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Marsilio 2003,I ed., atti dell'omonimo convegno, coll. Ricerche, brossura ed. con copertina ill., pagine 111. Il volume è in ottime condizioni. 88-317-8214-2.
Marsilio 2003, atti dell'omonimo convegno, I edizione, pagine 111, volume mai aperto
(Codice LO/7119) In 8° (24 cm) 128 pp. Brossura editoriale, ottimo stato. ~~~ SPEDIZIONE IN ITALIA SEMPRE TRACCIATA
In 8° s.p. con tavv., br. edit. ill.
47p. Illustrated. 8vo. Original printed wraps. NH 2
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).
pp. xxii, 236 + Frontis and full page drawings and maps by W. M. Brunton. Inked ownership of Mrs. C. F. Klunk, York, Pa. Tall 8vo. Original full green cloth binding, gold lettered. Binding slightly soiled. Hardbound. Includes pieces on: the Kyksos; Dirges; and the Songs in the Tomb of Yntuf the Justified.HOLY LAND BOX 1
187 pages. Signed and inscribed by author upon dedication page. "... A story about the early days in, and development of, food production and rural life in America. It reveals... Many of the obscure wonders as they unfolded early across these two great North American nations. We can now, from these pages, appreciate better from whom and from where we came." - from Preface. Somewhat above-average wear and soiling. A sound copy. Book
Nancy, Editions Berger-Levrault, 1935; in-8, [2]-126 pp. + 8 pl. hors-texte, dont certaines dépliantes, broché. Sommaire : Articles de fond : Paul d’ARBOIS de JUBAINVILLE : Le Congrès de la Fédération historique lorraine à Nancy (1935), p. 259./ Lucien BRAYE : Les Chartes de franchise de la châtellenie et de la ville de Ligny, p. 265./ Pierre MAROT : Recherches sur les pompes funèbres des ducs de Lorraine (suite et fin) (avec planches), p. 275./ Lucien KLIPPFEL : Mariage du prince héréditaire de Nassau-Sarrebruck avec mademoiselle de Montbaret (1779), p. 331./ Boris LOSSKY : Artiste lorrains en Bohême, p. 337./ Pierre-Émile KIPFFEL : Autour du nom de la rivière lorraine Ar, p. 341./ René HARMAND : Une petite ville lorraine au début de la Révolution : Puttelange-lès-Sarralbe en 1790-1791, p. 357. – Chronique de la Faculté des Lettres : L’Année scolaire 1934-1935 : C. : « Lecture Dantis », p. 369. – C. : Conférence sur la peinture baroque italienne, p. 366. – C. B. : Conférences en Pologne sur Nancy, p. 366. – Une bibliographie lorraine rétrospective, p. 368. – L’Année scolaire 1935-1936 : André GAIN : Nos bibliothèques, p. 368. – Fédération historique lorraine : *** : Bureau de la Fédération au 1er janvier 1936, p. 373. – Liste des Sociétés affiliées à la Fédération, p. 373. – Table des illustrations : Pompe funèbre de Charles III : Le Cheval d’honneur, p. 276. – Pompe funèbre de Charles III : L’Effigie du duc portée sous un dais, p. 284. – Pompe funèbre de Charles III : Le Retour du cortège au Palais ducal, p. 288. – Pompe funèbre de Charles III : Le Service de table à la royale dans la salle d’honneur, p. 292. – Pompe funèbre de Charles III : Chambre du trépas, p. 296. Chambre du trépas de Louis XIV, p. 296. Catafalque du duc Léopold, p. 304. Catafalque de Stanislas, p. 308. – Errata de l’année 1935.
1 S. Qu.-kl.-4to. "Zuerst müßt ihr vor allem tausend Schedeln | Der Vaterländischen von ihm erschlagnen Edeln | Ein prächtiges Denkmal bauen. | In dessen Mitte groß in Stein gehauen, | Der größte Tieger mit gekröntem Haupt | In seinen Klauen ein Lamm, nach dem sein Blutdurst schnaubt. | Last läsig an der Knochenwand im schauervollen Kreise, | Vom Wittwenmark, und ausgeprestem Schweise, | Zehntausend düstre Lampen brennen. | So wird die Nachwelt ihn schon ohne Inschrift kennen".
