1 160 résultats
2024x-1032666250Routledge 2024. Paperback. New. 320 pages. 9.18x6.12x9.21 inches. Routledge paperback
1032666250.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
20078284Münkeboe, Selbstverlag/ Elbe-Werkstätten Hamburg, 2007. Broschiert, 8°, 598 S.; -tadelloses, sehr gutes Exemplar.
177662764ABLeipzig, Hilscher, 1776. 8o. [8] Bl., 480 S. Papiereinb. d. Zt., dieser am Rü. m. kl. Fehlstellen,Exlibris. 2 kl. Stempel auf Titelbl., alle Seiten unbeschnitten , Ecke gestaucht, innen tls. braunfl., insgesamt gut erhalten.
200295111Rosenheim : Rosenheimer, 2002. 299 S., mit Abb. 8° , Hardcover/Pappeinband
2004223876[Berlin]: Ullstein, 2004. 455 S., 22 cm. OPp., gebundene Ausgabe, SU.
191661947Berlin : Lustige Blätter (Dr. Eysler & Co.), 1916. jeweils [32 Bl.] : überw. Zeichnungen ; quer 8° Broschiert, Rücken mit Tesafilm nachgeklebt, sonst Exemplare in gutem Erhaltungszustand
1915210485Berlin: Mars, o. J. [etw. 1915]. 170 S. Opp., gebundene Ausgabe.
19411231771941 Verlagshaus Bong, Berlin - 1941 - In-8, relié, couverture cartonnée toilée sous jaquette illustrée de l'éditeur - 144 pages - Nombreuses photographies couleurs in et hors-texte - Ouvrage en allemand, Deutschsprachiges Buch
2014306575München : Allitera-Verlag, 2014. 283 Seiten ; 22 cm Originalbroschur.
191497762Berlin, Ernst Siegfried Mittler, [ 1914]. VIII, 199 S. Mit 1 Portrait-Tafel, 3 Bildtafeln, 9 einfarb. Vollbildern u. fast 100 Abb., Kartenskizzen und schemat. Darstellungen im Text. 21 cm. Illustr. OBroschur.
19762091502133514338Shingenronsha Publishing Office 1976. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Shingenronsha Publishing Office paperback
19762092902141505125Shingenronsha Publishing 1976. Soft Cover. Fine. Size: 46 size Shingenronsha Publishing paperback
20021078802002 Editions Naval Submarine League Sonalysts / Hugh Lauter Levin Associates - 2002 - In-Folio, couverture matelassée bleue avec insigne de la United States Submarines en relief sur le premier plat - 352 p. - Très nombreuses reproductions photographiques en couleurs et N&B - Texte en anglais
19791199311979 Editions Robert Laffont - 1979 - In-4, cartonnage toilé rouge, sous jaquette illustrée en couleurs, sous emboîtage cartonné neutre - 256 pages - nombreuses illustrations en couleurs in-texte
24605PARIS, Imp. & lib. centrales de N. Chaix & cie - 1851 - in-8 - Broché -
19368266BBJena, Diederichs, 1936. 1. - 30. Tsd. 153 S. Kart. Aufkleber a. Vorsatz, sonst sehr guter Zust. mit Schutz-Umschl. (Dust-jacket). 30
1990285207Frankfurt (Main) : R. G. Fischer, 1990. 369 S. ; 21 cm Originalbroschur.
1925WOC-205Lieutenant au 63 ème Marocains, Officier au Service des Renseignements, Croix de Guerre avec Palme, Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur. Tombé pour la France, à Bab-Moroudj (Maroc) le 11 juillet 1925. Préface du Maréchal Lyautey. Ouvrage orné d'un portrait et d'une carte du Maroc. Lausanne,éditions Spes, sans date(vers 1926).In-8 relié plein cuir noir avec quelques éraflures. 218pp.
