1 547 résultats
- Extrait de la Revue des deux mondes., (Paris) 1887, 15,5x25cm, agrafé. - First edition of these two articles. Plain paper cover. Rare. [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Edition originale de ces deux articles. Sous couverture muette. Rare.
- J. Carbonel, Alger 1922, 16x24,5cm, broché. - Edition originale publiée par ordre de M. Steeg, gouverneur général de l'Algérie. Ouvrage illustré de sept planches dépliantes en noir et en couleurs. Bel exemplaire. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
- Charles-Lavauzelle, Paris & Limoges 1890, 14x21,5cm, broché. - First edition. Offprint. [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Edition originale. Il s'agit d'un tiré à part extrait de la revue d'infanterie.
E. J. Brill, Leyden - Luzac & Co., London. 1916. In-8 Carré. Relié. Bon état. Couv. convenable. Dos satisfaisant. Intérieur frais. Env. 400 pages. Illustré de quelques reproductions en noir et blanc hors texte. Texte en arabe, avec lecture de droite à gauche. Composed in A.H. 658 = A.D. 1260. Edited with an Introduction, Notes and Indices from several Old Mss., by MIRZA MUHAMMAD, Ibn 'Abdu'l-Wahhab-I-Qazwini. And printed for the Trustees of the 'E.J.W. Gibb Memorial', Vol. XVI, II.
Octavo in white color illus wraps; 180p; 22cm, bibliographical references (pages 175-176). In Arabic. Uncommon. Muslim women -- History. Women in literature. Musulmanes -- Histoire. Femmes dans la littÈrature. Muslim women.
Octavo in while wraps illus. in color; 107 pages ; 21 cm In Arabic. Uncommon. Fiction, Novel. Palestine. Gaza. "Ghareeb Asqalani (whose real name is Ibrahim al-Zand) was born in the village al-Majdal Ashkelon in the south of Palestine in 1947. He has been living in the Gaza Strip with his family since 1948. He studied at the college of Agriculture in the University of Alexandria in Egypt, and received a degree in (Higher) Education in Islamic Studies in Cairo. He has worked as an agricultural engineer on the Euphrates Dam in Syria, as well as a teacher in the Gaza Strip. He also worked as a director in the Ministry of Culture and a Media spokesperson for the Palestine International Book Fair. He represented Palestine at the Spring Palestinian Culture Fair in 1997, and since 2010 has been Deputy Secretary General to the Palestinian Writersí Union and Chairman of the Gaza branch. He is the author of nine novels, six short story collections, three collections of essays, as well as three collections of stories online. His articles have been published widely across national print media. He was the winner of the short story prize from New Bethlehem University in 1976, and from the Palestinian Writersí Union in 1991. His short stories have been translated into English, French, Spanish and Russian." ó Publisher.
Very Good English Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In Turkish and facsimile in Ottoman script. [xvi], 25, [14], 48 p. Study on one of important books on 'kâfiye'. Kitâbu'l-Kavâfî. Prep. by Kenan Demirayak.
Fine Turkish Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). Reprint in Arabic; large introduction, and annotations in Turkish. [4], [xLvi], 236 p. El-Bark el-Sâmî. [= Kitab al-Barq al-Shami]. Abridged by Al-Bundârî. Published, prepared and introduction by Ramazan Sesen. Muhammad ibn Hamed Isfahan was a Persian historian, scholar, and rhetorician. He left a valuable anthology of Arabic poetry to accompany his many historical works and worked as a man of letters during the Zengid and Ayyubid period. He was born in Isfahan in the year 1125, and studied at the Nizamiyya school in Baghdad. He graduated into the bureaucracy, and held jurisdiction over Basra and Wasit. He then became a deputy of the vizier ibn Hubayra. After the death of ibn Hubayra, he went to Damascus in 1166 CE (562 Islamic Calendar) and entered the service of the qadi of Damascus, Kamal ad-Din. The qadi presented him to the Zengid Nur ad-Din, who appointed him a professor in the school he had established there, which then became known as the Imadiyya school in his honour. Nur ad-Din was later appointed to be his Chancellor. After the death of Nur ad-Din in 1174, Imad ad-Din was removed from all his bureaucratic duties, and was banished from the palace. He went to live in Mosul and later entered the service of Saladin, the Kurdish Sultan of Egypt during that time. When Saladin took control of Damascus, Saladin's vizier, al-Qadi al-Fadil, appointed him chancellor, and he also became al-Fadil's deputy. Saladin had been unsure of his talent because he was only a scribe, Imad ad-Din soon became one of the sultan's favourites. As chancellor he did not