Due vol. In 16° pp. 294, 266, br. edit.
8vo. 15 black and white photographs captioned in white, plus one repeat in a smaller print. Original board album, acquired from "M. Arthur, Beyrouth". Paper label to upper cover: "Arab Types. Syria". Small but fascinating collection of portrait photographs showing Arabian nobles as well as commoners, all captioned and the subject often identified by name and tribe. The photos, many of which are executed as highly expressive profile studies, were taken and assembled by Lt. Col. Walter Francis Stirling (1880-1958), Chief of Staff to T. E. Lawrence. While the present photographs were taken during his time with Lawrence, whom Stirling revered, it is not his British comrades but rather the striking features of the sheikhs and bedouins on which this collection is focused. Among the images are "Sheik Gawaileh of Nejd, one of Lawrence's Bodyguard", and "Sheikh Hamondi, Friend of Lawrence"; others are more ominously identified as "Yezidi Shepherd, Devil worshipper" or "Bad type of Hadadiyim Tribesman". Of many noble tribesmen here depicted, such as Fauraz ibn Sha'laan, Emir of the Ruwalla, or Sheikh Daham al-Hadi, Paramount Sheikh of the Shammar tribe, these probably constitute the only photographic record. - Stirling was trained at Sandhurst and served in the Transvaal operation during the Boer War before being seconded to the Egyptian Army in 1906. He spent five years patrolling with an Arab battalion on the Eritrean and Abyssinian borders. Throughout WWI he served at Gallipoli and the Palestinian campaign until he was appointed chief staff officer to Lawrence of Arabia, who called him "Stirling the imperturbable". In 1937, Stirling would reflect on his famous wartime comrade: "From then [early 1918] throughout the final phase of the Arab revolt on till the capture of Damascus, I worked, travelled, and fought alongside Lawrence [...] We sensed that we were serving with a man immeasurably our superior [...] In my considered opinion, Lawrence was the greatest genius whom England has produced in the last two centuries [...] If ever a genius, a scholar, an artist, and an imp of Shaitan were rolled into one personality, it was Lawrence." In 1919 Stirling became advisor to Emir Feisal and Deputy Political Officer in Cairo, then acting governor of Sinai and Governor of the Jaffa district in Palestine before moving to Albania in 1923 to take up a position advising and assisting in the reorganisation of the Albanian Ministry of the Interior.
Firenze, Sansoni, 1979, in-4, tela editoriale con titolo e fregi in oro, sovraccoperta illustrata a colori (questa con minima mancanza al dorso), custodia, pp. [6], 155, [3]. Con illustrazioni come da front. su tavole f.t. Edizione delle opere complete di Roberto Longhi, IX. Condizioni molto buone.
Fascicolo in -4 (21,5 x 32 cm.), brossura editoriale arancio con titoli in nero sul piatto ant., pp. 82 con diverse fotogr, in nero nel testo. In buone condizioni ""
71 p. + Portrait Frontis. Frontis and title page age stained. Sm. 8vo. Green publisher's cloth binding. Loss at top front corner. Mennonite missionary memoirs. PA 05B.
1 S. Folio. Mit 2 papiergedeckten Siegeln. Bestätigungsurkunde für den Brucker Schützenhauptmann Nikolaus Hochmuth: "Das Vorweiser dieß Niklaus Hochmuth von Prugg als Oberaufseher bey den Schanzarbeiten bey der Zillerbrücke gestanden und sich bey dieser Arbeit durch rechtschaffenes, vernünftiges, und sehr lobwürdiges Benehmen ausgezeichnet habe, wird demselben zu seiner Legitimation von Kommissariatwegen bestättiget" (Rattenberg, 30. Sept. 1809, Franz Berr, Commissair). Darunter Speckbachers Bestätigung: "Ich Endesgefertiger bestättige ales das obige und empfel ihm der höchsten Gnade um seine Verdienste mit einer kleinen Unterstützung zu begnädigen." Faltspuren; braunfleckig. - Josef Speckbacher, der "Mann von Rinn", hatte an der Seite Andreas Hofers an drei Schlachten am Bergisel gekämpft und zusammen mit Joachim Haspinger und Peter Mayr die Rheinbunddivision in der Enge von Mittenwald-Oberau (der sog. "Sachsenklemme") besiegt. Nikolaus Hochmuth hatte im Mai 1809 Rattenberg und die Zillerbrücke verteidigt.