20031078792003 Editions Special Operations Warrior Foundation / Hugh Lauter Levin Associates - 2003 - In-Folio, couverture matelassée noire avec insigne de la United States Special Operations Command en relief sur le premier plat - 325 p. - Très nombreuses reproductions photographiques en couleurs et N&B - Texte en anglais
Very Good Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928) Original typescript letter signed (TLS) by Kâzim Karabekir to Nevzat Ayas [Abdullatif Nevzad Ayasbeyoglu], (1889-1966), who was an important Turkish politician. 21x15 cm. In Turkish (Modern) with Latin letters. 1 p. [in four]. 'Sevgili Bay Nevzad Ayas, Yazilarinizi ilgili iç makama bildirmemizi uygun görürüm. Sevgilerimle gözlerinizden öperim, K. Karabekir'. "The Grand National Assembly of Turkey Presidency - Special" letterhead. The letter has five typescript lines with autograph signature of Karabekir. Musa Kâzim Karabekir was a Turkish general and politician. He was the commander of the Eastern Army of the Ottoman Empire at the end of World War I and served as Speaker of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey before his death. Karabekir was born in 1882 as the son of an Ottoman general, Mehmet Emin Pasha, in the Kocamustafapasa quarter of the Kuleli neighborhood of Constantinople, Ottoman Empire. The Karabekir family traced its heritage back to the medieval Karamanid principality in central Anatolia. Karabekir toured several places in the Ottoman Empire while his father served in the army. He returned to Istanbul in 1893 with his mother after his father's death in Mecca. They settled in the Zeyrek quarter. Karabekir was put into Fatih military secondary school the next year. After finishing his education there, he attended the Kuleli Military High School, from which he graduated in 1899. He continued his education at the Ottoman Military College, which he finished on 6 December 1902 at the top of his class. As a junior officer, after two months he was commissioned in January 1906 to the Third Army in the region around Bitola in North Macedonia. There, he was involved in fights with Greek and Bulgarian komitadjis. For his successful service, he was promoted to the rank of Senior Captain in 1907. In the following years, he served in Constantinople and again in the Second Army in Edirne. During his service in Edirne, Karabekir was promoted to the rank of major on 27 April 1912. He took part in the First Balkan War against Bulgarian forces, but was captured during the Battle of Edirne-Kale on 22 April 1913. He remained a POW until the armistice of 21 October 1913. Before the outbreak of World War I, Karabekir served for a while in Constantinople and was then sent to some European countries like Austria, Germany, France and Switzerland. In July 1914, he returned home, as a world war was likely. He was commissioned to the Iraqi front to join the Sixth Army. For his success at Gallipoli, he was decorated in December 1915 both by the Ottoman and German Command, and was contemporaneously promoted to colonel. In April 1916, he took over the command of the 18th Corps, which gained a great victory over the British forces led by General Charles Townshend during the Siege of Kut-al Amara in Iraq. Karabekir was appointed commander of the 2nd Corps on the Caucasian front and fought bitterly against the Russian and Armenian forces for almost ten months. In September 1917, he was promoted to brigadier general by a decree of the Sultan. In compliance with the Treaty of Sèvres, which ended World War I, Ottoman Sultan Mehmet Vahdettin gave Karabekir the order to surrender to Entente powers, which he refused to obey. He stayed in the region and, on the eve of the Erzurum Congress when Mustafa Kemal had just arrived in Erzurum, he secured the city with a Cavalry Brigade under his command to protect him and the congressmen. He pledged with Mustafa Kemal to join the Turkish national movement and subsequently took the command of the Eastern Front during the Turkish War of Independence by the Kuva-yi Milliye. Karabekir Pasha moved to Ankara in October 1922, and continued to serve in the parliament as Deputy of Edirne. He was still the acting commander of the Eastern Army when he was elected Deputy of Constantinople on 29 June 1923. Six months later, he was appointed Inspector of the First Army. Parliament awarded him the highest Turkish "Order of Inde
19461113121946 Editions du Panache, Chez Cart (libraire) - 1946 - Petit In-12, feuillets libres sous jaquette illustrée et papier cristal - Sans pagination - Avec 18 gravures uniformes et 11 gravures médaille, en couleurs et hors-texte
