692 527 résultats
43428P., Plon, 1917, in 12 broché, 380 pages ; portrait en frontispice.
17681023926Augsburg, G. A. Bornstäd, 1768. 3 Bl., 32, 496, 16 S., 1 Bl. Ldrbd d. Zeit (beschabt, Rücken defekt, gestemp.).
1999RO30318409Bonneton. 1999. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 319 pages. Couverture contrepliée. Nombreuses illustrations et photos en couleurs et noir et blanc, dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 900-GEOGRAPHIE, HISTOIRE, SCIENCES AUXILIAIRES DE L'HISTOIRE
In 8° s.p. con tavv., br. edit. ill.
103.111Bruxelles, Tircher, 1861. "8 x 15, 360 pp., reliure d'édition carton, état moyen (couverture abîmée; dos manquant; plat avant détaché)."
72485Bruxelles, Librairie J. Lebègue, 1914. "12 x 19, sans pagination (ca 600 pages), plusieurs illustrations et cartes, broché, bon état (couverture défraîchie; mouillure sur la tranche supérieure)."
1985526j0252Saskatchewan Canada: Drummond Creek and Cleveland History Book Committee. Good. 1985. First Edition. Hardcover. Presents the local history of these districts located about forty minutes west-southwest of Battleford Saskatchewan. "Dedicated to our pioneers who endured the hardships of a sometimes harsh and unfriendly land." - Dedication page. xii 233 2 index pp. Map endpapers. Generously illustrated with black and white reproductions of archival photos. Includes over one-hundred and fifty pages of family histories. Clean and unmarked with moderate wear to green cloth lettered and decorated in gilt. Binding intact. A quality copy of this informative local history and invaluable genealogical reference. Heidebrecht & Leutenegger 26.; 4to . Drummond Creek and Cleveland History Book Committee hardcover
1961R320005296FLAMMARION. 1961. In-8. Relié toile grenée. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 266 pages illustrées de quelques photos en noir et blanc et augmentées d'une carte en début d'ouvrage - Auteur et titre dorés - Tampons sur la page de titre et contre titre.. . . . Classification Dewey : 980-Histoire générale de l'Amérique du Sud
1963ROD0106197FLAMMARION. 1963. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 266 pages. Quelques planches en noir et blanc hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 980-Histoire générale de l'Amérique du Sud
1936R320077063LES LABORATOIRES CIBA. 1936. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 61 pages - quelques planches en couleurs hors texte -. . . . Classification Dewey : 929.2-Histoire des familles célèbres
47p. Illustrated. 8vo. Original printed wraps. NH 2
1972R320046678ALBIN MICHEL. 1972. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 264 pages - nombreuses illustrations couleurs contre-collées et nombreux desins e nnoir et blanc in texte - Jaquette en bon etat et illustrée en couleurs.. . Sous Emboitage. . Classification Dewey : 709-Histoire des arts
1927R320099920LIBRAIRIE ARMAND COLIN. 1927. In-4. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. paginé de 212 à 479 - PAges augmentées de nombreuses illustrations et cartes en couleur et noir et blanc dans et hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 980-Histoire générale de l'Amérique du Sud
1926R320011578COLIN. 1926. In-4. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos abîmé, Intérieur acceptable. 31 pages illustrées de nombreuses gravures - Plat légèrement sali sur les tranches.. . . . Classification Dewey : 372.89-Livre scolaire : histoire / géographie
63331Antwerpen, Ministerie van Nederlandse Cultuur en Nationale Opvoeding, 1975. 25 x 31, 293 pp., plusieurs planches en couleurs, nombreuses illustrations en N/B, broché, bon état.
RO20241411H. Laurens. Non daté. In-4. En feuillets. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 12 planches illustrées monochromes légendées.. . . . Classification Dewey : 709-Histoire des arts
2004RO20219077Geste. 2004. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 309 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 944-Histoire de France varia
39603Paris, Librairie J.-B. Baillère et Fils, 1920. 12 x 19, 607 pp., 119 figures, broché, bon état.
