1 284 résultats
18061547621806-45. They "succeeded to the utmost & overthrew every thing" - Uxbridge and the "heavies" at Waterloo In two vivid deeply detailed letters Lord Uxbridge - later Marquess of Anglesey and commander of allied cavalry at Waterloo - recounts the withdrawal from Quatre Bras and the battle of Waterloo. Written within six months of the engagement they are almost certainly among his earliest surviving narratives. Autograph correspondence from any senior Allied commander is exceptionally rare. Uxbridge 1768-1854 had been Wellington's brilliant and inspirational cavalry commander in the Peninsula. At Waterloo he reached his zenith at a critical juncture when Picton's infantry was under overwhelming pressure. He personally led the British heavy cavalry in a sweeping charge that routed vastly superior French numbers destroyed batteries and took prisoners and eagles though at severe cost in men and horses. Throughout the day he moved ceaselessly between units - losing eight or nine horses - until his right knee was shattered by grapeshot in the battle's final moments. His supposed exchange with Wellington - "By God sir I've lost my leg!" / "By God sir so you have!" - became the most famous anecdote of the field. John Morewood quoted both letters in Waterloo General 2016 and Edward Owen cited them in The Waterloo Papers 1997. Owen identifies the recipient as Colonel James Allan of the 57th Foot formerly Fitzroy Somerset's successor as Wellington's military secretary a veteran of the Cape 1795 Seringapatam 1799 and the Peninsular War. Written from Beaudesert Staffordshire in December 1815 and addressed to "My dear Sir" and earlier "My dear Colonel" the first letter 10 pages 9 December describes Uxbridge's management of the Allied withdrawal from Quatre Bras. After a quiet morning a substantial force of French cavalry and artillery appeared on the left of Quatre Bras advancing from the pursuit of the defeated Prussians. As the Anglo-allied light battalions withdrew Uxbridge organized the cavalry retreat over the Genappe. He gives a sharply observed account of the fighting there where French harassment became so severe that he ordered a spirited attack by the Hussars followed by a decisive charge of the Life Guards which checked the French advance. The second letter 9 pages 18 December covers the day of Waterloo. Uxbridge begins by admitting that to answer Allan fully "wd be writing a history of my own exploits" before setting out the celebrated charge of the heavy cavalry: their simultaneous assault under Sir William Ponsonby and Lord Edward Somerset the overthrow of infantry and cavalry the seizure of two eagles and some 2500 prisoners and the deep penetration into French squares. He notes their over-extension and heavy losses from French artillery then comments on the actions of Dörnberg Colquhoun Grant Arentsschildt Vandeleur who took over after Uxbridge fell and Hussey Vivian. He ends by directing Allan to his aide-de-camp Captain Thomas Wildman of the 7th Hussars at Stevens's Hotel Bond Street for further detail. The collection includes a note of 17 January 1816 from FitzRoy Somerset - Wellington's military secretary at Waterloo and later Lord Raglan - giving allied numbers engaged and remarking "I hope it will be as useful to you as you are welcome to it". Written shortly after Somerset himself lost an arm at Waterloo it is reproduced in Owen's Waterloo Papers. Three letters from Wellington to his former India colleague Sir Alexander Allan first baronet date from 1806 1814 and 1820 and address James Paull's actions against Richard Wellesley Allan's candidacy for an East India Company directorship which Wellington strongly endorsed and Wellington's request for Allan's influence at India House during the 1820 general election. Two revealing letters from Catherine Duchess of Wellington express her lifelong devotion to her husband ask to keep a portrait lent by Allan and describe her efforts to canvass support for Allan's directorship bid. A brief account of Allan notes his service in the Mysore Wars his published aquatints his parliamentary career and his later role as an East India Company director trusted by Richard Wellesley. The remaining correspondence includes Allan's three political letters of July 1813 advocating Lord Wellesley's alignment with Sidmouth Buckinghamshire and John Sullivan; an 1809 letter from the Marquis de Montalembert describing winter campaigning in the Peninsula; an 1816 note from Sir William Knighton apparently on Allan's mother's death; a friendly letter from "von Kuefstein" in Vienna referring to