1932100747<p>New York November 14 1932. 1932. Very good. - Over 85 words typed on his 8-5/8 inch high by 6-1/2 inch wide "90 Broad Street" stationery. Addressing the young campaign volunteer Seymour J. Halpern William J. Donovan the future head of the Office of Strategic Services writes "We have been through a hard fight together. We did not win the title but we did a real job." He goes on to show his appreciation to the young autograph collector "I want you to know that I appreciate that the fight could not have been fought as it was if it had not been for your continued loyalty and support. Please accept this as my symbol of appreciation." Signed in full "William J. Donovan". Donovan ran for Governor of New York State to succeed FDR in 1932. A Republican he lost to Herbert Lehman. Folded in half for mailing the edges are soiled and there are tears to the edges of the fold. Very good.</p><p>To house his law firm in March of 1932 Colonel William J. Donovan leased a large suite of offices in the Stone & Webster Building at 90 Broad Street in New York City.</p><p>The American attorney diplomat soldier and intelligence officer William J. Donovan 1883-1959 is best known as the head of the OSS the Office of Strategic Services which was the war time precursor to the CIA. A veteran of World War I Donovan was awarded the Medal of Honor the Distinguished Service Cross the Distinguished Service Medal and the National Security Medal. In 1941 FDR established the Office of the Coordination of Information with Donovan as its director. Once the U.S. entered the war the COI became the OSS in June of 1942 with Donovan now a major general as its head. Donovan created the OSS as a military psychological warfare service to include both psychological and unconventional warfare. The service would soon include elements that would be called "special operations" the first phase of which would be intelligence penetration including research and analysis and propaganda followed by a second stage incorporating sabotage and subversion. This second stage would be followed by guerilla action commando raids and support of resistance movements.</p><p>An avid autograph collector in his youth the then 19-year old campaign volunteer the future Queens New York Republican Congressman Seymour Halpern 1913-1997 started his political career as a campaign aide to New York's powerful mayor Fiorella La Guardia and first served in New York's State Senate for 14 years before seeking a seat in the U.S. Congress. In Albany Halpern sponsored 279 bills that became law including measures on schools housing civil rights nutrition and mental health. A Liberal he was something of an anomaly as the lone Republican representative from New York City and generally garnered support from Labor Unions and endorsement from the Liberal Party. Yet he never even considered switching parties as he considered membership in the Republican Party a family tradition and commitment. While he found ample time for his private pursuits including painting and collecting autographs he took his legislative duties very seriously. Of these he was proudest of his co-sponsorship of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and of the original 1965 Medicare legislation.</p> [New York], November 14, 1932.
13427Both on letterhead of Old Quarries Avening Gloucestershire. 20 and 24 October 1940. Both items 2pp. 12mo. Both in good condition on lightly-aged paper with slight evidence of previous mounting. The first letter addressed to 'The Editor Cambridge Daily News' begins: 'When I received my L.L.D Degree from the University in June 1931 you published in your issue of June 6 some photographs of the procession to the Senate House on that occasion.' He is writing 'on the off chance' that 'original prints' survive 'as I am most anxious to obtain one for my Autobiography if it is in any way possible to do so'. In the second letter to 'Mr. Stuart' he thanks the editor for the trouble he has taken: 'The photograph is excellent and exactly what I wanted.' He is also 'much amused' by Stuart's 'reminiscence of the Hastings Election 1906 I assume but shocked to learn what I had entirely forgotten that I could ever have spoken against my old friend Freeman Willingdon!' Fareham was a Conservative and Willingdon a Liberal. He recalls that he has stayed with Willingdon 'in India & elsewhere so often since; and was his Sponsor when he took his seat as a "Viscount" in the House of Lords; some 15 years ago.' To prove that there is 'no permanent breach' he is sending a photograph taken when Willingdon 'gave away the Prizes at Cheltenham College - of which I was President'. Both on letterhead of Old Quarries, Avening, Gloucestershire. 20 and 24 October 1940. unknown
1983GUE5632MBroché, 490 pages, paru en 1983 chez Valence, livre en très bon état général.