have to perform the everyday duties of the chancery scribes, and he had a lot of leisure time in Egypt. From then on he accompanied Saladin on all his campaigns. After a certain raid, he was chosen to kill one of the prisoners, but the prisoner was a child and was instead exchanged for a Muslim prisoner held by the Crusaders. Imad ad-Din was present at the Battle of Marj Uyun, the Battle of Hattin, and the subsequent campaign to expel the Crusaders from the Holy Land. At Acre, he criticized Saladin for giving away the city's treasure instead of spending it on the reconquest. At Beirut, he became ill, but was the only scribe capable of writing the terms of surrender. He had recuperated in time to see the aftermath of the Siege of Jerusalem (1187), where he again criticized Saladin's generosity; he was also disgusted by those in charge of the ransom who took bribes, and the rich Crusader nobles who took their treasures with them rather than ransoming the poor. He was present at Acre again during the Third Crusade when the Christians retook the city of Acre, and was among those who fled after the defeat. After Saladin's death in 1193, he began writing his biographies of the sultan. He wrote the Kitab al-Barq al-Shami, which is lost, but was abridged by al-Bundari. This study contains just 5th volume of manuscript abridged by Al-Bundârî.
- Lucien Vogel éditeur, Paris 1922, 18x24cm, relié. - Set of eight original prints in color, drawn on laid paper. The XXXIII and XXXVI sketches are signed lower left and right boards. The boards are introduced by a text Joan Ramon Fernandez. Original prints made ??for the illustration of The Gazette fashionable, one of the finest and most influential twentieth century fashion magazines, celebrating the talent of creators and artists French burgeoning art deco. Famous fashion magazine founded in 1912 by Lucien Vogel, The Gazette fashionable appeared until 1925 with an interruption during the War of 1915 to 1920, due to mobilization of its editor. She is 69 Deliveries from just 2000 copies and is illustrated including 573 color plates and 148 sketches depicting models of fashion designers. Upon publication, these luxury publications "are for bibliophiles and worldly aesthetes" (Françoise Tétart-Vittu "good Gazette of tone" in the fashion dictionary, 2016). Printed on fine laid paper, they use a typeface created specifically for the magazine by Georges Peignot, the Cochin character, taken in 1946 by Christian Dior. The prints are made with the technique of metal stencil, enhanced color and some outlined in gold or palladium. The adventure began in 1912 when Lucien Vogel, man of the world and fashion - it has already participated in Femina magazine - decided to found with his wife Cosette de Brunhoff (John's sister, the father of Babar) Gazette good tone in which the subtitle is then "Art, fashions and frivolities." Georges Charensol quotes the editor: "In 1910, he observed, there was no truly artistic fashion magazine and representative of the spirit of his time. So I thought of making a glossy magazine with truly modern artists [...] I was certain of success because for any fashion country can compete with France. "(" A great art editor. Lucien Vogel "in literary News, No. 133, May 1925). The success of the magazine is immediate, not only in France but also the US and South America. Originally, Vogel therefore brings together a group of seven artists: André-Édouard Marty and Pierre Brissaud, followed by Georges Lepape and Dammicourt; and finally his friends from the School of Fine Arts as are George Barbier, Bernard Boutet de Monvel or Charles Martin. Other talents come quickly reach the equipped Guy Arnoux, Léon Bakst, Benito, Boutet de Monvel, Umberto Brunelleschi, Chas Laborde, Jean-Gabriel Domergue, Raoul Dufy, Edward Halouze Alexander Iacovleff, Jean Emile Laboureur Charles Loupot, Charles Martin, Maggie Salcedo. These artists, mostly unknown when Lucien Vogel appealed to them, will eventually become iconic figures and artistic sought. These are the same illustrators who make the drawings advertisements Gazette. The boards highlight the dresses and sublime seven artists of the time: Lanvin, Doeuillet, Paquin, Poiret, Worth, Vionnet and Doucet. The designers provide for each number of exclusive models. Nevertheless, some of Illustrations contained no real model, but only the idea that the illustrator is done in the fashion of the day. Gazette fashionable is a milestone in the history of fashion. Combining the aesthetic requirement and plastic unit, it brings together for the first time the great talents of the world of arts, literature and fashion and imposed