199 résultats
162pp., 25cm., brochure originale, pages toujours non coupées, dans la série "Bibliothèque de la Faculté de Philosophie et Lettres de l'Université de Liège" fasc. 194, très bon état, R99291
162pp., 25cm., reliure d'éditeur en toile bleue avec titre doré au dos, dans la série "Bibliothèque de la Faculté de Philosophie et Lettres de l'Université de Liège" fasc. 194, très bon état, R113088
grand in-8°, 162-21 pages, -, index, reliure plein simili ornee de l'editeur. Bel exemplaire. [WE-CA]
Mm 175x245 Volume rilegato di pp. 131, con illustrazioni in bianco e nero, dedica alla guardia. In ottimo stato. SPEDIZIONE IN 24 ORE DALLA CONFERMA DELL'ORDINE.
Mm 140x220 Volume in copertina rigida e sovraccoperta originale, 345 pagine con tavole in nero e a colori comprese nel testo. Opera in buono stato. SPEDIZIONE IN 24 ORE DALLA CONFERMA DELL'ORDINE.
A miscellany on books and book collecting. Signed inscription from author on front free endpaper. Brown red cloth covers with gilt title on spine. Dust jacket faded on spine and creased on lower front corner. Page edges foxed and browned.
br. Erasmo e Voltaire hanno attirato il nostro interesse in virtù del ruolo che hanno avuto nei momenti di svolta della cultura occidentale. Finora non era mai stato proposto uno studio esaustivo che delineasse un ampio confronto tra queste due importanti figure, alla luce delle diverse fasi delle loro carriere filosofiche, dei loro testi e della loro rilevanza storica. In questo saggio Ricardo Quinones dimostra che questi autori contribuirono in modo rilevante al cambiamento nelle loro epoche, e chiarisce perché essi possono essere considerati dei maestri del moderno liberalismo.
In-8, broché, couverture imprimée, xxiv, 376 p. Edition originale. Exemplaire non coupé.
xxiv + 376pp., 24cm., brochure originale, quelques soulignements en crayon (facilement à effacer), bon état, G100810
xvii + 267pp., Edition originale, 26cm., brochure originale, quelques soulignements sur une dizaine de pages, sinon en bon état, F106791
First Edition, folio, 321pp., 634 title-page facsimiles, orig. cloth.
Milano, Arnoldo Mondadori, 1968, in-4, cartone editoriale lucido, figurato a colori, pp. 75. Numerose illustrazioni a colori ed in b.n., e cronologia della vita. Collana "I Grandi di Tutti i Tempi". Ottime condizioni.
191pp., 22cm., brochure muette moderne, publié dans et extrait des Mémoires de l'Académie royale de Belgique, bon état, R102242
Mm 140x210 Volume di pp. 319, legatura in tela, ristampa anastatica dell'edizione di Amburgo del 1937. Opera in buone condizioni.
xxxi + 139pp., 23cm., softcover, good condition, G107886
GUIDA 1988 468 PP. FONDO DI MAGAZZINO: SEGNI DEL TEMPO ALLA COPERTINA, LIEVI FIORITURE AI TAGLI, VOLUME INTONSO, MAI SFOGLIATO. Parole e frasi comuni ANTONIO RUBERTI Assemblée Nationale Ateneo attività autonomia aziende Cagliari CARLO CILIBERTO certo complesso considerazioni Convegno corsi di laurea cultura culturale dell'Università didattica dire docenti dottorato di ricerca economico effetti egalitarian esempio esigenze Facoltà di Medicina faculty finanziamento formazione Francesco De Sanctis funzione gestione government higher education industriale ingegneri Ingegneria Elettronica iniziative institutions intervento istituzionale istituzioni l'Università Lànder laureati lavoro legge legislazione livello manageriale mente ministro modello money Napoli nazionale nuove obiettivi oggi organi organizzazione Paese particolare personale planning politica possibilità possono problema produttività professionale professori programmazione provvedimenti Pubblica Amministrazione punto rapporto realizzare realtà relativi relazione research ricerca riferimento riforma riguarda risorse rispetto risultati Ruberti ruolo SAVERIO AVVEDUTO scientifica Scienze scuola sedi universitarie Selenia servizio settore sistema universitario situazione sociale società soltanto specifici spesso squilibri staff Statera strutture studentesca studenti studio sviluppo tecnica tecnologia termini territorio tivo Università italiane universities University of Paris versità
Romae, Istitutum Historicum, 1955, in-8, br. editoriale, pp. 32. Estratto.