dispatches to Genoa and to Captain Cotton; a Stuttgart letter of February 1820 on affairs in Württemberg; and two mid-19th-century letters involving John Palfrey Burrell and William Boone seeking access to Waterloo documentation likely addressed to Major Edward Thomas Fitzgerald a wounded Waterloo veteran. Folio 300 x 245 mm contains an archive of 17 letters 55 pp. various sizes letters gummed direct to the leaf or with paper tape. Black half morocco-grain skiver album green pebble-grain cloth boards linen hinged mounting leaves;. Bookplate of Otto Orren Fisher 1881-1961 who after studying medicine at Johns Hopkins became an industrial surgeon for the Hudson Motor Company in Detroit establishing one of the first modern industrial first aid units there. Expected folds and minor toning to most letters generally very good the volume presenting handsomely. The Marquess of Anglesey One-Leg: The Life and Letters of Henry William Paget First Marquess of Anglesey 1768-1854 1991; David Howarth Waterloo: A Near Run Thing 1974. hardcover
21131442015. London: Extraordinary Editions. 2015. Two volumes folio. Original chocolate brown calf with stitched title and decoration on front cover; all housed in a wooden writing slope; as new.One of 200 copies of the Exemplary Edition. ""The Exemplary Edition consists of the same book block and end papers however all three sides are gilded. In addition the book is fully leather bound by hand in a specially selected chocolate calf with raised bands and gold lettering to the spine and featuring the cover design embroidered in coloured thread with gold and silver details. The map portfolio is also hand crafted in a full leather binding of matching calf with raised bands on the spine blocked in gold with the design of the Waterloo medal and lined with scarlet silk. The Exemplary also features two additional maps including a facsimile of the Duke of Wellington's own map which he is believed to have used during the battle and a full sized copy of Du Craan's incredibly detailed map which he created for the King. The key to which appears fully translated on the reverse. The Exemplary Edition and the leather map portfolio are presented together in a hand crafted wooden writing slope designed to replicate the traditional travelling desk that an officer would have taken on the campaign"" publisher's website. hardcover
187023094Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood and Sons 1870. 2 volumes. RARE FIRST EDITION IN PRESENTATION BINDING. A UNIQUE COPY. A family presentation copy inscribed to George E. Mercer from I. Tod-Mercer and dated 1896. 8vo in a beautiful Zaehnsdorf signed binding dated 1896 thus no doubt custom made for the presentation to George E. Mercer. The binding is of full crushed scarlet morocco richly adorned in fine late-Victorian style. The boards feature a wide frame of gilt vines flowers and thistles which is further ruled in gilt then further surrounded by minutely detailed gilt rolling the upper boards also lettered “Mercer’s Waterloo†in fine gilt stamping the smooth rounded spines with gilt lettering with a gilt oval surrounded by more gilt vines and flowers which then grow both up and below to fully frame the spine panel board edges gilt ruled wide turn-ins gilt tooled in the same motif as the covers silk endpapers with powder blue moire pattern and further gilt tooling complete this beautiful presentation a.e.g. xii 369; viii 347 pp. An extraordinary set the condition remains outstanding. The text-block is essentially pristine the fine bindings show only the most minimal evidence of age. Truly and outstanding and unique copy. A SCARCE AND IMPORTANT FIRST EDITION SCARCE IN ANY STATE AND THIS AN EXTRAORDINARY COPY. Mercer's ‘Journal’ is an important source for historians of the Waterloo campaign as well as a detailed description of the landscape and people of Belgium and France in the early 19th century. It is one of the few accounts of the period written by an artillery officer. Mercer’s journals were kept throughout the campaign of 1815 but were not published until 1870 after his death. The work was compiled and written in its finished form some 30 years earlier from the original notes Mercer wrote contemporaneously with additions and verifications from correspondence and other sources. It covers the period from April 1815 to January 1816. Although he eventually rose to the rank of general his fame is as commander of the British G Troop Royal Horse Artillery in the thick of the fighting at the Battle of Waterloo. It is also notable for its lengthy descriptions of the countryside and its people.<br> In spite of his position with the British Army the work is usually found in 20th Century editions in French. Its historical value in the English-speaking nations was largely overlooked till its rediscovery with a Praeger edition in 1970. William Blackwood and Sons hardcover
