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8vo., First [?and Sole] Edition, on laid paper, some very mild age-staining; late eighteenth century full calf, neatly rebacked in calf to style, original leather label gilt preserved, red edges, a remarkably fresh, crisp copy. With the engraved armorial bookplate of a town museum and the donor's original signed presentation slip on front paste-down. Scapula's 'Lexicon' was first published by Henri Stephanus in 1557. This Appendix is dedicated to Anthony Askew (1722-1774), founder of the Bibliotheca Askeviana, and an eminent Classical scholar educated at Emmanuel College Cambridge and at Leiden. He became MD in 1750 and was appointed physician to St. Bartholomew's and Christ's hospitals, and registrar of the College of Physicians. Himself the author of a manuscript volume of Greek inscriptions, his outstanding library was sold by Baker & Leigh in 1775. See Quaritch (DEBC, p. 323). 'Askew's house was crowded with books up to the garrets. The collection was chiefly Classical, and it was its possessor's aim to have every edition of a Greek author' ([Sale catalogue of the] Bibliotheca Askeviana. Sive Catalogus Librorum Rarissimorum, Baker & Leigh, 1775). The sale of his library lasted twenty days and realised a total of £3,993 0s 6d; the principal purchasers were Dr. Hunter, Mr. Cracherode, the British Museum, and the kings of England and of France. Askew's manuscripts (presumably including those pertinent to the present work) were catalogued separately; their sale took place in 1785. The sale catalogue indicates that an appendix to Scapula's Lexicon was edited by Dr. Chas Burney in 1789 so it is likely that the present work is the title referred to. Charles Burney (1757-1817), classical scholar, was the son of Charles Burney the musician and musicologist. Since Burney the younger published numerous tracts and papers relating to Greek literature he could well be the author, but we have been unable to verify this attribution from any other source. Extremely scarce.
Fine English In contemporary bdg. 4to. (33 x 23 cm). In Turkish. 86 p., 268 full page b/w plts. Turkish architecture in Southeast Anatolia. First and Only Edition. Cenubu Garbî Anadolu'da Türk mimarisi.
Light bump to top of spine. Former owner's name to ffep. Else minor shelfwear to book. DJ spine browned with a bit of sticker damage. Tears to head of spine. Some chipping to DJ. ; 191 pages; Flavius Abinnaeus is commander of the cavalry (praefectus alae) in the Fayum, stationed in a fortress in Dionysias, a village in the North-West of the province from AD 342 to 35. The book is a collection of petitions, letters, accounts and lists. Of the 42 letters, 37 are addressed to Abinnaeus and one is written by him. All together, he has 26 different correspondents. Fourteen petitions are addressed to Abinnaus in his official capacity as commanding officer at Dionysias. One petition in Latin is directed to the emperors by Abinnaeus himself. Most accounts and lists register tax contributions levied from farmers by the agents of Abinnaeus.
Aphorisms and poems by a Greek-Canadian writer. A special edition printed in green ink on 59 leaves bound together with braided red cords inside stiff boards designed by the author Embossed image in red sealing wax on the front cover. Numbered copy 089. Author inscription in green ink inside front cover thanking the printer for his support. Book
Foxing (sometimes heavy) and browning to pages. Book has been rebound in cream boards with black lettering to spine. Spine browned. ; Vi, 298, 64 pages. At end: "Appendix ad Frider. Iac. Bastii epistolam Criticam. Partim latine Vertit cumque suis notis et indicibus edidit Godofr. Henricus Schaefer. ; 362 pages
Scholar's bookplate to inner cover (G. P. Goold). Foxing to top of textblock. DJ spine is sunned. DJ has 2 tear to base of front panel and some creasing (2 cm) and 1 small tear to head of DJ spine. ; Reprint of the 1908 edition. This book was the first comprehensive study of the Roman law of slavery when it was published in 1908. It is still the standard work. ; 750 pages
New English Paperback. Pbo. 4to. (28 x 20 cm). In English. 356 p. B/w and color ills. "Photography in the Ottoman Empire 1839-1923 provides an account of the history of photography in the Ottoman Empire between the years 1839-1923, an important though neglected field in the history of an early photography. The sultans of the Ottoman Empire traditionally shaped the arts of their day, and their enthusiastic reaction to the discovery of photography was to be crucial in the development of photography in the Empire. This third edition of the book published by YEM Publications has been updated and enlarged to incorporate new information gathered over the years and many new photographs that have been added to my archive. I have made sure that the revised text comprises the latest information available on the subject. Many nation states were created in the former Ottoman territories in Europe, Asia and Africa. I have not included the individual photographic histories of these countries but endeavoured to focus primarily on photography within the present boundaries of the Republic of Turkey. A list of photographers who worked in the Ottoman Empire has been provided to assist all those who are interested in the history of photography in Turkey and the Middle East. The names of photographers that I have come across in documents written in Ottoman Turkish script have been given as spelt. The first two editions treated the story of photography in the Ottoman Empire from the announcement of its discovery in 1839 up to 1919, but this new edition has been extended up to the year 1923 when the Turkish Republic was founded. Researching the history of photography is an unending task requiring a lifetime's dedication."
