130 résultats
1703AQ14265London: Printed for Tho. Parkhurst 1703. 2 34pp. Bound after: DU MOULIN Lewis. A short and true account of the several advances the Church of England hath made towards Rome. London. s.n. 1680. 88 2 99-112pp. Short closed tear to title occasional ink underlining annotations and damp-staining paper flaw to leaf O with loss of several characters to p.105 replaced in manuscript. And: England enslaved under popish successors: being a true history of the oppressions this nation groaned under in times of popery. London. Printed for Jonathan Wilkins 1681. 44pp. And: A List of such of the names of the nobility gentry and commonalty of England and Ireland amongst whom are several women and children who are all by an act of a pretended parliament assembled in Dublin in the kingdom of Ireland the 7th of May 1689. before the late King James attainted of high treason. London. Printed for R. Clavel.and J. Watts 1690. 2 5-52 49-70pp. Complete despite erratic pagination. Shaving to F3 with loss to marginal notation. And: HART Richard. Parish churches turn’d into conventicles by serving God therein and worshiping him otherwise then according to the established liturgy and practice of the Church of England. London. Printed by Ralph Holt for Obadiah Blagrave 1683. 2 22pp. And: HALE Matthew. The judgment of the late Lord Chief Justice Sir Matthew Hale of the nature of true religion the causes of its corruption and the churches calamity by mens additions and violences: with the desired cure. London. Printed for B. Simmons 1684. 12 64pp. Small marginal hole to terminal leaf. And: PIERCE Thomas. The primitive rule of reformation: delivered in a sermon before His Maiesty at Whitehall Feb. 1. 1662. in vindication of our Church against the novelties of Rome.Published by His Majesties special command. Oxford. Printed by Henry Hall for Ric. Royston. 1663. Sixth edition. 8 37pp 1. And: SHERLOCK William. An answer to a late Dialogue between a new Catholick convert and a Protestant to prove the mystery of the Trinity to be as absurd a doctrine as transubstantiation. London. Printed for Thomas Bassett 1687. 2 14pp. And: STILLINGFLEET Edward. The doctrine of the Trinity and transubstantiation compared as to Scripture reason and tradition in a new dialogue between a Protestant and a Papist. The first part. London. Printed by J. D. for W. Rogers 1687. 47pp 1. Ink annotation to foot of title one instance of manuscript correction to text. And: STILLINGFLEET Edward. The doctrine of the Trinity and transubstantiation compared as to Scripture reason and tradition in a new dialogue between a protestant and a papist. The second part. London. Printed for William Rogers 1687. 4 43pp 1. Small worm-holes to margins throughout. And: KIDDER Richard. The judgment of private discretion in matters of religion defended; in a sermon on I Thessal. V. 21. Preached at St. Pauls Covent-Garden Feb. XXIII. 1686. London. Printed for Brabazon Aylmer 1687. 8 32pp. Ink numeral to head of title dust-soiling to final leaf. And: STILLINGFLEET Edward. A sermon preached November V. 1673. at St. Margarets Westminst. London. Printed by Robert White for Henry Mortlock 1674. 4 50pp. Without imprimatur leaf. And: LLOYD William. A sermon preached before the House of Lords on November 5. 1680. London. Printed by M. C. for Henry Brome 1680. 8 39pp 1. Presentation copy inscribed 'Dono R.Authoris' to recto of initial imprimatur leaf. And: LLOYD William. A sermon preached before Their Majesties at Whitehall on the fifth day of November 1689. Being the anniversary-day of thanksgiving for that great deliverance from the gunpowder-treason and also the day of His Majesties happy landing in England. London. Printed for Robert Clavell 1689. 4 32pp. And: LLOYD Wiiliam. A sermon preached before Her Majesty on May 29 being the anniversary of the restauration of the King and royal family. London. Printed for Thomas Jones 1692. 2 25pp 3. Without half-title. With terminal advertisement leaf. Quarto. Bound in nineteenth-century half-vellum green cloth boards title in manuscript to spine. A trifle marked discolouration to spine. Occasional annotations to titles browning shaving to top-margins with loss to running-titles and/or pagination. From the recently dispersed Mendham collection with Joseph Mendham's manuscript index to fly-leaf. A sammelband of 15 predominantly seventeenth-century anti-Catholic tracts and sermons including a rare pamphlet relating the situation in the French province of Cevennes at the outset of the war of the Camisards a Huguenot led uprising against the crown begun in response to the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 and resulting in the persecution of Protestant practitioners. ESTC locates copies of the first mentioned work in only three locations in North America Folger Harvard Yale and none in the British Isles. The third work too is scarce with ESTC locating copies at six locations in the British Isles Edinburgh Law Society Library Longleat House NLS Oxford Petyt and a further two in North America California Union Theological Seminary. ESTC N46280 Wing D2553 E2932 L2409 H962 H247 P2192 S3261 S5587 S5588 K406 S5643 L2712 L2713 L2716. First English edition. Printed for Tho. Parkhurst hardcover