4to. 6 1/3 pp. on 7 ff. A chapter from the English translation of his "Ein Requiem in Rot-Weiß-Rot" (Zurich 1946), which was published in 1946 in New York as "Austrian Requiem". - After the occupation and annexation of Austria into Nazi Germany in 1938, the former Austrian Chancellor was arrested, kept in solitary confinement and interned in various concentration camps. After the end of World War II, Schuschnigg emigrated to the United States and worked as a professor of political science at Saint Louis University from 1948 to 1967.
Volume in ottime condizioni
(Codice LO/7621) In 8° 64 pp., alcune illustrazioni. Brossura editoriale, ottimo stato. ~~~ SPEDIZIONE IN ITALIA SEMPRE TRACCIATA
4 SS. auf Doppelblatt. Folio. "In der Capstadt wurde durch die Güte des Hrn. Gouverneurs Sir George Grey ein Buschmannschädel erworben, welcher vom Schlachtfeld genommen wurde und daher jede nähere Bezeichnung fehlt. Dr. Bikersteth, Spitalsarzt in Capstadt, verehrte der Expedition ein kompletes Buschmanskelet welches sich in der Sammlung des anatom. Museums der k. k. Universität befinden dürfte. Ueber die beiden, unseres Aufenthaltes auf den Nikobaren erworbenen Schadel von Eingeborenen erlaube ich mir zu bemerken, daß diese Schädel von Dr. Schwarz und mir aus Gräbern genomen wurden u. zwar [...]". - Bei Scherzers orthographisch höchst bedenklichem Manuskript mag es sich um eine Vorarbeit zum anthropologischen Teil des von der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften herausgegebenen monumentalen Novara-Werkes handeln, das von 1860 bis 1876 erschien. Zu seinen Schädelmessungen vgl. Brigitte Fuchs, "Rasse", "Volk", Geschlecht. Anthropologische Diskurse in Österreich 1850-1960 (Frankfurt a. M., 2003), S. 139 ff.
Il testo è in francese, italiano. Menda al dorso della copertina<br/>Collana COLLECTION DE L'ECOLE FRANCAISE DE ROME 454<br/>Legatura brossura<br/>Formato Ottavo<br/>Num Pagine 421<br/>Illustrazioni in b/n fuori testo<br/>Prima Edizione
Estratto originale da Annali dei Lavori pubblici vol. 72 fasc. 12 anno 13. Su carta patinata. In perfetto stato Numerosissime illustr. fotografiche n.t., in fine 3 grandi tavole più volte ripiegate con le planimetrie degli impianti
Document on vellum, 320 x 192 mm. Counter-signed by Antoine-Jean Amelot, ministre de la maison du roi. Appointment for the Marquise d'Esclignac, designated as companion to "Madame Adélaide" de Bourbon: "Aujourd'huy [...] Le Roy étant à Versailles, mettant en consideration le merite et les [...] qualités de la dame Marquise d'Esclignac, Sa Majesté l'a retenue et retient pour l'une des dames que Sa Majesté a nommées pour accompagner ordinairement Madame Adélaide de France, veut et entend qu'a l'avenir lad. dame Marquise d'Esclignac serve pries cette Princesse en qualité de dame surnumeraire et sans apointements juqsu'a la premiere vacance, et jouisse des honneurs, prerogatives et autres distinctions apartenantes à lad. place en vertu du présent Brevet que bour assurance de sa volonté Sa Majesté a signé de Sa main et fait contresigne poar moi consilla secretaire d'État de de ses commandements et finances [...]". - The Marquise d'Esclignac is an unidentified member of the House of Preissac from the Gascony area. Antoine-Jean Amelot (1732-1795) served as "Secrétaire d'État de la Maison du Roy" until 1783, he died in the Luxembourg prison during the French Revolution. - Old collector's note verso: "Louis XVI et ses ministres - Documents sur la Revolution de 1789". Provenance: Eduard Fischer von Röslerstamm.
830pp. 25 cm. Hardcover Very good condition very good d.j.