by this alchemy, a new image of women, slender, independent and bold, also driven by the new generation of designers Coco Chanel, Jean Patou, Rochas Marcel ... Recovery in 1920 by Condé Montrose Nast, Gazette fashionable modeled for the new composition and the aesthetic choices of the "little dying newspaper" that Nast had bought a few years ago: the Vogue magazine. [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Ensemble de huit estampes originales en couleur, tirées sur papier vergé. Les croquis XXXIII et XXXVI sont signés en bas à gauche et à droite des planches. Les planches sont introduites par un texte de Jeanne Ramon-Fernandez. Reliure à la bradel en plein papier à motif décoratif, do
- Plon, Paris 1937, 13x20cm, broché. - Edition originale imprimée sur alfa, seul tirage avec 75 pur fil. Iconographie, exemplaire complet de son fac-similé autographe et de sa carte in-fine. Quelques rousseurs affectant essentiellement les toutes premières et toutes dernières pages ainsi que les tranches. Rare. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
Torino, Giulio Einaudi Editore, 1972. Prima versione integrale dall’arabo diretta da Francesco Gabrieli. A cura di Antonio Cesaro, Costantino Pansera, Umberto Rizzitano, Virginia Vacca. Opera completa in 4 Volumi, appartenente alla Collana: Gli struzzi. Le mille e una notte è una ricca raccolta di novelle orientali, di varia ambientazione storico-geografica e di differenti autori. E’ centrata sul re persiano Shahriyar che essendo stato tradito da una delle sue mogli, ha deciso di uccidere sistematicamente le sue spose al termine della prima notte di nozze. La bella Sharazad, andata in sposa al re, escogita un trucco per salvarsi: ogni sera racconta al re una storia, rimandando il finale al giorno dopo. Va avanti così per mille e una notte; e alla fine il re innamoratosi le rende salva la vita. In 8vo (cm. 20); brossure originali illustrate a colori con titoli al piatto e al dorso più custodia editoriale illustrata; pp. Vol. I: XXXIX, (1), 649, (7); Vol. II: IX, (1), 667, (3); Vol. III: VI, 581, (3); Vol. IV: VI, (2), 690, (8). Buono stato di conservazione. PAx
- L'action africaine, Paris Février 1914, 23,5x28,5cm, broché. - Edition originale de cette revue consacrée au Maghreb. Contributions littéraires de Camille Mauclair "La Kasbah vue par Suréda", André Suréda, Jean Vignaud... Contributions picturales de André Suréda avec 10 lithographies originales en reproduction. Rare et agréable exemplaire malgré d'infimes déchirures marginales sans manque sur les plats. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
- Seuil, Paris 1965, 14x20,5cm, broché. - Edition originale de la traduction dont il n'a pas été tiré de grands papiers, un des ex du service de presse. Envoi du traducteur. Plats très légèrement et marginalement passés, sinon agréable exemplaire. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
1st edition. Later boards. 8vo. 543 pages, 21 cm. In French. Title translates to From the Urban and Rural Economy of the Arabs and Jews. A monumental history of Arabian economy drawn from Greco-Roman sources. Reynier (1762-1824) was an notable Swiss-French scholar of ancient and modern economic history who accompanied Napoleon on his expedition to Egypt, where he served as High Superintendent of Revenues and Finances. SUBJECTS: Arabs. Jews -- Politics and government. Jews -- Social conditions. Jews -- Agriculture. OCLC lists 10 copies worldwide, but only 2 copies in North America (Penn and Harvard) (OCLC: 698357953) . A colleague offers a copy for sale for USD 2500. Ex-library with usual markings. Pages are ridged and wavy, but Very Good Condition. (YID-41-9-PE)
Very Good Arabic Original b/w lithographer print of Mecca. 21,5x17,5 cm. In Arabic. 1 p. [A FINE LITHOGRAPHER MECCA] Mecca al-Mukarrama Zad Al-Lah Sharifhâ al-ayyum al-qaima. It shows Mecca city with its building like Kaba, and walls besides its environment. Mecca is a city in the Hejazi region of Saudi Arabia. The city is located 70 km (43 mi) inland from Jeddah, in a narrow valley 277 m (909 ft) above sea level, 340 kilometres (210 mi) south of Medina, its population in 2012 was 2 million, although visitors more than triple this number every year during the ?ajj ("Pilgrimage"), held in the twelfth Muslim lunar month of Dhûl-Hijjah. It is the birthplace of Muhammad, a cave 3 km (2 mi) from Mecca was the site of Muhammad's first revelation of the Quran, and a pilgrimage to it, known as the Hajj, is obligatory for all able Muslims. Mecca is home to the Kaaba, one of Islam's holiest sites and the direction of Muslim prayer, and thus Mecca is regarded as the holiest city in Islam.
