6 954 résultats
46943with various interesting particulars relating thereto carefully reprinted from ancient documents : together with a notice of the fortifications of the town at that period its forts outworks walls gates draw-bridges &c.; and an attempt to trace and point out the existing remains of those ancient fortified barriers. Plymouth : G. P. Hearder 1843. Duodecimo modern marbled papered boards with gilt-lettered Morocco title-piece to upper board; pastedown with ex libris of G. & N. Ingleton; original printed blue wrappers bound in title with ownership inscription of noted Plymouth Dissenter Robert Govett 1813-1901 pp. 58 folding colour map; occasional light foxing a very good copy with a newspaper article on the Siege of Plymouth cut from the Western Daily Mercury 11 December 1874 mounted on 3 leaves at rear. A scarcely recorded account of the Siege of Plymouth by the Royalists in the Civil War locally published in the bicentennial year of the bloodiest episode in the city's history. Although the source documents on which the narrative is based are not explicitly stated it seems likely that the diary of John Syms Puritan naval chaplain and librarian was one of them. Having refused to surrender to the Royalists the citizenry of Plymouth signed a solemn covenant to fight to the last man; although poorly armed the defenders managed to overcome a formidable attacking force commanded by Sir Richard Grenville. The town held out for the next four years until the Parliamentary army finally prevailed over the Royalists. With the death of Cromwell in 1658 and the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 however retribution was exacted by King Charles II against the leaders of the Plymouth resistance many of whom were imprisoned. Davidson Bibliotecha Devoniensis p.71 Rare. Not in OCLC; not in COPAC Provenance: Geoffrey Ingleton his bookplate to front pastedown Ingleton catalogue number 11835 stamped on final blank. Â hardcover
47042orné de treize gravures coloriées représentant les costumes des Peuples qui habitent les différentes parties du Globe; suivi d'un Traité de la Grammaire française d'Arithmétique ancienne et décimale; de principes d'Écriture et de Dessin gravés d'après les meilleurs maîtres . . A Paris : chez L. Duprat-Duverger rue des Grands-Augustins n. 21 1811. Duodecimo 170 x 110 mm contemporary half calf over marbled papered boards rubbed edges slightly worn spine with early manuscript title label; ff. 4 half title title coloured engraved frontispiece Table des matières pp. iv 179 with 23 ff. of plates including 1 folding and 13 coloured engraved plates including frontispiece; scattered foxing and occasional ink marks but an attractive example in a fully contemporary binding. The first and principal part of this pedagogical publication is a child's geography which attempts to provide an overview of the peoples of the known world describing their manners and customs. Some of these peoples are depicted in the thirteen colourful yet fanciful illustrations that accompany the text. The four regions alluded to in the title are Europe Asia Africa and America; however Oceania is represented in the section Amerique through the inclusion of a three-page description accompanied by a plate of the Friendly Isles Tonga. Among the other engraved plates are depictions of the indigenous inhabitants of Florida Tierra del Fuego China Ceylon Senegal Persia Turkey Russia and Spain. The geography is followed by short primers in French grammar arithmetic penmanship and drawing. No copy traced in Australian libraries. hardcover
19691900Stuttgart: Verlag Müller und Schindler 1969. Hardcover. Near Fine/ Bookseller Photo Die Weingartner Liederhandschrift.: Textband zum Faksimile der Handschrift H. B. XIII der Württembergischen Landesbibliothek Stuttgart. . Two volumes in slipcase. The first volume is a cream colored cloth hardcover the text edition. The second volume is a eather bound hardcover with three raised bands on spine which is the facsimile edition. Limited edition of 850 copies. Both in Near Fine condition in Very Good slipcase. Verlag Müller und Schindler hardcover
170851699London: printed and sold by J. Morphew 1708. Folio pp. 12; removed from binding; small withdrawn stamp at the base of A2 light soiling short tear at the top gutter; all else very good. Foxon C-541. Not found in CBEL or NCBEL. Apparently rare: ESTC locates only 3 copies: British Library Guildhall Library and the National Library of Scotland. OCLC adds Minnesota this copy and the only copy in America and the National Library of Sweden. COPAC finds three more: Manchester York and Leicester. printed and sold by J. Morphew unknown