2015RO30336878National geographic. 2015. In-4. Relié. Bon état, Coins frottés, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 159 pages. Nombreuses photos, illustrations, cartes en couleurs et en noir et blanc, in et hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 980-Histoire générale de l'Amérique du Sud
1968R100075177Presses Universitaires de France. 1968. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 486 pages - couverture jaunie - rousseurs sur le dos.. . . . Classification Dewey : 980-Histoire générale de l'Amérique du Sud
2015RO20241972National Geographic. 2015. In-4. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 159 pages. Nombreuses photos, illustrations, cartes en couleurs et en noir et blanc, dans et hors texte. . . . Classification Dewey : 980-Histoire générale de l'Amérique du Sud
Large 8vo. 2 pp. on bifolium. On scritta stationery with printed letterhead of the "General Council of the International Working Men's Association, 256, High Holborn, London, W.C.". In German. A political article written for publication in the "Volksstaat", the official newspaper of the Social Democratic Workers' Party, edited by Wilhelm Liebknecht in Leipzig. Marx, writing as "Secretary of the General Council of the International Working Men's Association for Germany", defends himself against false reports published by the "Paris-Journal" concerning supposed anti-German tendencies among the French members of the "International". Only a few weeks earlier, on 26 February, the Treaty of Versailles had ended the Franco-Prussian War of 1871. - "The Paris-Journal, one of the most successful organs of the Paris police press, published an article in its March 14 issue, under the sensational heading 'Le Grand Chef de l'Internationale' [...]. 'He', begins the article, 'is, as everyone knows, a German, what is even worse, a Prussian. He calls himself Karl Marx, lives in Berlin, etc. Well now! This Karl Marx is displeased with the behaviour of the French members of the International. This in itself shows what he is like. He finds that they continually spend too much time dealing with politics and not enough with social questions. This is his opinion, he has formulated it quite categorically in a letter to his brother and friend, Citizen Serraillier, one of the Paris high priests of the International. Marx begs the French members [...] not to lose sight of the fact that their association has a single goal: to organise the work and the future of the workers' societies. But people are disorganising the work rather than organising it, and he believes that the offenders must be reminded again of the association's rules [...]'. In its issue of March 19, the Paris-Journal does indeed have a letter allegedly signed by me which [...] found its way into the London papers. [...] The letter, as I have already explained in The Times, is a brazen fake from beginning to end. That same Paris-Journal and other organs of Paris's 'good Press' are spreading the rumour that the Federal Council of the International in Paris has taken the decision [...] to expel the Germans from the International Working Men's Association. The London dailies hastily grabbed the welcome news and published it in malicious instigating leaders about the suicide of the International at long last. Unfortunately, today The Times contains the following announcement by the General Council of the International Working Men's Association: '[...] Neither the Federal Council of our association in Paris nor any of the Paris sections that it represents have ever dreamed of taking such a decision. The so-called Anti-German League, in so far as it exists at all, is exclusively the work of the aristocracy and the bourgeoisie. It was brought to life by the Jockey Club and kept going with the consent of the Academy, the Stock Exchange, some of the bankers and factory owners, and so forth. The working class has never had anything to do with it. The purpose of this calumny is immediately obvious. Shortly before the recent war broke out, the International had to be the scapegoat for all the unpopular events. The same tactics are now