Very Good Arabic Original b/w lithographer print of Medina. 21,5x17,5 cm. In Arabic. 1 p. [A FINE LITHOGRAPHED MEDINA] Medina al-Munawwara ali sâhibhâ afzal al-tahiyya. It shows Medina city with its building and walls besides its environment. Medina is the capital of the Al-Madinah Region in Saudi Arabia. At the city's heart is al-Masjid an-Nabawi ('The Prophet's Mosque'), which is the burial place of the Islamic prophet, Muhammad. Medina is one of the three holiest cities in Islam, the other two being Mecca and Jerusalem. Medina was Muhammad's destination in his Hijrah (migration) from Makkah, and became the capital of a rapidly increasing Muslim Empire, under Muhammad's leadership, serving as the power base of Islam, and where Muhammad's Ummah (Community), composed of both locals and immigrants from Muhammad's original home of Mecca, developed. Medina is home to three prominent mosques, namely al-Masjid an-Nabawi, Quba Mosque, and Masjid al-Qiblatayn ('The mosque of the two Qiblas'). Muslims believe that the chronologically final surahs of the Quran were revealed to Muhammad in Medina, and are called Medinan surahs in contrast to the earlier Meccan surahs.
Very Good Arabic Original hand-colored map on tissue paper. 23x19 cm. In Ottoman script and Arabic. No scale. Manuscript notes of toponyms. The manuscript shows Egypt, Ethiopia, Sudan, the Red Sea along the line of Red Sea shores. Manuscript notes show that the map was used for military purposes in the last Ottoman Imperial period. Habesh Eyalet, Ethiopia in northeast Africa was conquered by Özdemir Pasha in 1557. His son, Osman Pasha, transformed the region into an eyalet, which remained under Ottoman suzerainty until the early 19th century when Egypt assumed its administration. (Source: Pashas, Begs, Effendis: A historical dictionary of titles and terms in the Ottoman Empire, Bayerle, Gustav.).
Hardcover in-12 cartonnage illustre de l'editeur de XXXVIII-281 pages. Bon etat. [FL-16] Book only - Livre seul.
Hardcover in-12 cartonnage illustre de l'editeur de XXXVIII-281 pages. Near fine - Très bel exemplaire. [FL-16] Book only - Livre seul.
Hardcover in-12 cartonnage illustre de l'editeur de XXXVIII-281 pages. Bon état. [VU-8/83][VU-8/75] Book only - Livre seul.
Fine English Paperback. Roy. 8vo. (23 x 14 cm). In English. 29 p., color ills., a huge map (not opened). Baghdad [Archeological city guide with huge city map]. Foreword by Isa Salman (Director General of Antiquities). Very detailed modern guide including architectural works in Baghdad: Historical shrines, mausoleums and mosques, churches, monuments, etc.
N°3-4, de Mars-Avril 1999, de la revue fondée par Emmanuel Mounier et dirigée par Olivier Mongin; au sommaire: "Réalignements stratégiques en Asie centrale et en Iran", entretien avec Olivier ROY, "Algérie: les traumatismes de la langue et le raï" par Mohamed BENRABAH; dossier "Le Pari de la réforme": nombreux articles sur les laboratoires de la "troisième voie" et les social-démocraties européennes, et sur le réformisme en France. Français
in-4°, 89 pp., nombreuses photos en couleurs, broché, couverture illustrée. Tres bel exemplaire. [P-18] Catalogue de vente.
Paris, Hachette, 1915; in-4, 85 pp., reliure d'éditeur pleine toile estampée et imprimée. Contient les contes les plus populaires des 'Mille et Une Nuits' (Ali-Baba, Aladdin, Sheherazade). Nombreux dessins en noir. Bon état.