22 325 résultats
Book has been rebound in brown boards with gilt lettering to spine and design of Cornell University Library to base of spine. Spine sunned. Fraying to top of spine. 1 ex-library stamp to 1 page. No other markings. ; Text in Greek; [190]-386; Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum Et Romanorum Teubneriana TEUBNER; 196 pages
Book has been rebound in dark brown boards with gilt lettering to spine. Fraying to spine ends. Stamps of University Greek department to inner cover and titlepage. Attractive binding with marbling to textblock. ; Text in Greek; ; Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum Et Romanorum Teubneriana TEUBNER; 215 pages
Book has been rebound in dark brown boards with gilt lettering to spine. Light Fraying to spine ends. Stamps of University Greek department to inner cover and titlepage. Attractive binding with marbling to textblock. ; Text in Greek; [233]-466; Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum Et Romanorum Teubneriana TEUBNER; 233 pages
Slight edgewear to spine ends. Minor shelfwear. Light bumping. Boards a little darkened. ; Text in Greek; ; Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum Et Romanorum Teubneriana TEUBNER; Vol. 3; 466 pages
Spine cover has mostly chipped away and Wraps have been crudely repaired to spine with cellotape which has now stained spine. Wraps have detached from textblock but present. Former owner's name to front wrap. Chipping to wraps. ; Text in Ancient Greek; Preface in Latin. Xxiv, 95 pp; Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum Et Romanorum Teubneriana TEUBNER; 12mo 7" - 7½" tall; 95 pages
1 small chip to cloth of rear board. Light browning to boards. Scholar's bookplate to inner cover (Robert Brown). Scholar's blindstamp to ffep (Robert Brown). ; Greek Text with Italian introduction. ; Testi E Documenti Per Lo Studio Dell'antichità II; 133 pages
Corners lightly bumped. Light browning to boards. ; Greek Text with Italian introduction. ; Testi E Documenti Per Lo Studio Dell'antichità II; 133 pages
Endpapers are browned. Minor shelfwear. Light edgewear to base of spine. ; Greek Text with Latin introduction and apparatus. Xliv, 439. Alternate title: Dionysii Halicarnasei quae exstant ; Vol. Quintum. Opusculorum volumen prius. ; Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum Et Romanorum Teubneriana TEUBNER; 439 pages
Endpapers browned. Very light bumping to top corners. ; Greek Text with Latin introduction and apparatus. Xxviii, 83 pp; Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum Et Romanorum Teubneriana TEUBNER; 83 pages
Fine Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928) Original wrappers. Cr. 8vo. (20 x 14 cm). In Ottoman script (Old Turkish with Arabic letters). 120 p., ills. and many plans, one folded map (50x67 cm) of the Galata quarter surrounded by the Bosphorus and the Golden Horn of Constantinople, including Genoese and Byzantine architectural buildings. First edition of this rare and the early book on old Genoese and Byzantine buildings in the Galata quarter of Constantinople, written by Turkish art historian Celal Esat Arseven (1876-1972). The Galata quarter first appeared in Late Antiquity as Sykai or Syca. By the time the Notitia Urbis Constantinopolitanae has compiled in ca. 425 AD, it had become an integral part of the city as its 13th region. According to the Notitia, it featured public baths and a forum built by Emperor Honorius, a theatre, a portico street, and 435 mansions. It is also probable that the settlement was enclosed by walls in the 5th century. In the 11th century, the quarter housed the city's Jewish community, which numbered some 2,500 people. In 1171, a new Genoese settlement in the area was attacked and nearly destroyed. In 1233, during the subsequent Latin Empire (1204-1261), a small Catholic chapel dedicated to St. Paul was built in place of a 6th-century Byzantine church in Galata. This chapel was significantly expanded in 1325 by the Dominican friars, who officially renamed it the Church of San Domenico, but local residents continued to use the original denomination San Paolo. In 1407, Pope Gregory XII, in order to ensure the maintenance of the church, conceded indulgences to