being repeated. While Swiss and Prussian papers, e.g., are denouncing it as the originator of the injustices against the Germans in Zürich, the French papers [...] are simultaneously reporting on certain secret meetings of the Internationals in Geneva and Berne, under the chairmanship of the Prussian ambassador, at which the plan is to be devised of handing over Lyon to the united Prussians and the Internationals for the purpose of jointly plundering it.' So much for the statement of the General Council. It is quite natural that the important dignitaries and the ruling classes of the old society who can only maintain their own power and the exploitation of the productive masses of the people by national conflicts and antagonisms, recognise their common adversary in the International Working Men's Association. All and any means are good to destroy it [...]" (transl.). Marx signs in full as "Karl Marx, Secretary of the General Council of the International Working Men's Association for Germany". - The writing of this article coincided with the formation of the Paris Commune, about which Marx later wrote that it would "be forever celebrated as the glorious harbinger of a new society" ("The Civil War in France", MEW 17, p. 362). The article was published in the "Volksstaat" on 29 March 1871 and also in other newspapers of the "International", as well as in the paper "Die Zukunft", edited by Johann Jacoby. - Tiny flaw to lower right corner of the first leaf, resulting in very slight loss to the lower loop of one letter "h". A single ink smudge by Marx's own hand; a few tiny edge tears. The headline has been crossed out by the an editor and replaced by the new title "Erklärung" ("Declaration"). - Complete manuscripts by Karl Marx are of the utmost rarity in the trade. Published under the original title in MEW 17, pp. 298-300, as "An die Redaktionen des 'Volksstaats' und der 'Zukunft'" in MEGA I.22, pp. 5-8 (English ed., pp. 288-290).
1½ SS. auf Doppelblatt. Folio. Mit hs. Adresse. Bericht über Vorhaben und Satzungen der Nationalgarde mit einer aktuellen Finanzübersicht. - Über das politische Wirken des Mediziners im Jahre 1848 heißt es u. a. in einem wohl nicht von ihm selbst verfaßten Lebenslauf: "Was sein politisches Wirken betrifft, so gab ihm das Jahr 1848 genügsam Gelegenheit, seine Anhänglichkeit an das angestammte Kaiserhaus zu beweisen; nicht nur bedeutende finanzielle Opfer, brachte er, sondern auch sein Leben setzte er für die gute Sache u. seinen Kaiser auf das Spiel [...] Was in seiner Macht gestanden, hat er treulich erfüllt. Er hinderte am Barricadentage die Errichtung der Barricaden, - er trat zur berittenen Nationalgarde ein, und wehrte dem Tage der Sturmpetition mit 100 anderen Garden das Eindringen der Barricaden-Erbauer bei den beiden Kärnthnerthoren ab, - er schloß sich im September an die k. k. Cavallerie an, als es galt, den Sicherheitsausschuß aufzulösen [...]". - Im selben Jahr, so heißt es in einer beiliegenden Zeitungsnotiz a. d. J. 1894 aus Anlaß der Umbenennung der Meidlinger Misbach- in Vivenotgasse, "gründete er als Gegengewicht gegen die Stürmer und Wühler extremster Richtung den 'Constitutionellen monarchischen Verein', dessen Farben Schwarz-Gold waren, und alsbald demonstrirten die Wiener mit diesen kaiserlichen Farben. Am 15. September erschienen auf den belebtesten Stellen der Stadt Tausende mit schwarz-gelben Abzeichen, um ihrem Kaiser Treue zu documentiren. Es kam zu großen Schlägereien zwischen den 'Schwarz-roth-goldenen' und den 'Schwarz-gelben', den Vivenot'schen, und die Wiener nannten diese Excesse in ihrem ungebrochenen Humor den 'Bandlkrieg'. Die Regierung nahm sonderbarerweise in der 'Wiener Zeitung' Stellung gegen die Schwarzgelben und Dr. Vivenot legte verstimmt die Leitung des Vereines nieder [...]". - Bl. 2 mit halbseitigen Ausriß der unteren Blatthälfte (Textverlust nur in der Adresse).
94473Paris, Librairie Hachette, s.d. ( ca, 1920). 10 x 15, 586 pp., quelques dessins, reliure dos toilé, bon état (couverture défraîchie).
94856Paris, Le Club Français du Livre, 1969. 14 x 21, 387 pp., reliure skivertex bleu, bon état (dos insolé).