In folio (mm. 465x320), bella legatura in mz. pelle coeva a grandi ang. con fregi dorati, dorso a cordoni con decorazioni e titolo oro, pp. 76,(28), magnificamente illustrato fuori testo da: 1 tavola con 10 piccoli ritratti in medaglione, 1 mappa “exhibiting the retreat of the French Army from Moscow to Paris”, 1 tavola con facsimili, tutte inc. in rame e 19 splendide acquetinte colorate a mano (di cui 4 a doppia pagina) che raffigurano per lo più vedute di: “Mosca (2) / Danzica / Berlino / Francoforte / Dresda / Amburgo / L’Aja / Lipsia (4) / l’Isola d’Elba, ritratto di Napoleone, Porto Ferrajo / Amsterdam / Rosiere / Smolensko / Hanau / Paris / Ceremony of Te Deum by the Allied Armies on the Square of Louis XV, at Paris, the 10th April 1814”, tutte ampiamente descritte. Sempre dello stesso A., è unita la seguente opera: - "The Campaign of Waterloo", illustrated with engravings of “Les quatre bras. La belle alliance. Hougoumont. La Haye Sainte”, and other principal scenes of action. Including a correct military plan, together with a Grand View of the Battle on a large scale. To which is prefixed a history of the campaign, compiled from official documents and other authentic sources. London, 1816, di pp. (2),34,10 (“Biographical notices of the sovereigns, warriors and statesmen who have eminently signalised themselves in the campaigns of Moscow, Leipsic, France and Waterloo”), arricchita da: una bella veduta dell’Isola di S. Elena, inc. su legno nel t., 2 tavole con numerosi picc. ritratti in medaglione “of the British and their allied - The royal family of France, The family of Buonaparte, French generals, statesmen, etc.; 1 piano della battaglia, inc. in rame f.t. e 4 splendide acquetinte colorate a mano (di cui 1 a doppia pagina): “View from Mont St. Jean of the Battle of Waterloo.. the Evening of the 18th June 1815”. Entrambe le opere sono in "prima edizione". Cfr. Benezit,II, p. 701: “Robert Bowyer (1758-1834), britannique. Acquarelliste, miniaturiste. Il fut très apprécié à la cour de George III et exposa à la Royal Academy, entre 1782 et 1828 et à la Free Society en 1828” - Tooley “English Books with coloured plates..”, nn. 97 e 98. Testo con qualche lieve uniforme ingiallitura; una tav. con piccolo alone al margine super., altrimenti bell’esemplare ben conservato.
16505021650. Etching on thin cream laid paper with a partial "M" or "W" watermark 5 x 5 15/16 inches 126 x 150 mm thread margins. Inscribed in the plate in the upper-right: "Antoni Waterlo fe. et in." In very good condition with light toning in the top right and left corners at the location of a former mount and scattered inscriptions in pencil on the verso. With a charming ovoid beehive collectors stamp in purple ink on the verso Lugt 2732. Because this impression lacks the additional cross hatching and vertical shading on the trunk of the large tree in the left portion of the image and the mound of earth in the left-center sheet it is our opinion is that this is a first state impression of two and before the 1776 publication by Basan. A comparable impression may be found in the collection of the British Museum. Plate six from the series "Six Landscapes." <br /> <br /> Bartsch 52.1; Hollstein 52. On the collector's stamp taken from Frits Lugt Les Marques de Collections de Dessins & d'Estampes Fondation Custodia:<br /> <br /> "We have not found the owner of this mark the name of which must probably be related to what it depicts a beehive which could symbolize a concentration of elements around a collection. For us it evokes the words of the great art historian Henri Focillon who wrote in the preface to the catalog Le Dessin français dans les collections du XVIIIe siècle Paris 1935: "It is because the particular genius of the collector consists by the certainty of discernment and by the personality of choice to make with the genius of others a honey that belongs only to him. » In the margin of the copy of Frits Lugt's book The Marks of Collection of Drawings & Prints 1921 from the Galerie Karl & Faber in Munich it is written "Slg. Moran" opposite number L.2732 with a reference to the Supplement 1956 p. 409. In the latter there is indeed a note at the end of the objects section: "Bienenkorb mit und ohne Initial "M": Slg. Moran Berlin". But we have not yet found any information on this Moran collection