17342731Stockholm: de l'imprimerie de l'Historiographe du Royaume Par Hartwig Gercken 1734. Agenda format 12mo 168 x 69 mm. 4 304; 392 20 pp. 2 parts with alphabetical index and final errata page. Woodcut title-page ornaments and tailpieces type-ornament headpieces. Light foxing to first few leaves. Contemporary speckled sheep gilt edges marbled pastedown endpapers very worn spine completely abraded with loss at top paper lettering-piece barely legible Livre de Cantiques. A rare hymnal with a catechism and prayers for the small French Huguenot community who had taken refuge in Sweden. Most had fled to Sweden after the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 although a few French Calvinists had settled there earlier. They were not warmly welcomed by the Swedes who tried to amalgamate them with the English and German reformed groups. A small community persisted and in 1700 a first hymnal was published in Stockholm to meet their needs. This second edition was substantially revised and enlarged.The hymns are in French with headings in Swedish and usually German all indexed in the final table. Containing more hymns than psalms this is among the earlier French Lutheran hymnals. The Genevan reformist and poet Benedict Pictet was the first to advocate adding hymns to the psalters of the Reformed French communities but only in Germany did this truly catch on after about 1705. This Stockholm edition clearly follows the German model. In a prefatory letter to the reader the editor Laurent Arnell then pastor of the French Lutheran church in Stockholm explains that he decided to publish this because so few copies remained of the 1700 edition. As the latter contained an insufficient number of hymns he added 85 new ones and along the way he couldn't resist improving some of the wording the result being that he spent far more time on this revised edition than intended. Ars longa . Part 1 contains 224 hymns of which numbers 17-58 correspond to 38 psalms including four given in two versions. The French text of the psalms may derive from various sources: during the late 17th and 18th centuries a plethora of different French paraphrases of the psalms appeared: "A côté de la soixantaine de poètes qui ont donné une traduction complète en vers de l'ensemble des 150 psaumes plus de 250 noms peuvent être cités pour la paraphrase de quelques psaumes seulement" Le Chant de David Les Pseaumes en vers français exhibition at the Bibliothèque Part-Dieu Lyon Sept-Dec. 2010. As opposed to the psalms many of the present hymns were probably either written or heavily revised by Arnell. Printed as prose without music many include verbal indications of melodies referring to tunes used for other hymns e.g. "Sur l'air du N. 163" which were already firmly associated with a melody. The work opens with "Catechism in the form of hymns" "Le Catéchisme en forme de cantiques". Citing its rather clumsy verses Puaux remarked that it was rather foolhardy of Arnell to undertake his revision. Part 2 contains the Gospels and Epistles for every Sunday and feast day and also includes a "Catéchisme de Luther" pp. 233-252 in more traditional question and answer form including advice on explaining to children the Ten Commandments Articles of Faith Sacrament and other ceremonies and symbols. Further instructive material includes biblical passages on the duties of various social states women husbands parents etc. and a prose account of the Passion. Prayers for various occasions and social groups and the Litany conclude the edition. There is an index of incipits in French Swedish and German. OCLC locates 5 copies of which one in the US Yale with no US copies of the 1700 edition. Bibliographie des Psaumes Imprimés en Vers Français 1525-1900 apparently still unpublished no. 1537 cf. BM Lyon online catalogue entry for this edition. Cf. F. Puaux Histoire de l'établissement des protestants français en Suède 1892 p. 66. de l'imprimerie de l'Historiographe du Royaume, Par Hartwig Gercken unknown
