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032520046Script Format reprint. Like New. / 1991 REVISED DRAFT / I HAVE MORE TITLES LET ME KNOW IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR OTHER TITLES / THE SCRIPT IS PRINTED ON THREE-HOLE PUNCHED PAPER AND BOUND WITH 2 BRASS BRADS /SHIPS WITHIN 24HRS!! unknown
1989RO30358705PML éditions. 1989. In-4. Cartonné. Bon état, Coins frottés, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 509 pages. Rares rousseurs. Quelques tâches en plats. 70 illustrations noires et couleurs.. . . . Classification Dewey : 398.2-Conte populaire
Jensen, MonaIn Pristine Condition. unknown
1957ROD0010807Gründ. 1957. In-8. Relié toilé. Etat d'usage, Couv. défraîchie, Coiffe en pied abîmée, Intérieur bon état. 582pp., coiffe en tête abîmée, mors fendus, coins frottés. Illustrations en couleurs de Françoise Estachy. *- 1 PHOTO DISPONIBLE.. . . . Classification Dewey : 398.2-Conte populaire
Hansen, Erik FosnesIn Pristine Condition. unknown
Jeppesen B., Flemming, ilIn Pristine Condition. unknown
Foreword by Dr. Brittay SIn Pristine Condition. unknown
1988ROD0139800LIBRAIRIE DUPONCHELLE. 1988. In-8. Relié. Etat passable, Coins frottés, Dos abîmé, Papier jauni. 189 pages augmentées de nombreuses illustrations en couleurs dans le texte - coiffes et coins abimés - mors fendus.. . . . Classification Dewey : 398.2-Conte populaire
1988R320030011DUPONCHELLE. 1988. In-4. Cartonné. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 189 pages - Nombreuses illustrations e ncouleurs in et hors texte et lettrines e ncouleurs.. . . . Classification Dewey : 398.2-Conte populaire
Dahl, RoaldIn Pristine Condition. unknown
Lewis, Noami, Emma ChicheIn Pristine Condition. unknown
1970107381Subervie Subervie 1970, In-12 broché de 80 pages. Avec illustrations. Bon état.
Subervie 1970, In-12 broché de 80 pages. Avec illustrations. Bon état.
1974LFA-126711762Un ouvrage de 149 pages, format 125 x 195 mm, illustré, relié cartonnage couleurs, publié en 1974, Editions La Farandole, bon état
Ilustraciones de Ricardo Gomez.
Juul, Pia PrefaceIn Pristine Condition. unknown
Brothers Grimm, AndersenIn Pristine Condition. unknown
1963141155Burbank CA: Warner Brothers 1963. Draft script for the fifth episode of season six of the 1958-1964 television series.<br /> <br /> The series followed Stu and Jeff a pair of womanizing wisecracking private investigators. In this episode Stu heads to Tel Aviv to uncover a Nazi art-smuggling plot. <br /> <br /> Set in Paris and Tel Aviv. <br /> <br /> White titled self-wrappers dated July 2 1963. Approximately 71 leaves not numbered. Mimeograph duplication rectos only with revision pages throughout dated variously between June 28 1963 and July 2 1963. Pages Near Fine wrapper Very Good plus bound with a staple.<br /> <br /> Pagination available upon request. Warner Brothers unknown
RO40269084PELLERIN ET CIE. Non daté. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. défraîchie, Agraffes rouillées, Papier jauni. Environs 5 pages augmentées de nombreuses illustrations en couleur dans et hors texte . Couverture jaunie . NON DATE. . . . Classification Dewey : 398.2-Conte populaire
PELLERIN ET CIE. In-8 Carré. Broché. Etat d'usage. Couv. défraîchie. Agraffes rouillées. Papier jauni. Environs 5 pages augmentées de nombreuses illustrations en couleur dans et hors texte . Couverture jaunie . NON DATE
12779Comédie-proverbe en un acte, mêlée de couplets, précédée de nouvelles et contes rémois en prose et en vers. Cet ouvrage orné de vignette, fleurons, encadrements etc. est composé (typographiquement) par l’auteur, n’a été tiré qu’à 50 exemplaires dont 25 exemplaires seulement sont en vente. In 12 cartonnage à la bradel, pièce de titre cuir, titre, 120 pages, texte encadré d’un filet noir, non rogné ; Reims H. HUET imprimeur. BRISSARD BINET libraire 1855. Deux plats de couverture conservés. Très bon état. Edition originale fort rare. Le novice de St Thierry- Fauvette et jeune fille- Pastel- récréation les rues de Reims arrangées en conte- 99 moutons… comédie proverbe en un acte.
