1 160 résultats
200938724Bielefeld: Kerber 2009. 72 S. Mit zahlr. Illustr., Karten. OKart. 23x28 cm.
196621619Menden, im Selbstverlag Max Pferdekämpers, 1966. IX, 211 SS., 22 s.w. Tafeln im Anhang. 8°, orig. flexible Pappe der Zeit
1997305865Essen : Klartext-Verlag, 1997. 510 S. ; 23 cm Originalpappband.
19761222571976 Editions Del Borghese - 1976 - In-4, cartonnage bleu, titre doré au dos, sous jaquette illustrée en couleurs - 173 pages - Nombreuses illustrations en couleurs in-texte - Ouvrage en italien - Tirage limité à 2000 exemplaires, ex. n°946.
201435442München : Riva, 2014. 346 S. Ill. 8°. 1. Aufl. Ill. OPpbd.
19991198153München: Kösel Verlag, 1999. 239 S. Paperback.
19359489Paris, Editions de la Clé d'Or, 1935 ; grand in-4 en feuilles sous couverture crème rempliée, illustrée en couleurs, chemise-étui de l'éditeur, pièce de titre havane imprimée en doré ; 201, (5) pp., 1 photographie hors-texte et 24 aquarelles hors-texte coloriées au pochoir par le procédé Duval-Beaufumé.
186615568München, Rieger, 1866. 48 SS. Kl.-8°, spätere Halbleinwand.
197612365BBDüsseldorf, Hoch, 1976. 23 cm. 127 S., Ill. Pappband., m. illustr. Buchumschlag. guter Zustand.,
199810549BBLimburg a.d. Lahn, Starke, 1998. 8°. XII, 368 S., Ill. Or.-Leinen m. illustr. Buchumschlag guter, altersgemäßer Zustand.
23500Headed United Service Club Pall Mall S.W. 7 Dec. 1872. Two pages 12mo bifolium good condition a scrawI. Text: "I have only now come to town & was prevented replying to your letter of 28 Nov. sooner. We are getting on slowly but I hope surely with the subscription for the BruneI Statue - but all concerned in this National Scotch undertaking must exercise patience - no Committee in Scotland have a such command as you mention £500 I hope the Cttee here are "coping doing" I came to London for Decr. to work at Blue Books at the War Office connected with the late operations in the Field in New Zealand & to prepare an illustrated work "on Bush Fighting" I hope to be able to see you before long also Dr Rogers meanwhile I'm very truly yours ." Note by source of letter: "It would seem that the project failed. The only Brunel statue built before 1872 was the one on the Embankment dated 1864. But Alexander did produce his book "Bush Fighting" on the Maori war in New Zealand He and Cruikshank had met in connection with the similar proposal for the Robert the Bruce statue at Stirling Cast/e for which Cruikshank had suggested some early designs Alexander being the chairman of the project committee". [Headed] United Service Club, Pall Mall, S.W., 7 Dec. 1872. unknown
26808Chatham 16 March 1824. Three pages cr.8vo bifolium small closed tear at fold aging text clear and complete. See Image for partial Image of titles listed ordered from Mittler's "Catalogue of Military Books 1823" adding a postscript as follows: "NB I am not anxious to have the Books very soon and will therefore wait your usual period of important German Books if more convenient to you than ordering the immediately."Note: Wikipedia "soldier and military engineer who wrote the defining text on the role of the post-American Revolution British Empire: An Essay on the Military Policy and Institutions of the British Empire published in 1810. This text changed how Britons thought their empire should relate to the rest of the world. He warned that Britain could not keep its Empire by its "splendid isolation". Britain would need to fight to gain its empire and by using the colonies as a resource for soldiers and sailors it grew by an average of 100000 square miles 260000 km2 per year between the Battle of Waterloo and the American Civil War. Serving in the Royal Engineers in the Napoleonic Wars he was Europe's leading demolitions expert and siege warfare specialist." Chatham, 16 March 1824. unknown
55219 October 1907; on letterhead of The Lawn Walmer. Two pages 12mo. Very good on lightly creased paper. He is sending five autographs to add to her collection and is 'sorry not to have those of distinguished men of later dates but I am quite out of the service now'. Wonders if she knows his 'very dear friend General Nicholson who is living now at St. Andrews. He and his wife are among our dearest friends.' He 'saw the Godfreys last week - both well.' 9 October 1907; on letterhead of The Lawn, Walmer. unknown