170851699London: printed and sold by J. Morphew 1708. Folio pp. 12; removed from binding; small withdrawn stamp at the base of A2 light soiling short tear at the top gutter; all else very good. Foxon C-541. Not found in CBEL or NCBEL. Apparently rare: ESTC locates only 3 copies: British Library Guildhall Library and the National Library of Scotland. OCLC adds Minnesota this copy and the only copy in America and the National Library of Sweden. COPAC finds three more: Manchester York and Leicester. <br/><br/> printed and sold by J. Morphew unknown books
193170190Madrid: Instituto Geologico y Minero De Espana. 1931. Hardcover. Very Good. 46pp illustrated plates 3 folded coloured maps bound in red cloth spine/cream boards; Octavo . Instituto Geologico y Minero De Espana hardcover
18206459530 pages illustrated throughout with woodcuts quite a rare thing Printed by J Kendrew paperback
184082852No date c.1840. Vellum bound ruled household book with marbled edges and endpapers and brass clasp which is mostly filled with hand-written in ink recipes for a variety of farm animal ailments and colours for shows. Includes indexes for colours and stains plus separate index for diseases of Horned Cattle at the start of the volumes. Pages numbered by hand 1-72 are mostly filled with dye recipes and recipes to cure humans from page 109-142 are varnishes dyes and stains. Pages 148 - 200 have medicines for cattle and horses. 201 - 251 are blank and there are a few odd blank sheets in between the hand-written sheets. Vellum boards slightly bowed and soiled otherwise a very clean and sound copy of a unique volume. hardcover
1565BTETM0002405Antwerp: Plantin 1565. 2nd Edition. Hardcover. Good/No Jacket. Octavo Standard 8vo 6 נ9 in 152 נ229 mm . Please email for Photographs or further information. Good - Title with woodcut printer's mark in woodcut title border and woodcut initials in the text. 8 nn. 392 num. pp. 1-16 replaced by copy 98 num. 20 nn. v. 22 missing P7 and white P8 32 nn. slightly rubbed bumped and stained. Two column print. With a list of biblical names in the margin with printed marginalia in Hebrew and Greek. - Front. fl. Intent with ownership entry 20th century. - Browned due to paper slightly foxed throughout title with small. Missing parts last sheet narrowly trimmed and with small. Missing parts in the margin minor loss of letters otherwise in overall good condition. Collation: pp. 542 Please see Photos as part of condition report. 1565 2nd Edition BIBLIA AD VETUSTISSIMA EXEMPLARIA CASTIGATA Quid in horum Bibliorum castigatione praestitum sit subsequens praefatio latius indicabit. By Anon Synopsis: Second edition published by Plantin. Format: Hardcover Octavo Standard 8vo 6 נ9 in 152 נ229 mm Note: Binding/size selection follows standard bibliographic conventions and is approximate; exact measurements may vary. Language: Latin Published By: Plantin Antwerp Condition Report: Dust Jacket: No Jacket Dust Jacket Condition: No Jacket Good - Title with woodcut printer's mark in woodcut title border and woodcut initials in the text. 8 nn. 392 num. pp. 1-16 replaced by copy 98 num. 20 nn. v. 22 missing P7 and white P8 32 nn. slightly rubbed bumped and stained. Two column print. With a list of biblical names in the margin with printed marginalia in Hebrew and Greek. - Front. fl. Intent with ownership entry 20th century. - Browned due to paper slightly foxed throughout title with small. Missing parts last sheet narrowly trimmed and with small. Missing parts in the margin minor loss of letters otherwise in overall good condition. Collation: pp. 542 Please see Photos as part of condition report. SKU: BTETM0002405 Shipping Info: Approximate Package Dimensions H: 12.5 L: 30 W: 25 Units: cm W: 2Kg Tracked Shipping Insurance Coverage as per Customer Request Plantin hardcover
187361644London: Ward Lock and Tyler. 1873. Hardcover. Very Good. No date but early 1870's xviii 2pp 198pp 6pp adverts sm hole in last pp of adverts. Illustrated with 11 plates one of which is in facsimile many other illustrations in the text relevant press cuttings etc loosely inserted bound in original blue cloth new spine incorporating original backstrip new endpapers. Scarce book.; Octavo . Ward Lock and Tyler hardcover