Mm 160x230 Brossura editoriale di pp. 356. Opera in stato di nuovo, sigillata. SPEDIZIONE IN 24 ORE DALLA CONFERMA DELL'ORDINE.
8vo., maroon cloth, boards framed in blind, gilt back, upper hinge starting (but binding entirely sound), a bright, clean copy. Sold from an institution with its cancelled armorial bookplate on front paste-down and small stamp in title verso. SCARCE.
64pp.+ enkele buitentekstills., in de reeks "De Guirlande" nr.6, 19cm.
in-12, 188 pages, broche, couv. Tres bel exemplaire. [CL-2]
ff. [60], 320 numbered leaves. Woodcut Aldine anchor and dolphin printer's device on the title page and last leaf. Latin Italic type. Some age stain, especially on first and last leaves. In several places the name of Erasmus is obliterated in ink by a censor. An early ownership on the title has been washed out, and a small marginal chip has resulted. Small 8vo. 160 mm. Edges decorated red. Early nineteenth century full vellum binding. Lacks front fly leaf. This second and improved Aldine edition is essentially a reprint of the edition of 1516, edited by Giovanni Battista Cipelli, called Egnazio (1478-1553), with the addition of annotations by Erasmus, which were first published in the Froben edition of 1518. Both Aldine editions contain the relevant texts of Aurelius Victor and Eutropius with the continuation by Paulus Diaconus. The full work was once the common manual of almost everyone who wished to study Roman history, and because of this long and hard use, it is extremely difficult to obtain a clean and perfect example - Renouard. This second edition is considered the more valuable, as containing an 'Index Memorabilium' and the notes of Erasmus and the Venetian philologist Joannes Baptista Egnatius (ca. 1473-1553). Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus, commonly known as Suetonius (ca. 69/75-after 130). Suetonius was a close friend to Senator and letter-writer Pliny the Younger. Pliny describes him as 'quiet and studious, a man dedicated to writing'. Through Pliny, Suetonius came into favor with Trajan and Hadrian. Under Trajan he served as secretary of studies (precise functions are uncertain) and director of Imperial archives. Under Hadrian, he became the Emperor's secretary. In 122, Hadrian dismissed him for disrespectful behavior towards Empress Vibia Sabina. Suetonius may have later regained imperial favor under Hadrian and returned to his position. It was probably in Hadrian's time that he wrote his most important surviving work - this set of biographies on the Lives of the Twelve Caesars. Entitled 'De Vita Caesarum' it deals with successive Roman rulers, from Julius Caesar to Domitian. It also includes other texts on Roman history, notably Eutropius. This collection of ancient Roman historians is dedicated to the great book collector - Jean Grolier, and is followed by a letter from Erasmus commending the edition as well as Egnatius' scholarship. Renouard 91:7; Schweiger 974-975; Adams S-2035; UCLA A4S93; Graesse VI, 521; Ahmanson-Murphy 201 (incomplete); Bibliotheca Erasmiana Bruxellensis 499 (incomplete); Dibdin II, p. 439; STC Italian p. 651. Very good. Scarce. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! ALDINE BOX SAFE
Ex-library copy with usual stamps, call numbers and pocket. 1 small tear to DJ. Gift inscription from author to Sister Marie Therese. ; The last decade has seen a renewal of interest in the works of Erasmus. Much has been written on the educational and editorial writings of that great humanist of the northern Renaissance, but relatively little on his fictional work. This book deals with the fiction of Erasmus and what it contains of instruction and delight. The attention of the study is focused primarily on the four satiric works: The Praise of Folly, the Colloquies, Julius Secundus, exclusus, and Ciceronianus, although the author, in the process of analyzing and appraising, looked for analogues and explanations in the educational exegetical works. Three aspects of Erasmus' thought are considered. The first is his insistence on man's capacity for betterment through good teaching -- the formal teaching of a preceptor, or the incidental teaching of a good satirist or storyteller. The second is his notion of what man is and to what end he is to be educated. (Man is, of course, bent to knowledge and virtue, but one cannot afford to be too simple in one's appraisal of Erasmus' moral emphases -- the moral life involves both doer and spectator and is strongly dependent on the thinking process, although not divorced from the act of willing, and, activated by faith and the grace of God, is never far removed from creed and devotion. ) The third aspect is Erasmus' special use of irony -- an irony both dramatic and satiric --subtle and various, and doubly pronged so that it punctures what it praises but also questions the too obvious alternative, and leaves the reader pondering the whereabouts of the right and the perimeters of truth. To quote the author: 'It seems to me that the fictional works are the exempla that give life and specificity to the great theories of a great man, and a study of them should not be without interest.' ; Erasmus studies; 198 pages; Signed by Author