25411'CIRCULAR. / WAR-OFFICE / 10th JULY 1807.' Whitehall London. See his entry in the Oxford DNB. 1p 8vo. In fair condition on lightly aged and worn paper. Folded twice. A printed circular completed in manuscript by a secretary for the ‘Earle of Hardwicke Kt’ as Colonel of the Cambridge Regiment of Militia and signed by Pulteney ‘Ja: Pulteney’. Note at head of page in a third contemporary hand: ‘Copied for Col. the Rt. Hon. Chas. Yorke - 14/7/7’. The circular states that ‘Clothing for the next Year may be immediately provided’ with any not wanted by a certain date ‘from a Decrease in the Number of Supernumeraries’ ‘to be considered as public Stores’. Endorsed in the third hand: ‘War Office 1807 / Secy. of War. July 10 / Clothing for 1808 / Copy made out for Col. Yorke / 14/7/7’. '(CIRCULAR.) / WAR-OFFICE, / 10th JULY, 1807.' [Whitehall, London.] hardcover
2601323 June 1796. 'Entered in the Office for Auditing the Public Accounts the 9th of February 1797'. See his entry in the Oxford DNB. 1p folio. Text clear and entire on worn and grubby paper with chipping to edges and slight loss to one corner with one closed tear repaired with archival tape. Embossed tax stamps at head. Good firm signature at bottom right ‘David Dundas.’ beside small seal in red wax with crumbling impression. At bottom left: ‘Signed Sealed and Delivered being first duly stampt in the Presence of us / John Landon / M King’. Downwards in left-hand margin: 'Entered in the Office for Auditing the Public Accounts the 9th of February 1797 / Thos Gibbes’. Begins: ‘Know all Men by these Presents that I David Dundas Esqr. Major General of His Majestys Forces and Colonel of the Twenty Second Regiment of Foot for and in Consideration of Clothing furnished and delivered by Alexander Adair Esqr. of Pall Mall to and for the Use of the said Regiment .’. The document concerns ‘the Offreckonings or Clothing Money of Twenty Serjeants Twenty Corporals Eight Drummers Two Hundred Privates Ten Contingent Men and Eight Warrant Men’. 23 June 1796. 'Entered in the Office for Auditing the Public Accounts the 9th of February 1797'. hardcover
22615'Rotterdam Dec 13' on paper with watermark date 1830. 4pp 12mo. Bifolium. In good condition on lightly-aged paper with minor traces of tape from mount adhering along one edge. Endorsed 'Genl. Wm. Napier'. On wove paper with watermark 'CANSELL 1830'. The letter - written with energy and some resentment - refers to Admiral Sir William Parker 1781-1866 who was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath in 1815. It is headed 'Private & Confidential' and begins: 'My dear Macdonald In reflection I decided not to ask for the rank you suggested because I thought it might be considered a personal favor & not an act which conferred personal dignity on one of the King's Agents & I detest asking for favors especially from persons unwilling to grant them.' He continues: 'Lord Palmeston ought to see & judge himself whether or not the public service is benefitted by such rank being conferred my own belief is that when An Agent goes amongst these Military Nations where Military rank is alone considered the higher the rank of the Agent the easier he can do his duty.' Nevertheless Napier will not ask '& without asking nothing is given in England'. He continues: 'I think I was ill used in not having the 2d Order of the Bath given to me when it was given to Adl. Parker. We were colleagues on the same station he a New Admiral I a Brigadier General with fuller powers than he had for when two Ministers like Asses sent our fleet to Sea where it remained at a great expense from near 2 to the Nation I alone had the Power to call it into the Tagus & did call it into the Tagus on my own responsiblity which act was approved of by the Ministry. However they gave Parker the Bath & not me but I certainly shall not ask for it. Nor have I ever nor shall I ever complain of not having it & say to to you & to you alone in strict Confidence'. 'Rotterdam Dec 13' [on paper with watermark date 1830]. unknown