the visitors of the Monastery of San Paolo in Galata. The building is known today as the Arap Camii (Arab Mosque) as per its conversion into a mosque a few years later (between 1475 and 1478) under the rule of Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II with the name Galata Camii. In 1261, the quarter was retaken by the Byzantines, but Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos granted it to the Genoese in 1267 in accordance with the Treaty of Nymphaeum. This rare book includes the history and the plans of the buildings such as the Arap Mosque (Church of San Domenico) (1325), Galata Tower (1348), Church of Saint Benoit (1427), Zülfaris Synagogue (1823), Church of Saints Peter and Paul (1843), Camondo Steps (1880), St. George's Austrian High School (1882), Ashkenazi Synagogue (1900), Italian Synagogue (1931), Neve Shalom Synagogue, etc. ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Celal Esat Arseven was a Turkish art professor and historian. Born the son of a pasha in Istanbul, Celal Esat Arseven graduated from Besiktas Military School in 1888 and studied drawing at a fine arts school for a year before going to military college. He continued writing and painting while in the army, from which he resigned in 1908. In the years before World War I, he worked at the humor magazine Kalem with Cemil Cem, one of the great early caricaturists of Turkey. Arseven was a writer and artist of diverse talents. In 1918, he wrote a libretto for one of the first Turkish operas and went on to write several musical plays performed at the Istanbul municipal and state theaters. In addition to being an accomplished watercolorist, he was also a professor of architecture and municipal planning at the Istanbul Fine Arts Academy from 1924 to 1941. He published a five-volume art encyclopedia between 1943 and 1954, and many books on Turkish painting and architecture throughout his lifetime. Before his death, he was awarded a doctoral degree by Istanbul University. He was also a delegate to the Turkish Grand National Assembly during its seventh and eighth sessions. (Sources: And, Metin. "Opera and Ballet in Modern Turkey." In The Transformation of Turkish Culture: The Atatürk Legacy, edited by Günsel Renda and C. Max Kortepeter. Princeton, NJ: Kingston Press, 1986). Özege 5112.; TBTK 4748.
Light shelfwear. Spine lightly browned. Pages unopened. ; Greek text with Extensive Italian Commentary. ; Testi Greci E Latini Con Commento Filologico I; 102 pages
Book has been rebound in 1/2 brown cloth binding with marbled boards and typed lettering to spine. L Corners are edgeworn. Ffep has been excised. Scholar's stamp to titlepage (William Harris). From the library of G. P. Goold. Light age-toning to pages. Book still solid. Else VG. ; Preface in Latin; text in Greek. Lxviii, 612pp. Chariton of Aphrodisias, Eustathius Macrembolitas, Theodorus Prodromus, Nicetas Eugenianus, Constantinus Manasses; Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum Et Romanorum Teubneriana TEUBNER; Vol. 2; 612 pages
Light browning to wraps. Minor shelfwear. Very Light bump to base of spine; Greek Text with Italian commentary. XXXVI, 51 pp. ; Testi E Documenti Per Lo Studio Dell'antichità XLVII; 51 pages
Light browning to wraps. Minor shelfwear. Very Light bump to bottom corner. Tiny chip to base of spine. ; Greek Text with Italian commentary. XXXVI, 51 pp. ; Testi E Documenti Per Lo Studio Dell'antichità XLVII; 51 pages
Scholar's name stamped to ffep with small label affixed over another name. Minor shelfwear. Endpapers lightly browned. ; Greek Text with Latin apparatus and introduction. ; Oxford Classical Texts Oct (Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis); Vol. 1
Former owner's name to ffep. Some rubbing to boards. Very light bump to head of spine. Minor shelfwear. ; Greek Text with Latin apparatus and introduction. ; Oxford Classical Texts Oct (Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis); Vol. 1
Endpapers browned. Former owner's name to ffep covered with white label. Light shelfwear. ; Greek Text with Latin apparatus and introduction. ; Oxford Classical Texts Oct (Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis); Vol. 2
