2 256 résultats
222423Paris, Plon, 1914 in-12, IV-337 pp., fac-similé dépliant, index, demi-chagrin vert, dos à nerfs orné, couv. cons. (reliure postérieure). Dos passé.
19409498Paris, Jean Bisson, sans date (1940) ; petit in-8, broché ; 63, (1) pp., (2) ff. blancs, couverture crème illustrée, 12 illustrations hors-texte soit imprimées directement soit sur feuilles collée.
1960R320061492BASE ECOLE DES TELECOMMUNICATIONS - DIVISION D'INSTRUCTION TECHNIQUE - SUBDIVISION FIL. 1960. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. environ 100 pages agraffées.. . . . Classification Dewey : 358-Artillerie. Forces aériennes et spatiales
8vo., First Edition, with photographs and facsimiles in the text; white buckram, gilt back, red endpapers, a fine copy in unclipped dustwrapper. Duffell served with 2nd and 22nd Batteries, Australian Field Artillery Brigade in Egypt, France and Belgium.
1999LFA-126741147Une revue de 16 pages, format 220 x 285 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, Editions Atlas, bon état
2000LFA-126741175Une revue de 16 pages, format 220 x 285 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, Editions Atlas, bon état
2000LFA-126741180Une revue de 16 pages, format 220 x 285 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, Editions Atlas, bon état
2000LFA-126741190Une revue de 16 pages, format 220 x 285 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, Editions Atlas, bon état
2001LFA-126741199Une revue de 12 pages, format 220 x 285 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, Editions Atlas, bon état
2001LFA-126741200Une revue de 12 pages, format 220 x 285 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, Editions Atlas, bon état
2001LFA-126741201Une revue de 12 pages, format 220 x 285 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, Editions Atlas, bon état
2001LFA-126741207Une revue de 12 pages, format 220 x 285 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, Editions Atlas, bon état
24617‘Excellent i.e. HMS Excellent Friday morning no date but watermarked 1838’. See his entry in the Oxford DNB. 4pp 4to. Bifolium. In good condition lightly aged. Folded for postage. Whatman watermark of 1838. Sixty-nine lines of text addressed to ‘My dear Sir Charles’ and signed ‘Thomas Hastings’. Begins: ‘I have been thinking that the difficulty of giving mathematics instruction to the Lieuts of Royal. Marine. Artillery. who are now preparing themselves in the laboratory course at the F under Captain Stevens of which Lord Minto spoke yesterday might be got over easily by a temporary arrangement until his Lordship’s plans as to the College are matured.’ He continues with reference to ‘Mr Stark the Mathematical Instructor of the Excellent’ ‘a zealous patient persevering teacher of Nautical Astronomy Navigation & Gunnery’. He ends by stressing that in writing he is ‘only actuated by a desire of shewing how a difficulty may be removed till final arrangements are made’. Among other things he escorted Napoleon to Elba etc. See Wikipedia. ‘Excellent [i.e. HMS Excellent] Friday morning [no date, but watermarked 1838]’. unknown
2081502111806521Not Available N.A. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Not Available paperback
322466Engraved frontispiece pictorial title-page 14 plates numerous illustrations in text. 831 1pp. Thick Royal 8vo. Original green cloth showing wear some staining to fore-edge but tight copy. Ownership signature of Captain Egan 3rd Regt. Engraved frontispiece pictorial title-page 14 plates numerous illustrations in text. 831 1pp. Thick Royal 8vo. Covers all aspects of outdoor travel from transportation and camp logistics to sketching to caring for the wounded. Bases on the authors' experiences in North Australia and South Africa. Mendelssohn p. 925 unknown