19982Docketed as from Stratton Street with date 31 January 1803. . 2pp. 4to. Bifolium. In fair condition lightly aged. Written in a difficult hand. Docketed on reverse of second leaf in a neat hand explaining the context: 'Genl Thomas Graham Stratton Street 31 Janry 1803 wrote him first febry that Peers could not be Commssrs of Supply 1803 3 Febry wrote Lord Keith.' Graham's letter reads: 'There is the list – except two names wch. Lord Keith wishes to have inserted & the memorandum. Of wch. I have mislaid – one is the Baillie of Kinkardine sic for the time being I think – but it wd. be best to apply to him for the proper designations & if necessary afterwards to write to Mrs. Paton abt. them – I think it wd. be worth while to have this list printed - & carefully examin'd & any errors corrected – I will be at the expense & then no mistake can take place in the names or designations in the act of parliament. Transcribing them from this printed list'. He ends by asking to be advised on the matter. [ Docketed as from Stratton Street, with date 31 January 1803. ] unknown
21023No place or date. Lower half of a letter only 13 x 8cm fold marks sl. remnants of having been laid down in album two edges sl. roughened mainly good condition. Surviving Text "time. Will you give my kindest regards to Mrs Chausey Harry & Lucy & believe me friend Geo B McClellan" No place or date. unknown
13770Both letters on letterhead of 12 The Leas Folkestone Kent England. 17 and 28 December 1896. Printed flier: Wightman & Co. "The Westminster Press" 104 Regency Street London SW. Undated. The two letters and flier are in good condition on lightly-aged paper; the cutting is on aged newsprint separated into two parts along a crease line. Letter One 17 December 1896: 2pp. 12mo. Bifolium. He informs the recipient that as the review list for the book is closed its publishers Wightman & Co have sent on the reviewer's letter to Musgrave. 'We are following this course as much interest exists between the North Country & West Africa. In fact the deadly colonies of the coast would soon come to a standstill were it not for the labours of numbers of Scotchmen who brave the climate in a way that makes "Southerners" wonder'. He describes his book as 'an unpretentious little volume of more interest perhaps for its side lights than the account of the expedition which has been so fully dealt upon in Major Baden Powell's Diary "The Downfall of Prempeh".' Baden Powell's book is 'a well produced & expensive work . beyond the reach of ordinary readers whilst its interest is mainly military rather than general'. Letter Two 25 December 1896: 3pp. 12mo. Bifolium. He discusses a photographic reproduction which the recipient would like to accompany his review in the Figaro. Musgrave gives the details of the printer J. Lesley 17 Charlotte Street Portland Place and explains how to obtain and return the 'fair block taken from a small snap shot enlargement' which the recipient wishes to accompany the review. Musgrave is 'sailing to Cuba in the course of a few days' and lists four people to whom he would like copies of the review sent. Printed flier: 4pp. 12mo. Bifolium. Good on lightly-aged paper. Headed 'Now Ready. To Kumassi with Scott. A new & popular edition of a work on West Africa and the Ashanti Expedition. By George C. Musgrave'. The last page prints three endorsements: the first from H. M. Stanley the second from the Daily News the third from 'An Officer who served with the Force'. The cutting is headed: 'The occupation of Kumasi. sic King Prempeh a prisoner. Arrest of the envoys. Official despatches.' Both letters on letterhead of 12 The Leas, Folkestone [Kent, England]. 17 and 28 December 1896. Printed flier: Wightman & Co., " unknown
19741199451974 Macdonald and Jane's, London / Macdonald Illustrated War Studies - 1974 - In-8, cartonné sous jaquette illustrée de l'éditeur - 160 pages - Très riche iconographie (reproductions photographiques) en N&B in et hors texte - Ouvrage en anglais
19701205041970 Published by Macdonald & Co., Purnell's History of the Second World War, collection "Weapons Book", N° 5 - 1970 - In-8, broché couverture illustrée - 160 p. - Très nombreuses illustrations et reproductions photographiques en N&B in et hors texte - Ouvrage en anglais
2010258323Kiel : Arndt, 2010. 206 Seiten. Mit zahlreichen dokumentarischen Abbildungen. 25 cm Originalpappband.
500321740Presses Pocket Sans date.
199826440Frankfurt am Main : Büchergilde Gutenberg, 1998. (Roman) 603 S. (22 cm) Leinen mit Umschlag / gebundene Ausgabe
1972FD10-767Steyr, Selbstverlag, [um 1972]. original Broschur, 8?, 52 S. mit ein paar Abbildungen; Zustand: gut +