of Japan, including Korea, Hokkaido, and the Ryukyu Islands, also providing descriptions of the inhabitants, including the Ainu. It contained, among other repugnant content in the eyes of the shogun, the attribution of Korean sovereignty over the Dokdo / Takeshima / Liancourt archipelago, and secondly, Chinese sovereignty over the Senkaku Islands [Diaoyu Islands] instead of recognizing it as part of the Ryukyu Kingdom (which had been a vassal state of the Satsuma Domain of Japan with 'de jure' status since 1609). Not a single publisher dared to put their name on the work, for fear of retribution, and thus, Hayashi released it independently in the years of 1787-1791, at his own expense. In 1792 [Kansei 4], the Tokugawa shogunate evaluated the content of this book, declared it a delusion, and banned it. The printings of Sangoku Tsuran Zusetsu also became collateral victim of this banning. Almost all the original woodblock-printed versions of Sangoku Tsuran Zusetsu were collected and destroyed. In 1787, he had published a second work of enlightened perspective and concern, titled ???? "Kaikoku Heidan" [Military Defense of a Maritime Nation]. This was a 16-volume work which brought to light the potential inadequacy in the military defense of Japan during the Edo period, specifically highlighting the island's vulnerability from the sea, as well as the need for Japan to adopt Western military science for improved defenses along Japanese frontiers, and the re-education of the samurai. Hayashi believed the nation's crisis was due to the repeated arrivals of foreign ships. He complained of a lack of organized drill exercises, and stressed the importance of choren, or teamwork drill, rather than mere individual martial training. He gave technical descriptions about shipbuilding, cannons and other military designs. He was especially critical of the Shogunate's sakoku national isolation policy. The work generated great interest, but it too, was banned in May 1792, on the grounds that national security matters were being discussed without official consent. This work having been published a few years prior, it was impossible to locate and destroy all printed copies, but the woodblocks were seized and destroyed with those of Sangoku Tsuran Zusetsu. Simultaneously, as his two works were banned and destroyed, Hayashi was placed under house arrest. He died the following year, 28 July 1783, at the young age of 54. There were rumours of suicide and speculations of decapitation by authorities, but no evidence for either has surfaced. Ironically, shortly after Hayashi was punished, a Russian ship arrived in Nemuro, and the shogunate was forced to take measures to protect the coast, as had been suggested in Hayashi's "Kaikoku Heidan". In spite of the shogunate's best efforts, a scant few of 'Sangoku Tsuran Zusetsu' survived, thanks to a handful of audacious erudite men, and manuscript transcripts of his maps began to circulate covertly in learned Japanese circles. This book also went from Nagasaki to Holland and Germany through Katsuragawa Hoshu (1751-1809), who was a physician to the Shogun from 1777 and an Edan scholar in Edo; it was subsequently translated into European languages in Russia. In 1872, it was translated into French by the German Oriental scholar Heinrich Klaproth. Shugun Tokugawa Ienari, who suppressed and destroyed these works, and who exiled the author to his home, reigned from 1787-1837. In the first year of his reign there were rice riots in Edo and Osaka. Later tragedy, the Great Fire of Kyoto and the Tenpo famine took place. And in his strict fashion, in 1817 he ordered the expulsion of Titia Bergsma, the first European woman to visit Japan. The Dutch and Chinese were allowed to visit the country, but only for trade, and no women were permitted. Bergsma never saw her husband again. Credit to Pierre Joppen of Paulus Swaen Gallery, whose research on the subject is exhaustive and from whom some of the above content has been copied.
Packet ship broadside for the auction sale of Glasgow schooner called 'London Packet' to take place six days after this announcement, on 7 November 1851, in the harbour of the historic seaport village of St. David's situated very near to Inverkeithing, Fife. 8vo. Single leaf printed document, watermarked, measuring approximately 28 x 20 cm. Slight creasing, one unobtrusive small chip to lower margin, otherwise in Very Good condition, presenting an exceptionally rare example of an in-situ auction for a vessel. Lovely and rare broadside from Scotland during the Golden Age of Sail to announce the sale of a Scottish packet ship which had then been recently stranded on the notorious Beamer Rock. The public auction was to begin at noon, 7 November 1851, in the harbour where the vessel sat in situ, in the historic village of St. David's. The vessel was part of the early sailing fleet of William Sloan & Co., a notable Scottish firm established in 1825 and operating the largest fleet in Glasgow by 1848.
84 pages. Undated. Circa 1967?. Orange card covers. Average wear. Unmarked. A sound copy. Book