1874012516London: Longmans Green Reader and Dyer 1874. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Poor. COPY OWNED BY REV. HENRY WARD BEECHER WITH ALS FROM AUTHOR PRESENTING THE BOOK. First edition large 4to purple cloth elaborately decorated in gilt aeg with numerous full page "illustrations of localities and scenes around Stratford Upon-Avon by the helioytype process". Disbound copy covers worn spine browned. With references in the text to Rev. Beecher's visit with his wife to Stratford on Avon in 1850 with a treatment of his observations thereof. Rev. Beecher's bookplate with his address of 82 Columbia St on the pastedown. The author James Walter a Liverpool shipowner is declared on the title page as Major of the Fourth Lancashire Artillery Volunteers an organization that he founded. The Volunteer Movement in England took hold after an invasion scare in 1859. The volunteer units were composed of part-time soldiers eager to supplement the regular British Army. The Lancashire Artillery that Walter founded was one of the first and the largest in the Volunteer Movement. Walter's ALS dated Chicago February 4 1883 is on letterhead of the Grand Pacific Hotel where both Walter and the famous Rev. Beecher 1813 - 1887 Congregational clergyman orator abolitionist and social reformer were hotel guests. The letter transcribed see below xxxx indicating unreadable reveals what an operator Walter was. Using both flattery of Beecher and feigned self-deprecation he tries to ingratiate himself to Beecher's favor apparently with the purpose of selling Beecher some portraits of George Washington by Shapler that were "owned by his family". He obsequiously points to the section of the book a rather pretentious grand state-of-the-art production for the time which describes Beecher's visit to Stratford on Avon "look to page 77 for your own beautiful paper". Walter also name-drops Rev. David Swing who as the most popular clergyman of Chicago of the time naturally would have been known to and by Beecher. An interesting curio of an artifact. GRAND PACIFIC HOTEL Chicago Reverend H. W. Beecher Chicago 4 Feb 1883 My Dear Sir On my arrival in New York last pairl I ried to see you but vailnly - sickness anxiety xxxxxx discouragments consequent on being utterly unknown in the mighty Babel of dollars caused my return to my name of his estate in England - I am within the last 2 months returned and find myself here in Chicago - I make another effort to shake your warm hand - a xxxx xxxx of your Star papers now for over thirty years compels it - and I want you to see the Shapler Washington portraits owned by my family which are here in the Pacific Hotel with me - they are best seen under the Electric Light in the Corridor or Drawing Room here - If you will kindly let me know any hour after 5 tomorrow Monday or Tuesday I will have been pleased xxxx xxxx - I am deeply anxious you should have been - I am a stranger as you see in America - though here in Chicago Professor Swing has been most kind to me - Do me the xxxx of accepting my "Shakespeare House" book: it will carry you to Stratford so deeply impressed on your heart and mind - and invaluable only for its illustrations - look to page 77 your own xxxx beautiful paper. Dont trouble to call on my room 395. I will call at your room anytime you let me know convenient - my room is a Den - when at home I am a horticulturalist. My xxxx friend the author of "Lorna Doone" xxxx grown Pears Plums and Apples - alas the reason for xxxxx pasts have all nigh driven us to the Worldhome - xxxxx my wife and daughters to "tidy up" English fashion - my palace is a very xxx of confusion worse confounded. Respectfully Dear Sir James Walter. Longmans, Green, Reader and Dyer hardcover books
1874012516London: Longmans Green Reader and Dyer 1874. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Poor. COPY OWNED BY REV. HENRY WARD BEECHER WITH ALS FROM AUTHOR PRESENTING THE BOOK. First edition large 4to purple cloth elaborately decorated in gilt aeg with numerous full page "illustrations of localities and scenes around Stratford Upon-Avon by the helioytype process". Disbound copy covers worn spine browned. With references in the text to Rev. Beecher's visit with his wife to Stratford on Avon in 1850 with a treatment of his observations thereof. Rev. Beecher's bookplate with his address of 82 Columbia St on the pastedown. The author James Walter a Liverpool shipowner is declared on the title page as Major of the Fourth Lancashire Artillery Volunteers an organization that he founded. The Volunteer Movement in England took hold after an invasion scare in 1859. The volunteer units were composed of part-time