from Berlin which would perhaps allow us to identify this amateur beekeeper. A landscape drawing attributed to Theodorus Wilkens sold on the art trade at Christie's in Amsterdam on November 14 1984 under number 130 was presented in the auction catalog as coming from a "Moran collection Berlin its mark not mentioned in the Lugt". It reappeared in 2004 in the catalog of the Winterberg house in Heidelberg Meisterzeichnungen aus fünf Jahrhunderten under number 21 and this time noted as coming from "anonymous collection L.2732". The joint presence on several drawings and prints of this mark L.2732 associated with the name "Moran" and of the unidentified mark L.4218 M in capital letter followed by a point both stamped in purple ink encourages us to write that these two brands are linked to the same collection. They are found stamped on several prints: for example on a mezzotint by Wallerant Vaillant sale 1995 November 28 London Christie's n° 336; on an etching by Daniel Chodowiecki sale 2001 June 7 Hamburg Hauswedell & Nolte no. 139; on an engraving by Pieter II de Jode after J. Jordaens sale 2004 November 24 and 25 Haarlem Bubb Kuyper no. 3485; on three burins by Hans Sebald Beham from the series Les Noces de village B. 157 B. 161 B. 162; sale 2016 March 22 London Sotheby's no. 21. They are still together indicated on an etching by Breenbergh bearing in particular the mark of the doubles of the Kupferstichkabinett in Berlin L.2398 archives of the Fondation Custodia January 9 2016. They are also stamped together on the mount of a wash attributed to Bartholomeus Breenberg sale 1998 November 9 Amsterdam Christie's n° 102. The L.2732 mark alone has also been reported on old prints: La Sainte Famille by Bartolommeo Biscaino sale 1987 December 8 and 9 Berlin Bassenge Auktion 50 n° 4044; a Shepherd and his herd walking by Gerrit Claesz Blekker bearing the marks of Cabinet Brentano-Birckenstock L.345 and of J. Pricken L.2049 B. 9; id. n° 4045; Empedocles by René Boyvin after Rosso id. no. 4072; three woodcuts by Albrecht Dürer B. 76 B. 82 and B. 86; sale 2007 March 28 London Christie's nos. 61 62 and 65. It has also been reported alone on drawings: sale 2000 November 24 and 25 Berlin Bassenge Auction 76 n° 5647 as Wilhem F. Schlotterbeck 1777-1819; sale 2014 June 14 Hamburg Hauswedell & Nolte n° 556 as Jan Hackaert. We also do not know why Lugt proposed the name of Zeidler of Nuremberg in the 1921 notice except that the coat of arms of the bibliophile Carl Sebastian Zeidler 1719-1786 presents a beehive and the word 'zeidlerei' being an old name to indicate the collection of honey. unknown
1816WATERLOO010935Printed by J. Russell Birmingham 1816. Second edition enlarged from the 1814 edition with the account of the Battle of Waterloo. Octavo. 476 pages. Five woodcut plates. Original boards with later leather spine retaining the endpapers.Covers rubbed. Discreet repairs to minor insect damage at bottom edges of first few leaves. Very good. Very scarce; no copies of this edition on Library Hub. Printed by J. Russell, Birmingham, hardcover
188915949Paris, A. Le Vasseur, 1889 ; in-4 ; large demi-maroquin à coins bleu marine, dos à nerfs, titre doré, tête dorée sur témoins, couverture illustrée et dos conservés, non rogné (V. Champs) ; XVI, 518, (2) pp.
51-3650Philadelphia: Janentzky & Weber 1883-1884. Portfolio of matted original etchings in various sizes. Mats are 14 x 20 inches. No table of contents or title page. 11 of 12 etchings. Original fabric portfolio. Includes the etching by Meryon: "Bain-Froid Chevrier." Delteil-Wright 44; Schneiderman 93V. Minor foxing in the image and more specks in the margins. May not be OCLC Number: 145382593 which is American prints whereas this one contains European artists. Philadelphia: Janentzky & Weber, [1883-1884] unknown
14536S.l. (Paris), s.n. (Plon et Lemercier), s.d. ; in-folio oblong (29 x 43 cm) ; cartonnage de percaline noire, grand décor à froid à la plaque sur les deux plats, grand titre doré sur le premier plat ; recueil de 20 planches gravées sur acier par Rouargue, Laloisse et Duron, d'après Th. Yung. Exemplaire finement aquarellé. Les batailles représentées sont celles de : Siège de Toulon (1793), Ste Euphémie (1806), Prise de Gaëte (1806), Combat de Somo-Sierra (1808), La Corogne (1809), Prise d'Oporto (1809), Siège de Saragosse (1809), Talavera (1809), Ocaña (1809), Passage de la Sierra-Morena (1810), Fuentes d'Oroño (1811), Affaire de Brienne (1814), Combat de Champaubert (1814), Montmirail (1814), Montereau (1814), Craonne (1814), Arcis-sur-Aube (1814), Paris (1814), Ligny (1815)- et Waterloo (1815).