16305564London: Robert barker 1630. Very early complete King James Bible containing Psalms genealogical tablesboth Old and New Testaments. In poor condition. Leather binding still in one piece.-although spine cracking.Appears to be missing Frontispiece- starts with "An act of the Uniformitie" which also slightly torn at corners. Inside cover extensively inscribed by a variety of hands. spine also broken in places-although all internal pages appear to be present. it also ends on page 86 of the psalms at the back-suggesting pages missing there also. 1630 Robert barker hardcover
1933146213<p>London : London Transport 1933. 1st Edition . Hardcover. Very Good/No Jacket Issued. Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. original cloth hardcover with spine lettered by hand very large linen backed multi folding map with attractive partial hand colouring 173cm wide and 217cm tall a very clean and attractive copy of this monumental work. We are a real bookshop with real books situated in and shipping from the United Kingdom. Shelf H. <br /><br /></p> London Transport hardcover
1685c2056London: Printed by Charles Bill Henry Hills and Thomas Newcomb. G : in Good condition with velvet lined case crafted from a later album with clasps. Case scuffed and edgeworn book covers also. Text block clean and tight with minimal foxing. Occasional pencilled notation. 1685. First thus. Full leather hardback. 170mm x 110mm 7" x 4". 271pp 36pp. English Military Discipline published 1686 Rules and Articles published in 1685. The case has a label on its first 'page' marked 'Bp of Durham'. . Printed by Charles Bill, Henry Hills, and Thomas Newcomb hardcover
12mo., First Edition thus, with several woodcut illustrations in the text, neat nineteenth century signature on front free endpaper, title and first page of text; original publisher's brown grained cloth, boards with double frame border enclosing an elaborate an elaborate lozenge all in blind, very neatly recased with new cloth backstrip to style, original gilt lettering laid down, fore-edges lightly dust-soiled else a very good, crisp copy in sympathetically restored publisher's binding. According to the English editor's Preface this scarce work is 'an adapted translation of one of the most popular treatises on French Cookery, entitled La Cuisiniere de la Campagne et de la Ville ou Nouvelle Cuisine Economique, Paris, Audot, 1846'. The success and stature of the French original is compared to that of Mrs. Rundell. It has been suggested that this is in fact a second edition of a work with a similar title published by Thomas Boys in 1825 [Bitting, p. 554; Oxford, p. 157; Wellcome III, 67]; however this would contradict the Preface, and there is no mention of such a kinship in Oxford who lists both volumes. A very nice copy of an extremely scarce work. Oxford, p.177 (recording the publisher as 'David Boyne'). Not in Cagle.
41036Mahogany with Macassar ebony inlaid decoration on a splay quatrefoil pedestal base recent felt baize lightly stained measuring 72cm high 91cm wide and 46 cm deep a few light scratches. A handsome Regency practically useful closed or open for a number of purposes  unknown
34377Watercolour on laid paper with watermark of a horse and rider and pair of scales 200 x 148 mm sheet; captioned in ink 'Nouvelle Hollande' at bottom left and with a foliation number '184' in the same hand at bottom right; the sheet is unmounted verso blank and the drawing has survived in fine condition - virtually in its original state; removal from a sketchbook at some point is confirmed by the slightly roughened top edge of the sheet which also shows evidence of the original stitch holes. This watercolour sketch was made by an anonymous French artist probably around 1835. It appears to be a conflation of several images by the voyage artist Louis Auguste de Sainson 1800-1887 which depict Indigenous people at King George's Sound Albany Western Australia. Sainson made his sketches in situ in 1826 during the Astrolabe's scientific round-the-world voyage under the command of Dumont d'Urville. His drawings were reproduced as engraved plates in Voyage de la Corvette l'Astrolabe Paris: J. Tastu1830-35 and elsewhere. The male figure wears a short animal-skin cloak characteristic of the type worn by the men in Sainson's King George's Sound drawings. His arms are outstretched with the wrists limp and hands downturned a highly distinctive gesture that appears to have been copied directly from the identical body language of several of the subjects in Sainson's famous drawing titled Port du Roi Georges. Nouvelle-Hollande. Un naturel montre à ses Compagnons les Cadeaux qu'il a reçus à bord de L'Astrolabe which depicts an Indigenous man showing his companions the trinkets given to him by the Astrolabe's crew. Furthermore the way in which the man is shown in full profile with knees slightly bent his straggly beard and hair accentuated is strikingly similar to the manner in which the left-hand figure in Sainson's Nlle. Hollande. Naturels du port du Roi Georges is posed. Finally the native grass tree Xanthorrhoea australis is placed at the bottom right of the image just as it is in Sainson's Vue d'un Étang près la Baie du Roi Georges. unknown