Spine browned. Very light marginalia mostly in pencil with 1 word or two in pen. Edgewear with minor chipping. Spine ends have been reinforced with white binding tape. ; Zetemata: Monographien Zur Klassischen Altertumswissenschaft. Heft 24; 443 pages
Wraps browned with a bit of edgewear and creasing. Faint creasing through upper pages. ; Zetemata: Monographien Zur Klassischen Altertumswissenschaft. Heft 24; 443 pages
Gift inscription from author to E. W. Handley. Light rubbing to boards. ; Monographs in Classical Studies; 259 pages; Signed by Author
A few neat underlinings and marginal notes in Greek and English. Inscribed by the author to the classicist John Herington (with his name to ffep) and with a brief letter from Gerber to Herrington tipped in. Ring stain to front board. Spine and part of boards are sunned and discolored. Corners a bit bumped. ; Commentary on the Archaic Greek Poets with original Greek Text. ; 436 pages; Signed by Author
Former owner's name to ffep in pen else fine. ; A thorough analysis of the language, thought, myth, structure, and poetic technique of Pindar's most famous ode. ; Phoenix Journal of the Classical Association of Canada Supplementary Volume XV; 202 pages
Minor chipping to spine ends. Light discoloration to spine and top portion of wraps. Classics scholar's name on ffep (Alvin H. Bernstein). Pages uncut. ; Study of the Constitutional aspects of the Antonine monarchy and looks at how the nature of the Roman imperial government changed from the Augustan concept of a Restored Republic under a princeps to an overt monarchy under an emperor. ; Papers and Monographs of the American Academy in Rome Volume XIX; 527 pages
Minor edgewear. Light discoloration to spine. Classics scholar's name on ffep and front wrap (F. A. Lepper). Minor foxing. Very light pencil marginalia (by Lepper? ). ; Study of the Constitutional aspects of the Antonine monarchy and looks at how the nature of the Roman imperial government changed from the Augustan concept of a Restored Republic under a princeps to an overt monarchy under an emperor. ; Papers and Monographs of the American Academy in Rome Volume XIX; 527 pages
Minor edgewear. Signed by both authors to ffep of vol. 1. Name of scholar to ffeps of both volumes (E. Badian). ; Text is in French and Ancient Greek. XC pages of plates at end with 1 map. Vol. II is ; Meletemata 11; Centre De Recherches De L'Antiquite Grecque Et Romaine. Fondation Nationale De La Recherche Scientifique; Vol. 1/2/2022; 448 pages
Very faint wear to corners of front wrap else fine. ; Lexis' Research Tools IV; 4to 11" - 13" tall; 349 pages
Minor creasing to spine. Light shelfwear. ; Skrifter Utgivna Av Svenska Institutet I Athen / Acta Instituti Atheniensis Regni Sueciae, Series in 4°, XXXVIII; 303 pages; The purpose of the Fifth International Symposium at the Swedish Institute at Athens, the papers and discussions of which are contained in this volume, was to initiate a discussion of the various phenomena characteristic of Greek cult practice of the pre-Hellenistic periods, ranging from sacrifice and libations to the handling of cult images and the placing of votive gifts in a sanctuary. It was planned as a cross-discipline symposium so as to allow the problems to be addressed by scholars from diverging points of view, by diverse methods and on the basis of the available evidence, be it archaeological, architectural, iconographical, literary or epigraphical. We also invited an anthropologist, Professor W. Arens, of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, in order to put Greek cult practice in the more general perspective of cultural anthropology. These efforts notwithstanding, it proved impossible to even touch upon all relevant aspects of the topic within the limited time of three days of sessions (and a one day field-trip). The result was a concentration of papers and discussions on a few central phenomena, such as animal sacrifice, votive offerings and ritual meals, and a number of single contributions dealing with a wide range of other aspects. It is our hope that the proceedings will inspire further research in this fascinating field. Robin Hägg
Ex-library copy with usual stamps, book is fair to good. Pencil underlining to a couple of pages. Corners are bumped; and top corners along with top of spine are edgeworn. Boards are scuffed. ; Covers his early career to 66 AD, with stress on the family's background, their patrons and the implications of his two marriages; the Judaean campaigns of 67 and 68 AD, his part in the siege of Jerusalem, his voyage in the east and the significance of Agrippa II and Berenice. Also examines Titus' position in Vespasian's reign and an attempt is made to assess the alleged conflict with Mucianus. Finally various aspects of his reign are considered in detail. ; 240 pages