17342731Stockholm: de l'imprimerie de l'Historiographe du Royaume Par Hartwig Gercken 1734. Agenda format 12mo 168 x 69 mm. 4 304; 392 20 pp. 2 parts with alphabetical index and final errata page. Woodcut title-page ornaments and tailpieces type-ornament headpieces. Light foxing to first few leaves. Contemporary speckled sheep gilt edges marbled pastedown endpapers very worn spine completely abraded with loss at top paper lettering-piece barely legible Livre de Cantiques. A rare hymnal with a catechism and prayers for the small French Huguenot community who had taken refuge in Sweden. Most had fled to Sweden after the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 although a few French Calvinists had settled there earlier. They were not warmly welcomed by the Swedes who tried to amalgamate them with the English and German reformed groups. A small community persisted and in 1700 a first hymnal was published in Stockholm to meet their needs. This second edition was substantially revised and enlarged.The hymns are in French with headings in Swedish and usually German all indexed in the final table. Containing more hymns than psalms this is among the earlier French Lutheran hymnals. The Genevan reformist and poet Benedict Pictet was the first to advocate adding hymns to the psalters of the Reformed French communities but only in Germany did this truly catch on after about 1705. This Stockholm edition clearly follows the German model. In a prefatory letter to the reader the editor Laurent Arnell then pastor of the French Lutheran church in Stockholm explains that he decided to publish this because so few copies remained of the 1700 edition. As the latter contained an insufficient number of hymns he added 85 new ones and along the way he couldn't resist improving some of the wording the result being that he spent far more time on this revised edition than intended. Ars longa . Part 1 contains 224 hymns of which numbers 17-58 correspond to 38 psalms including four given in two versions. The French text of the psalms may derive from various sources: during the late 17th and 18th centuries a plethora of different French paraphrases of the psalms appeared: "A côté de la soixantaine de poètes qui ont donné une traduction complète en vers de l'ensemble des 150 psaumes plus de 250 noms peuvent être cités pour la paraphrase de quelques psaumes seulement" Le Chant de David Les Pseaumes en vers français exhibition at the Bibliothèque Part-Dieu Lyon Sept-Dec. 2010. As opposed to the psalms many of the present hymns were probably either written or heavily revised by Arnell. Printed as prose without music many include verbal indications of melodies referring to tunes used for other hymns e.g. "Sur l'air du N. 163" which were already firmly associated with a melody. The work opens with "Catechism in the form of hymns" "Le Catéchisme en forme de cantiques". Citing its rather clumsy verses Puaux remarked that it was rather foolhardy of Arnell to undertake his revision. Part 2 contains the Gospels and Epistles for every Sunday and feast day and also includes a "Catéchisme de Luther" pp. 233-252 in more traditional question and answer form including advice on explaining to children the Ten Commandments Articles of Faith Sacrament and other ceremonies and symbols. Further instructive material includes biblical passages on the duties of various social states women husbands parents etc. and a prose account of the Passion. Prayers for various occasions and social groups and the Litany conclude the edition. There is an index of incipits in French Swedish and German. OCLC locates 5 copies of which one in the US Yale with no US copies of the 1700 edition. Bibliographie des Psaumes Imprimés en Vers Français 1525-1900 apparently still unpublished no. 1537 cf. BM Lyon online catalogue entry for this edition. Cf. F. Puaux Histoire de l'établissement des protestants français en Suède 1892 p. 66. de l'imprimerie de l'Historiographe du Royaume, Par Hartwig Gercken unknown books
18690057371869 Sans lieu ni nom d'éditeur, 1569 [pour "La Complainte de Trie"] et 1609 [pour "Les Deviz comingeois"] - [Saint-Gaudens, Abadie, 1869 pour les deux ouvrages]. Deux ouvrages reliés en un volume grand in-8 (243 X 171 mm) demi-chagrin vert bronze à coins, double filet doré sur les plats, dos cinq nerfs filetés or, caissons dorés ornés aux petits fers dorés, titre doré, tête dorée (Reliure de l’époque). Premier ouvrage ("La Complainte de Trie") : plats de la couverture conservés, 4 pages - Second ouvrage : ("Les Deviz commingeois") : (4) ff., 107 pages, (1) f. blanc - (2) ff., 42 pages, (1) f. blanc - 144 pages, (1) f. blanc - 148 pages. Quelques discrètes pointes de rousseurs, très éparses, décharge de la dédicace autographe au premier ouvrage.
166417474Amsterdam, Daniel Elsevier, 1664; in-12, maroquin rouge, dos lisse à faux nerfs dorés, entièrement décoré et doré «à la Bozérian», roulettes d'encadrement des plats, filet sur les coupes, roulette d'intérieur, tranches dorées (sort très probablement de l'atelier des Bozérian) ; (6) ff. y compris le frontispice gravé et le titre, 566 pp. , (10) ff. , le dernier blanc, Henry le Grand au Roy. Poème par Cassagnes.