soldiers eager to supplement the regular British Army. The Lancashire Artillery that Walter founded was one of the first and the largest in the Volunteer Movement. Walter's ALS dated Chicago February 4 1883 is on letterhead of the Grand Pacific Hotel where both Walter and the famous Rev. Beecher 1813 - 1887 Congregational clergyman orator abolitionist and social reformer were hotel guests. The letter transcribed see below xxxx indicating unreadable reveals what an operator Walter was. Using both flattery of Beecher and feigned self-deprecation he tries to ingratiate himself to Beecher's favor apparently with the purpose of selling Beecher some portraits of George Washington by Shapler that were "owned by his family". He obsequiously points to the section of the book a rather pretentious grand state-of-the-art production for the time which describes Beecher's visit to Stratford on Avon "look to page 77 for your own beautiful paper". Walter also name-drops Rev. David Swing who as the most popular clergyman of Chicago of the time naturally would have been known to and by Beecher. An interesting curio of an artifact. GRAND PACIFIC HOTEL Chicago Reverend H. W. Beecher Chicago 4 Feb 1883 My Dear Sir On my arrival in New York last pairl I ried to see you but vailnly - sickness anxiety xxxxxx discouragments consequent on being utterly unknown in the mighty Babel of dollars caused my return to my name of his estate in England - I am within the last 2 months returned and find myself here in Chicago - I make another effort to shake your warm hand - a xxxx xxxx of your Star papers now for over thirty years compels it - and I want you to see the Shapler Washington portraits owned by my family which are here in the Pacific Hotel with me - they are best seen under the Electric Light in the Corridor or Drawing Room here - If you will kindly let me know any hour after 5 tomorrow Monday or Tuesday I will have been pleased xxxx xxxx - I am deeply anxious you should have been - I am a stranger as you see in America - though here in Chicago Professor Swing has been most kind to me - Do me the xxxx of accepting my "Shakespeare House" book: it will carry you to Stratford so deeply impressed on your heart and mind - and invaluable only for its illustrations - look to page 77 your own xxxx beautiful paper. Dont trouble to call on my room 395. I will call at your room anytime you let me know convenient - my room is a Den - when at home I am a horticulturalist. My xxxx friend the author of "Lorna Doone" xxxx grown Pears Plums and Apples - alas the reason for xxxxx pasts have all nigh driven us to the Worldhome - xxxxx my wife and daughters to "tidy up" English fashion - my palace is a very xxx of confusion worse confounded. Respectfully Dear Sir James Walter. Longmans, Green, Reader and Dyer hardcover
1970R320011167ECOLE DE SPECIALISATION DE L'ARTILLERIE ANTIAERIENNE - ESAA.. 1970. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 47 pages + 27 PAGES illustrées de nombreux schémas et figures.. . . . Classification Dewey : 358-Artillerie. Forces aériennes et spatiales
0656305665.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
244719London 1981. 4to. 48 826 s. Rikt illustr. annonser i farger og s/h. Orig. helsjirtingb. . unknown
1950904721950 Ecole d'Application d'Artillerie. IDAR-Oberstein, Avril 1950. 1 vol in-4, broché, 20 pages (textye dactylographié).
1950904731950 Ecole d'Application d'Artillerie. IDAR-Oberstein, Janvier 1950. 1 vol in-4, broché, 39 pages (textye dactylographié).
199213903Friedberg, Podzun Pallas Verlag, 1992.
191749219n.p.: Field Artillery School 1917. fair. Approx. 250 wraps figures appendices errata text darkened covers worn and discolored small pieces of spine missing tears at spine. Some pages brittle and small pieces missing at edges. Topics covered include preparation of fire on the terrain execution of fire and employment of artillery. There are six appendices: protection of a battery position; transportation and storage of ammunition; table showing the kind of projectiles to be used according to the objective; notes on telephone lines; liaisons Morse signals conventional signs used by ground stations; and fire with aerial observation. Field Artillery School paperback