K80193Two figures stand by a small bridge.Drawing after Waterloo's etching <em>A man and a woman near a small bridge</em> H 59 in this lot in two states 1st and 2nd.In the drawing some details differ from the etching the clothes of the figure on the left and the one woman with a hat visible just beyond the arm of the man at the center of the composition are missing.Usually Waterloo sketched lines in black chalk and completed the drawings with a grey or brown wash. Some more finished and detailed drawings featuring walking figures or figures on animals are drafted in pen and ink and then enriched with grey or brown wash to determine regions of shadows. See for example Hamburger Kunsthalle Hamburg inv./cat.nr 22688 and Stiftung Weimarer Klassik und Kunstsammlungen Weimar Thüringen inv./cat.nr KK 5624 recto.The first state is signed at the top left: Antoni Waterloo sc. Lettered on the top right: a.; in the second state the address of Ottens is added: R. &. J Ottens ex.NL Twee figuren staan bij een beek in een bos. Over de beek is een smalle brug met een hek afgebeeld. Antieke tekening toegeschreven aan Anthonie Waterloo 1609-1690 en twee etsen in twee verschillende staten. Pen in black and gray ink washed in gray; total: 125 x 145 mm; some light staining on the top margin otherwise in outstanding condition. Etching on laid paper with small margins; total: 136 x 157 mm; state I/3; some rubbing due to handling some minor staining otherwise in good condition. Etching on laid paper with wide margins; total: 211 x 266 mm; state II/3; in good condition. Mounted on cardboard passepartout. Hollstein 59. hardcover
1997SONG0387984003Springer 1997-12-12. 3rd ed. paperback. Used: Good. 6.69x0.88x9.61. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Springer paperback
8vo., SOLE EDITION, some age-marking on half-title, neat repair to last leaf without loss of text, fore-edges browned, new endpapers; newly bound in black coarse-grain cloth, gilt back, uncut, a very good, clean copy. WITH THE SIGNATURE OF BRIGADIER-GENERAL [HENRY] CLINTON, DATED JUNE 1810, ON HALF-TITLE. The author was an officer of infantry. Sir Henry Clinton, the younger (1771-1829), was the second son of Sir Henry Clinton the elder and victor of Charleston. Beginning his career as ensign in 1787 he served in Holland from 1788-89 and was gazetted captain in 1791. He was appointed aide-de-camp to the Duke of York in 1793 and promoted lieutenant-colonel in 1795. A distinguished career followed: as adjutant-general in India, 1802-5; military attaché with the Russian Army at Austerlitz, 1805; commandant at Syracuse, 1806-7; MP, 1808-18; adjutant-general in Sir John Moore's campaign, 1808-9; major-general, 1810, commanded sixth division in Peninsular, 1811-14; KB, 1813; lieutenant-general, 1814; at Waterloo, 1815. A SPLENDID ASSOCIATION COPY OF A SCARCE WORK OF CONSIDERABLE NAPOLEONIC INTEREST. Apparently not in BLPC; not recorded by Sandler.
8vo., Second Edition, on laid paper, with a portrait frontispiece in photogravure, 2 plates in photogravure and 5 folding maps, neat signature on front free endpaper verso, half-title, frontispiece and title mildly spotted ; original red cloth, upper board framed in blind enclosing regimental crest of 16th Light Dragoons in gilt, gilt back, black endpapers, upper hinge tender (but binding entirely sound) else a very good, bright, clean copy. SIR CHARLES OMAN'S COPY WITH HIS NINETEENTH CENTURY ARMORIAL BOOKPLATE MOUNTED ON FRONT PASTE-DOWN. Tomkinson's Diary was first published in 1894 (a number of Press reviews is given on half-title verso). Widely regarded as a classic personal account of the campaign, it has been several times reissued but usually without the plates. This second edition contains the editor's final amendments, including the correction to the part played by Vivian's brigade at Waterloo. A RARE, POSSIBLY UNIQUE, ASSOCIATION COPY. Sandler 3277.