184789177Imprimerie des établissements denseignement militaire | ??????????????? [Saint-Pétersbourg] 1847 | 13 x 20.3 cm | Relié
New Persian, Old(ca. 600-400 B.C.) Original bdg. HC. Demy 8vo. (21 x 14 cm). In Persian and Pahlavi. 63 p. [A]Yâdgâr-i Zarîrân: Matn-i hamâsî az dawrân-i kuhan. [= Ayâdgâr-e Zârêrân]. Ayâdgâr-e Zârêrân, or 'Memorial of Zarer', a short Pahlavi text which is the only surviving specimen in that language of ancient Iranian epic poetry. It is preserved in a unique manuscript, written in A.D. 1322. The chief editions are those of J. M. Jamasp-Asana, The Pahlavi Texts Contained in the Codex MK II, Bombay, 1913, repr. Tehran, [1971-72], pp. 1-16; Pagliaro, Il testo pahlavico Ayâtkâr-i Zarêrân, Rome, 1925; and D. Monchi-Zadeh, Die Geschichte Zarêr's, Uppsala, 1981 (reviewed by D. N. MacKenzie, IIJ 27, 1984, pp. 155-63). It celebrates an event in the early history of Zoroastrianism. Wistâsp, having accepted the "pure religion of the Mazda-worshippers" (dên î abêzag i mâzdesnân)), is challenged on this account by Ardjâsp, lord of the Hyôns. The wise Jâmâsp foretells that Wistâsp's brother Zarêr and many others of his kin will die in the coming encounter. Nevertheless battle is joined. Zarêr, after fighting heroically, is foully slain by a Hyôn, Wîdraf the sorcerer. His son Bastwar, forbidden by Wistâsp to go to the battle-field because of his youth, flouts this command, finds his father's body, and utters a moving lament over it. He slays many Hyons in revenge, and shoots an arrow through Wîdrafs' heart. His cousin Spandyâd, Wistâsp's son, ends the battle by capturing Ardjâsp, mutilating him, and sending him abject away. There are numerous traces in the Pahlavi text of an older Parthian version, with Parthian words, phrases and grammatical usages scattered through it (for these see most fully MacKenzie, loc. cit.). Parthian, and other apparently archaic, certainly obscure, elements are most concentrated in passages of reported speech, notably par. 92, Bastwar's incantation over the arrow with which he is to shoot Wîdrafs; par. 41, an oath-taking formula; and pars. 84-87, Bastwar's elegy for his father... (Encyclopediae Iranica).
Very Good Russian Very attractive early Russian edition of this famous Georgian national poem 'The knight in the panther skin', richly illustrated in very well binding. This is a Georgian medieval epic poem, written in the 12th century by Georgia's national poet Shota Rustaveli, and a definitive work of the Georgian Golden Age, the poem consists of over 1600 Rustavelian Quatrains and is considered to be a "masterpiece of the Georgian literature". Original decorative green cloth bdg. with Rustaveli's embossed portrait. Art-nouveau borders on board. Faded titles and decorations on spine. A very good copy. 4to. (27 x 20 cm). In Russian. [5], 315, [7] p., [18] b/w full-paged plates. Shalva Nutshubidze, (1888-1969), was a Georgian philosopher, translator, and public benefactor, one of the founders of the Tbilisi State University (TSU), founder of Alethology. The main fields of scientific activity of Shalva Nutsubidze were: alethology, history of Georgian philosophy, history of the old Georgian literature, Rustvelology, problems of the oriental renaissance. He was also a well-known translator: he translated The Knight in the Panther's Skin of Shota Rustaveli, Visramiani, and other outstanding literary works in Russian. Nutsubidze is co-author of a well-known theory about the identity of Pseudo-Denys Areopagite and Georgian philosopher of the 5th century Peter the Iberian (Theory of Nutsubidze-Honigmann).