180321250471803. London: Printed by J. Cundee . Sold by T. Hurst. 1803. 12mo. Contemporary sprinkled calf with restorations; pp. xii 349 eight stipple-engraved portraits including frontispiece; binding worn; occasional light spotting or browning p. 173 with flaw to lower outer corner; otherwise a good copy.First edition of this anonymously published compendious biographical dictionary of remarkable women who defied gender roles or led independent lives and had a positive impact on their societies and the perception of women.Almost programmatically the volume opens with the biography of Alice a 106-year old African-American slave in Pennsylvania who remembered the days of William Penn and the first settlers. At the age of 95 she still could be seen in full gallop on her daily way to church. Alice of Dunk's Ferry as she became known died in 1802 in Bristol Pennsylvania and is considered now to have been the formost local aural historian for the eighteenth centrury. In the entry for Alice is a reference to a portrait ""See annexed engraving"" p. 3 which is not listed in the directions to the binder and strangely enough can only be found in the later 1804 Worcester Massachusetts edition printed by Isaiah Thomas 1749-1831 a New England pioneer politician writer publisher and printer to whom this text is sometimes ascribed.A precursor of this dictionary is the 1801 ""Eccentric Biography; Or Memoirs of Remarkable Characters"" published by T. Hurst. It contained biographies of both genders; however far fewer of women about a fifth of the almost one hundred biographies collected in this first edition. Among them are biographies of the cross-dressing Chevalier d'Eon Mme de Pompadour Angelica Kaufmann Mary Wollstonecraft the longest and most laudatory biographical entry in the volume Mary Astell Catherine I and II empresses of Russia and other outstanding female lives from history.See Sabin 21754 for the Boston edition of ""Eccentric Biography of Remarkable Characters"" and a Boston 1825 edition. unknown
1816014251Great Britain: printed by Command of His Majesty King George III 1816. Volumes 12 & 3. Volumes 1 & 2 printed 1783 volume 3 1816. Books measure 46.5x30.5.cm. Collation 382pp alternative pages numbered i.e 764pp 450ppxvii635pp. Volumes 1 & 2 published without title pages. Bound in modern red cloth with black title labels. All bindings in very good clean firm condition. Internally minor worming to margin of about 30 pages in volume 2 not affecting text. Pages in good clean condition. Nice clean well bound volumes. . Cloth. Very Good. Folio. printed by Command of His Majesty King George III Hardcover
66353W. Kent & Co. London. 1861. Fifth edition. pp. xviii ii 259 i. Frontispiece and many engraved text vignettes. Original brown cloth impressed decoration and gilt vignette on the front cover spine slightly faded a very good copy. JISC-COPAC records a single copy University of Oxford. W. Kent & Co. London. 1861. Fifth edition. hardcover
1878013677Great Britain 1878. Graphic Newspaper from Saturday July 6th to December 28th 1878. Complete 664pp plus 34pp Christmas number. Book measures 31x41.cm. Bound in period half calf calf corners cloth boards flat gilt bands gilt lettering. Calf rubbed scuffed some dust dirt marking. Internally very occasional stamp The Eccles Hotel. Bantry Bay some occasional offsetting or staining. Pages in good clean condition. A good copy. Some of the articles in this volume. Cyprus. Malta. Dublin. Paris Exhibition. Afghanistan War. F. Hardcover. Very Good. Folio. Hardcover
1791278119United Kingdom: T Cadell 1791. Book. Good. hardback. hardback octavo bound in half calf and marbled paper covered boards and edges. Gilt title to spine. Lower hinge weak with board just attached.Tightly sewn with a text free of markings. The date at the foot of the final leaf has been excised. Foxing to the front endpapers and with one or two spots to the title page. The large folding map of North Africa by J Rennell has a short closed edge tear and is generally in very good order xvi 351pp. Scarce. . T Cadell Hardcover