Scholar's name to ffep (Philippa Goold née Forder). Endpapers browned. Some pencil notes. Light bump to 1 corner. ; Greek Text with Latin apparatus and introduction. ; Oxford Classical Texts Oct (Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis); Vol. 2
Former owner's name stamped to ffep (J. D. Fitton). Crease to front board. A couple of pages have not been corner trimmed. ; Greek Text with Latin apparatus and introduction. ; Oxford Classical Texts Oct (Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis); Vol. 2
Book is fine. Minor shelfwear to DJ. Very tiny chip to DJ. ; Greek Text with Latin apparatus and introduction. ; Oxford Classical Texts Oct (Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis); Vol. 3; 402 pages
Former owner's name stamped to ffep (J. D. Fitton). ; Greek Text with Latin apparatus and introduction. ; Oxford Classical Texts Oct (Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis); Vol. 3; 402 pages
Bound in brown marbled boards. Black spine label with gilt lettering to spine. Corners and spine ends edgeworn. Rubbing to boards. Colour flecking off in places of boards. Pages age-toned. Foxing passim. Former owner's name with note in ink to ffep. ; Hippolytus: (1823) Xxxii, 416 pp + Diatribe (1824) viii, 328 pp Text in Greek, notes and commentary in Latin. ; 744 pages
Bound in brown marbled boards. Black spine label with gilt lettering to spine. Corners and spine ends edgeworn. Rubbing to boards. Colour flecking off in places of boards. Cracks along joints of spine cover. Pages age-toned. Foxing passim. Former owner's name with note in ink to ffep. ; Vol I: (1824) XVIII, 489 pp + vol. II: (1824) 370 pp Text in Greek and Latin. ; 2 Vols in 1; Vol. 1/2/2022; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 744 pages
Fine Greek, Modern (post 1453) First appearance of Orhan Veli's poems in the Greek language in a book form. This booklet is a supplement to 'Pirsos' periodical in Greek published in Istanbul by the Greeks of Istanbul. Pyrsos, the last literary magazine of the Greek Community in Istanbul (Romans or Rhomaioi), ceased its publishing activity with the gradual decline in the Greek population after the 6-7 September riots. Finally, in 1962, the magazine bade farewell to its readers with its August-September issue number 93 and went down in history as one of the most remarkable magazines in Istanbul. As the longest-running magazine, Pyrsos had managed to accomplish a most remarkable work. Its publication contributed to the continuation of the Greek literary tradition and it became the voice of an anxious but also ambitious new generation. Apart from showcasing Greek literature, the magazine also embraced Turkish literature, translating countless works by contemporary Turkish writers, who were in fact from among close friends and the intellectual circle of Panagiotis Abatzis (1922-2015). The magazine also presented a smaller number of several works by Armenian authors, all of which were translated from their respective languages, mainly from Turkish into Greek. Even though the journals of Rums of Istanbul which are dedicated to their literature were shortly-lived, they consistently exist. One of these journals is Pirsos. One of the Rums of Istanbul Panayot Abaci who started to publish the journal in 1954, fills the journal with prototype and modern articles for eight years. The writers of the journal are consist of Rums of Istanbul and Turkish authors of the time. Orhan Veli Kanik was a pioneer Turkish poet who is one of the founders of the Garip Movement together with Oktay Rifat Horozcu and Melih Cevdet Anday, aiming to fundamentally transform traditional form in Turkish poetry, he introduced colloquialisms into the poetic language. This extremely rare first book translated into Greek of Orhan Veli's poems. It includes 20 poems by Veli in Greek. Paperback. 12mo. (17,5 x 12,5 cm). In Greek (Modern). 29, [1] p. Near mint. An uncut copy.
Ffep has tear along inner hinge but still attached. Light browning to titlepages. Some fraying/edgewear to spine ends. Call Numbers to spine but no other ex-library markings found. Else VG. ; Xvi, 176 p; Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum Et Romanorum Teubneriana TEUBNER; 12mo 7" - 7½" tall; 176 pages