Very Good German Contemporary black cloth bdg. Original covers in binding. 4to. (27,5 x 20 cm). In German. 173-224 pp. Ownership signature on colophon, some underlined sentences, and markings. Otherwise a good copy. Exceedingly rare separatum of collected and compiled 27 Laz (Lazuri) fairy and folk tales around Rize area of Turkey as well as an introduction and short information on folklorists of Lazistan by Finger. From introduction: "Die nachstehenden Märchen wurden von mir im Jahre 1934 in der kleinen Nahie Kurayiseb'a, etwa 80 km landeinwarts von Rize am Kalopotamos gelegen, aufgezeichnet. Der kleine Han, der wir dort durch etwa 14 Tage bewohnten, war abends Treffpunkt der Jugend des Ortes, und die Märchen wurden mir im Austausch gegen deutsche Sagen und Märchen, die ich erzahlte, mitgeteilt." [i.e. The following fairy tales were recorded by me in 1934 in the small town Kurayiseb'a, about 80 km inland from Rize on the Kalopotamos. Little Han, which we lived there for about 14 days, was the evening meeting place for the local youth, and the fairy tales were given to me in exchange for German sagas and fairy tales that I told]. Josef (Sepp) Finger studied at the Handelsakademie and was employed from 1919 in a Vienna bank. In 1926 he emigrated to Turkey, living in Ankara and Constantinople (Istanbul), traveling around Asia Minor, and working for the Deutsche Orientbank. From 1927 he worked at the Austrian legation in Turkey and the Deutsches Archäologisches Institut in Istanbul and he also organized a zoological study trip through Anatolia. He returned to Vienna at the end of 1934 and was employed by the Österreichisches Verkehrsbüro. After the annexation of Austria, he was employed initially at the Feinstahlwerke in Traisen, Lower Austria, and then as an export manager in Vienna. Finger, who spoke Turkish and several European languages, was employed in 1939 as an interpreter in the Vienna Gestapo censorship department and also joined the SS Security Service (SD) that year. He attended the SS leadership school in Fulda in 1941 and was promoted to SS-Obersturmführer. In 1943/44 he published extensive travel reports, particularly about Turkey, in the Völkischer Beobachter. Until September 1944 he worked in the press censorship department of the Vienna Gestapo and later in Department (Amt) IV (Gestapo) of the Reich Security Main Office in Berlin. He moved to the anti-Communist Department (Amt) VI in February 1945. His last posting was in the special department for combating Austrian resistance. From February 1946 to July 1947 he was detained in the Marcus W. Orr US internment camp in Glasenbach near Salzburg. He said nothing there or during registration as a Nazi about his career in the Gestapo and ultimately lived under a false identity in the Saalfelden area. In 1947 he was transferred to the prison of the Landesgericht für Strafsachen (provincial court for criminal matters) in Vienna, and Volksgericht proceedings were instituted against him under §§ 8, 10, and 11 of the Prohibition Act (registration fraud, illegality, and qualified illegality). Finger claimed that he had been sent to the Gestapo by the employment department and had been used there merely for "subordinate activities". In 1949 the public prosecutor's office in Vienna dropped the case. On several occasions between 1935 and 1944, Finger had given or sold the Museum für Völkerkunde (Museum of Ethnology, now Weltmuseum Wien) objects from the Caucasus, Asia Minor, Persia, and the Middle East. The objects were not identified as having been expropriated by the Nazis, and it is most likely that Finger acquired them during his long sojourns abroad. The Art Restitution Advisory Board took note of a report on the ethnographic items in the Weltmuseum from Finger on 30 November 2012 and a dossier on textiles in the MAK on 26 September 2014. (Lexikon Provenienzforschung online). Only one copy in OCLC: 560570599 (The British Library, St. Pancras of London).