145237<p>Bas-Rhin Alsace France 1818. Broadside approx. 10½ × 8¼ inches. Ink manuscript on laid paper with red ink and pencil illustrations; watermark visible. Folded with creases light soiling irregular trimming and minor edge wear not affecting text or decoration; very good. Offered with: One-page German manuscript on matching laid paper with identical watermark also dated 1818. Folded with creases and a small perforation not affecting text; very good.</p> <p>Curious and crudely executed folk art this 1818 German-language taufschein baptismal certificate is decorated in ink and pencil. The text records the birth in “Diemringen†and baptism in “Rathsweiler†likely Ratzwiller a village near Diemringen in Bas-Rhin Alsace. Fitting the baptismal theme it features a chicken and egg motif symbolizing creation and new life. The opening lines in German transcription approximate read: “I’ve been baptized and registered The Book of Life includes me now My Father will love me eternally / And be merciful to His child / God surely knows me already for a long time / My name rests in His hand.â€</p> <p>Alternating lines circles and triangles frame the text in an abstract border with the chicken and egg motif placed prominently at the top. Square blocks of color in each corner may suggest a picture frame or reference the brass bosses found on elaborately bound 18th- and 19th-century Bibles.</p> <p>Accompanying the taufschein is a one-page untranslated German manuscript written on matching laid paper with an identical watermark also dated 1818. Both items appear to have originated in Bas-Rhin and were acquired together from an estate in Lancaster County Pennsylvania—an area of early German-speaking settlement. The family may have emigrated from Alsace after the post-Napoleonic upheaval of 1815 when widespread political and economic instability spurred migration.</p> <p>The watermark on both sheets is of the “Vryheyt†“Freedom†type used in Holland and later copied in England Sweden and the United States; see Churchill’s Watermarks in Paper nos. 79–108. The full watermark—visible on the illustrated sheet—depicts a lion holding a stave within a crowned circle possibly encircled by the motto “Pro Patria Eiusque Libertate.â€</p> unknown
3731167<p>London: Printed. Boston; New-England Re-printed and sold by Green & Russell at their Printing-Office near the Custom-House and next to the Writing School in Queen-Street. MDCCLVI. 1756. half-title 23 1 pages. 8vo. “The Second Edition.†In fact the First American Edition preceded by printings in London and York both dated 1755. Expertly washed conserved and stitching renewed; scattered staining. A very good copy housed In a custom cloth clamshell box with a gilt-stamped leather spine label.</p> <p>Partly-untrimmed. First American edition of this eyewitness account of this terrible disaster on All Saints Day November 1 1755 that shook perspective views in the Old World and the New. The Lisbon Earthquake alarmed New England clergy and perplexed philosophers in France. For the former some ministers interpreted the event to show God expressing his angry will. For the latter some thinkers saw the disaster as evidence that no such will existed.</p> <p>The Lisbon Earthquake is estimated to have been 8.5–9.0 magnitude on the Richter scale and lt triggered a tsunami. The devastation was enormous:</p> <p>"“Not long after…a general Panic was raised from a Crowd of People’s running from the Waterside all crying out the Sea was pouring in and would certainly overwhelm the City. This new Alarm created such Horrors in the agitated Minds of the Populace that vast Numbers of them ran screaming into the ruinated City again where a fresh Shock of the Earthquake immediately following many of them were buried in the Ruins of falling Houses. This Alarm was however not entirely without Foundation. For the Water of the River rose at once above twenty Feet perpendicular and subsided again to its natural Pitch in less than a Minute’s time.â€"</p> <p>From the Rev. Thomas Prince to John Winthrop in to Voltaire to Rousseau —the intellectual luminaries of the world weighed in. Years later Goethe would write in his autobiography of his memory as a six-year old of the event: “Perhaps the Demon of Fear had never so speedily and powerfully diffused his terror over the earth.