Light soiling to boards. One single institution stamp "Library US Naval Academy" stamped to top of textblock-- no other ex-library markings. Minor shelfwear. ; Articles: Roman army in the East; Where are the frontiers now? ; River Frontiers in the environmental psychology of the Roman World; Emperors, their borders and their neighbours: the scope of imperial mandata; Parthia and Rome: Eastern perspectives; Annexation of Arabia and imperial Grand Strategy; Civic coins and imperial campaigns; one hundred years of rebellion: the eastern army in politics, AD 175-272; Eusebius and the geography of Roman provinces; Was there an eastern origin for the design of late Roman fortifications? Some problems for research on forts of Rome's eastern frontier; roman army as "total Institution" in the Near East? Dura-Europos as a case study; Laxity of Syrian legions; commanders of Syrian Legions (1st to 3rd c. AD) ; North african deserts and mountains: comparisons and insights. ; Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series; Vol. 18; 1 x 11.5 x 9 Inches; 320 pages
Light scuffing to front board; Beiträge Zur Altertumskunde 93; 329 pages
Former owner's name neatly stamped on ffep (P. Stork). Very light browning to spine else Fine. ; Beiträge Zur Altertumskunde 93; 329 pages
Xv, 396pp. The Augustan age was one in which writers were constantly reworking the Roman past, and which was marked by a profound engagement of poets with the historians and historical techniques which were the main vehicle for the transmission of the image of the past to their day. In this book 17 leading scholars from Europe and America examine the fascinating interaction between such apparently diverse genres: how the Augustan poets drew on - or reacted against - the historians' presentation of the world, and how, conversely, historians picked up and transformed poetic themes for their own ends. With essays on poems from Horace's Odes to Ovid's "Metamorphoses", on authors from Virgil to Valerius Maximus, it forms the most comprehensive examination yet of this central topic of this most central of literary periods. ; 396 pages
Lower corners a bit bumped. ; Xv, 396pp. The Augustan age was one in which writers were constantly reworking the Roman past, and which was marked by a profound engagement of poets with the historians and historical techniques which were the main vehicle for the transmission of the image of the past to their day. In this book 17 leading scholars from Europe and America examine the fascinating interaction between such apparently diverse genres: how the Augustan poets drew on - or reacted against - the historians' presentation of the world, and how, conversely, historians picked up and transformed poetic themes for their own ends. With essays on poems from Horace's Odes to Ovid's "Metamorphoses", on authors from Virgil to Valerius Maximus, it forms the most comprehensive examination yet of this central topic of this most central of literary periods. ; 396 pages
Spine sunned and a little creased. Scholar's name to ffep (Martin Cropp). Light wear to corners of wraps. ; Hypomnemata; Heft 54; 335 pages
Mixed Set. Endpapers tanned for set. Pencil notes to blank endpaper facing titlepage or on titlepage for set. Light foxing to textblocks & Slight fraying to spine ends for set. I, 1: Spine cover mostly split along one side but holding along 2" at bottom. G condition. I, 2: spine cover is split along sides but still folding. G Condition II, 1: VG condition. II, 2: VG condition. III: VG Condition. IV: VG condition. V: small bump along bottom edge of boards. VG condition; Erster Band. Erste Hälfte Einleitung: Elemente Der Anthropologie. 1921. Erster Band. Zweite Hälfte: Die ältesten Geschichtlichen Völker Und Kulturen Bis Zum Sechzehnten Jahrhundert. 1921. Zweiter Band. Zweite, Völlig Neubearbeitete Auflage. Erste Abteilung: Die Zeit der ägyptischen Grossmacht (mit 8 tafeln abbildungen) 1928. Zweite Band. Zweite Abteilung: Der Orient vom Zwölften bis zur Mitte des Achten Jahrhunderts. 1931. Dritter Band. Zweite Unveränderte Auflage: Das perserreich und die Griechen. Erste und zweites Buch: Bis Zu den Friedensschlüssen von 448 und 448 v. Chr. (mit einer Karte) 1915. Vierter Band: Das perserreich und die Griechen. Drittes Buch: Athen (Vom Frieden von 446 Bis Zur Capitulation Athens im Jahre 404 v. Chr. ) 1915. Fünfter Band. Dritte Auflage. Das perserreich und die Griechen. Viertes Buch: Der Ausgang der Griechischen Geschichte 1921.; I.1, I.2, II.1, II.2, III, IV, V in 7 Volumes Complete