182215861Paris, Béchet Ainé et chez le Capitaine Bacheville, 1822 ; in-8 ; demi-veau glacé grenat à petits coins, dos à quatre nerfs plats décorés encadrant le titre et deux caissons décorés "à la cathédrale", palette et roulettes décoratives dorées, fleurons et roulettes à froid, tranches marbrées (reliure de l'époque) ; XII, 432, (2) pp., frontispice lithographié par G. Engelmann montrant les frères Bacheville se séparant pour toujours en Turquie d'Europe.
elala5776London: 1700-1727. Thomas Bray 1656-1730. The English clergyman and abolitionist helped establish the Church of England in Maryland as well as the Society for the Propagation of Christian Knowledge and the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts. He established a scheme for establishing parish libraries in England and America and in 1723 he formed a group of associates to carry on his work. The Waterloo Clerical Lending Library in Waterloo Quebec was founded in 1845; twenty years later the library was moved to the parish of Dunham. The five complete texts are as follows the odd volumes are works by John Conant John Sharp and John Tillotson: NEWTON Robert. A Practical Exposition Of The Church-Catechism; In Twenty Four Lectures Read In the Parish Church of St. Augustine. pp. viii 392. woodcut ornaments & initials. contemporary paneled calf worn front cover detached foxing to outer leaves. London: Printed by J.Willis and T.Pettet for J. and J.Bonwicke… 1727. First Edition. NICHOLS William 1664-1712. A Conference With A Theist; Containing an Answer To all the most usual Objections of the Infidels Against The Christian Religion. 2 Volumes. pp. xvi 516 14; 2 p.l. 486 10. 2 folding engraved plates. woodcut ornaments & initials. contemporary paneled calf spines & corners worn. early ownership entry of William Woldish Cambridge. London: Printed for J.Holland and J.Bowyer… 1723. Third Enlarged Edition with two additional conferences one with a Machiavelian and the other with an Atheist. PARSONS Robert 1546-1610. His Christian Directory Being a Treatise of Holy Revolution… 2 Parts in 1 continuous pagination. pp. 4 p.l. 490 4. contemporary paneled calf rebacked binding worn some browning. early ownership entries of Thomas Spencer Browne & Jonathan Browne. London: Printed for Richard Sare 1700. Wing P567. ST. JOHN Pawlet. Fourteen Sermons On Practical Subjects. pp. 12 p.l. incl list of subscribers & errata 451. woodcut ornaments. contemporary paneled calf worn front joint cracked foxing to outer leaves. London: Printed by J.Bettenham and sold by ABettesworth and C.Hitch 1737. First Edition. SHARP John Archbishop of York 1645-1714. Fifteen Sermons Preached on Several Occasions. pp. 3 p.l. 472. engraved frontis. portrait. contemporary paneled calf worn spine ends chipped some foxing. London: Printed for Walter Kettilby and sold by Richard Wilkin 1709. Third Edition. 5 complete books in 6 volumes enumerated below plus 8 odd volumes. each octavo volume with printed & manuscript bookplate: ‘This book was given by the Associates of the late Rev. Dr. Bray to the Clerical Lending Library of Waterloo In the County of And Diocese of Quebec 1845 52 Hatton Garden’ rubberstamp of the ‘The Library of Dr. Bray’s Associates’ on title & gilt stamp on spines and printed ‘Rules for the Preservation of Dr. Bray’s Lending Libraries’ on rear paste-down. elala5776 London: 1700-1727 unknown
#[60942]To the left the city of Rhenen with two mills and a church in a flat landscape. To the right is a sailing boat in the river. In front is a figure transporting goods on his head. Plate from a late French edition of the series of six landscapes designed and etched firstly by Jan Ruyscher and then edited by Waterloo. Probably end of eighteenth century. Waterloo's address above on the left: 'AW ex.' l Etching burin and drypoint on laid paper with broad margins in passepartout; plate mark: 120 x 208 mm total: 203 x 254 mm; state III/3; in very good conditions; Hollstein 90 Waterloo 15 Ruyscher unknown
185719030Paris, Jules Tardieu - Bruxelles, E. Guyot et Stapleaux Fils & Charles Tanera 1857 In-8 relié 27,5 cm. Bon état d’occasion.