â€</p> <p>The earthquake was the “subject of anxious Church sermons across the Atlantic in New England. In fact an earthquake had also occurred in Massachusetts on the 18th of November 1755 centered east of Cape Ann. In Boston most of the damage occurred where buildings had been constructed over landfill near the wharves. John Adams who was at Braintree wrote in his diary: ‘The house seemed to rock and reel and crack as if it would fall in ruins…’†Kenneth Maxwell</p> <p>The Lisbon and Boston earthquakes became in tandem seismic cultural events as ministers philosophers and scientists contextualized one to the other. Some ministers compared the heavy damage of the Lisbon quake to the minimal damage from Boston’s and drew conclusions of moral American exceptionalism. Others used the Lisbon earthquake’s date of All Saint’s Day to suggest that God was punishing the Catholics. At Harvard professor and astronomer-scientist John Winthrop blamed volcanoes. </p> <p>By and large An Account of the Late Dreadful Earthquake and Fire… is written from neither a secular nor philosophical viewpoint. Rather it is a richly-detailed moment by moment account. It is a linear timeline written by an eyewitness who was literally on the shaky ground —when and where the dramatic event transpired.</p> <p>Charles Edwin Clark’s “Science Reason and an Angry God: The Literature of an Earthquake†in The New England Quarterly describes this narrow field of literature of the New England earthquake of 1755 —from the sermons to accounts such as the present example— as documenting a “science struggling to be born; a vigorous aggressive Protestantism on its way to becoming humanized and rationalized; a continuing consciousness of the uniqueness and special mission of America; and a scholarly approach in the best Puritan tradition to the problems of this world and the next.†Clark also provides an excellent and granular timeline of Boston’s printing and publication history concerning these two earthquakes.</p> <p>The verso of the half-title has an advertisement for the Boston edition of the Indian captivity of William and Elizabeth Fleming which is worth quoting at length: “A NARRATIVE of the Sufferings and surprizing Deliverances of William and Elizabeth Fleming Howes F-183 who were taken captive by Capt. Jakob Commander of the Indians who lately made the incursions on the frontiers of Pennsylvania as related by themselves. A NARRATIVE necessary to be read by all who are going in the Expedition The Kittanning Expedition a.k.a. the Armstrong Expedition as well as every British subject. Wherein it fully appears that the Barbarities of the Indians is owing to the French and chiefly their Priests. Price six Coppers.†After Braddock’s Defeat Capt. Jacob had terrorized the Pennsylvania population until a force armed Pennsylvanians killed Jacobs September 8 1756 in an retaliatory raid. The reader of this pamphlet would not have known of Jacob’s death because according to Clark it was published on April 1 1756.</p> <p>Evans 7602. ESTC W10073. Howes L-371 ref. ESTC records only 6 institutions all in America owning this. The “third American edition†i.e. the second is likewise rare. Ref. Maxwell Kenneth V — Lisbon 1755: The First ‘Modern’ Disaster but if modern how is it so accessed online.</p> unknown
1825BOOKS259406Albany NY: Packard & Van Benthuysen. VG/No Dustjacket. 1825. . 1/2 Leather. 4to. 189pp. Nicely rebound leather; marbled boards rubbed . Packard & Van Benthuysen hardcover
1900CAT0004561900. Some restaurant menus but most for occasions weddings first communions royal dinners and various other festivities as well as countless dinner parties some very professionally printed some handwritten in a variety of styles. The bulk of the material is from 1890-1920 and the early 1930s into the 1950s almost all in Europe though it trickles into the late 1990s. England Belgium Germany France and many from Luxembourg. It includes a number of menus from during the two world wars and a few referencing them a number of the menus appear to be from an RAF chef whose identification card is included in the collection. Like many collections of this sort while it was clearly collected first hand in part it's hard to tell which menus the collector gathered at the time and which were collected later or if perhaps the earlier group was passed down and added to. 146 pieces in all a remarkable collection that stretches from the height of 19th century French cuisine well into the 20th century - a tumultuous period in Europe to be sure but one where at least some people evidently continued to entertain. Held in three binders. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: 2-3 kilos. Category: Cooking Wine & Dining; Inventory No: CAT000456. unknown