17480Dans une même reliure début 19ème en demi-cuir, 6 textes présentés en page de garde de façon manuscrite- Les Prussiens dénoncés à l'Europe par une Société de Témoins et de Victimes, de leur invasion dans la Province de Hollande. Paris 1789. 107 pages. -Relation fidèle et détaillée de la dernière campagne de Buonaparte terminée par la bataille de Mont-Saint-Jean dite de Waterloo. Paris 1815. 1 carte dépliante en couleurs. 69p. - Général de division J.H Bécaysferrand : Précis de la Défense de Valenciennes. Paris 1805. 78p -Mémoire du Duc de Rovigo sur la Mort de Pichegru du capitaine Wright, de M.Bathurst. Paris 1825. 72p. -Explications au sujet de la Commission Militaire instituée en l'An XII, pour juger le Duc D'Enghien. 15p. -Léonard Gallois : Trois mois au Portugal en 1822. Lettres. Paris 1822. 93p. Etat correct.Demi-reliure d'époque aux mors supérieurs ouverts.Coins émoussés.Ex-libris du Baron de Neuflize.
1850TATLL(WA48Brussels: Gérard c1850. 1850. oblong 4to. folding partly hand-coloured lithographed plan & 12 lithographed plates. 19th century half vellum original printed front wr. bound in. some foxing throughout stain in lower margin of 5 plates. Brussels: Gérard, [c1850]. hardcover
308Etching. Dutuit 75; only state. Watermark: early Amsterdam seal see Dutuit. Rare with no later printings. Image: 4 x 6 . Margins: ½ to ¾ inch. unknown books
308Etching. Dutuit 75; only state. Watermark: early Amsterdam seal see Dutuit. Rare with no later printings. Image: 4 x 6 . Margins: ½ to ¾ inch. unknown
231154(Début du XIXème siècle.) 25 x 38.5 cm, dessin à la plume. Légères pliures et petites rousseurs.
1819117441819 1 volume comprenant 4 tomes reliés ensemble (one volume composed of 4 books linked together), reliure plein veau havane brun marbré (binding full calfskin) in-octavo, dos long (spine without raised band) superbement décoré or (gilt decoration) - pièce de titre sur fond rouge avec filet or (red label of title with gilt line), coiffes légèrement défraîchies (head and tail of the spine lightly faded), coins émoussés (corners blunt), roulettes sur les coupes (fillets on the cuts) manque de dorure (blurred gilding), tranches peignées (painting edges) - petite tache d'encre sur la gouttière (small ink mark on the fore-edge), illustrations : planches repliées (folding plates), 107 - IV+87 - iv+112 - VIII+86 pages, 1815 à Paris J. G. Dentu Imprimeur-Libraire - 1815 à Paris Chez A. Tardieu Géographe-Graveur - Chez Madame Veuve Courcier Imprimeur-Libraire - Delaunay Libraire - Pillet Imprimeur-Libraire - Treuttel et Wurtz Libraires - Magimel Libraire - 1814 à Paris J. G. Dentu Imprimeur-Libraire - 1819 à Paris à la Librairie Constitutionnelle de Baudouin Frères,
1600042. Hälfte 17. Jahrhundert. Mit der Nr. 5. Ausgezeichneter, malerischer Druck auf festem Bütten. Mit gleichmäßigem Rändchen um die volle Plattenkante. 9 x 14 cm (Einfassungslinie). Papier: 9,8 x 14,6 cm.
64959Bartsch described this plate as: 'Les planches de bois attachées aux quatre arbres';signed on top right: 'Antoni Waterlo fe. et ex.' lettered on top left corner: 'A'.On verso various collectors' marks like J. M. F. Geissler 1779-1853 L.1072 and three further K.S. J. Schook and M. not in Lugt.Also on verso: 'B.artsch N: 21. Premiére épreuve magnifique'.set: twelve lettered plates.NL Een hek naast een brug. Etching on paper trimmed close to plate; total: 103 x 149 mm; state I/5; small pin hole slightly visible large watermark not identifiable. Some light foxing and traces of previous mounting on verso. Beautiful and extremely rare impression; Hollstein 21. unknown