212 résultats
12134Lyon Société des Missions Africaines s.d. (circa 1930) - Agrafé 12 cm x 21 cm 25 pages cartes ills noir et blanc - Préface de J. M. Chabert Supérieur Général des Missions descriptif des missions etc - Etat neuf
ROD00483821977. Non daté. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 48pp.. . . . Classification Dewey : 200-RELIGION
in-12, 208 pages, -, broche, couverture illustree Bel exemplaire. [GE-3]
1859GITb996Saint Brieuc chez Prud'homme 1859. Petit in-12 broché 80pp. Orné d'un portrait du saint en frontispice. 2e plat de couverture taché, intérieur frais, bien complet du portrait.
61054Paris, Librairie Bloud, 1903. "17 x 25, 431 pp., 90 gravures, 7 cartes dans le texte, broché, état moyen (couvertures défraîchie; dos abîmé, cachets du Collège jésuite Saint Stanislas à Mons)."
2001R77584Pamplona, Universidad de Navarra 2001 xxiv + 705pp., hardback (editor's orange cart.cover), 25cm., Very good condition, text in Spanish, R77584
xxiv + 705pp., hardback (editor's orange cart.cover), 25cm., Very good condition, text in Spanish, R77584
2760Paris, société des missions évangéliques, s.d. - in-8, 24 pp. - (rousseurs)
229361Tours, Alfred Mame, 1899 grand in-8, 300 pp., avec un frontispice et des illustrations en noir dans le texte, percaline rouge, dos et plats orné (reliure éditeur). Accroc à la coiffe supérieure.
PHO-1690Paris, Chez Christophe Journel, 1681, relié plein veau époque, dos à nerfs avec titre, timbre au titre et dernière page, coins et coiffes abimés, fentes aux charnières, frottements, épidermures au dos, première et dernière page brunie.
18276(Du dimanche de Quasimodo au dimanche de Pentecôte). Coloniae in Platea Lata, Thomas von Collen. 1724. In-4 (20x18). 4 ff.-260 pages.-22 ff. d'index. Plein vélin souple de l'époque.
205806Lyon, Impr. de Louis Cutty, (1791) in-8, 46 pp., broché.
194675593Basel: Basler Missionsbuchhandlung 1946. 99, (3) Seiten. Gr. 8° (22,5 -25 cm). Orig.-Broschur. [Softcover / Paperback].
200626620Kisslegg : Fe-Medienverlag, 2006. Relativismus in Aktion 157 S. (19,5 cm) Paperback / kartonierte Ausgabe
19193041820Aachen, Xaverius-Verlag 1919. 61 Seiten, 8° (19 x 13 cm), Hardcover (gebunden), Priv.-Halbleineneinband.
197414584St. Augustin, Steyler Verlag 1974. 118 Seiten, Gr. 8° (23 x 16 cm), Originalbroschur.
19732034956Gütersloh, Gerd Mohn 1973. 66 Seiten, 8° (22,5 x 15 cm), (Softcover, Paperback), Orig.-Pappeinband.
198315382München: C. Bertelsmann Verlag, 1983. 381 Seiten , 21 cm Pappeinband mit Schutzumschlag
198817151Hamburg : Fliss, 1988. 1. Aufl. S. 150 8° , Paperback , Sehr gutes Exemplar
185540753Hamburg, Agentur des Rauhen Hauses 1855. 381 Seiten, Kl. 8° (18 x 11 cm), Interimsbroschur der Zeit.
2016100136383Princeton University Press 2016 262 pages in8. 2016. Cartonné jaquette. 262 pages.
français In-8 de 284 pp.; broché de l'éditeur. Pueble 1979. Collection " Documents d'église ". Traduction Charles Antoine et Patrick Duboys de Lavigerie.
216515Paris, au bureau de l'Université catholique, 1853 fort vol. in-8, titre, 657 pp., broché, couverture très défraîchie, manque la seconde couverture.
1910182851910. Large missionary lantern slide archive documenting Protestant evangelical activity and African village life in West Africa during the early twentieth century most plausibly within the Upper Guinea Coast region encompassing present day Sierra Leone or Liberia. The photographs record interactions between European or American missionaries and local communities during a period when Protestant mission societies expanded schools churches and literacy programs throughout the forest belt of West Africa. Lantern slide sets such as this were commonly produced as visual material for missionary lecture circuits in Europe and North America where churches presented illustrated narratives describing evangelization education programs and village life in mission territories in order to secure financial and institutional support. Several images depict African men and women dressed in Christian or mission-associated attire and gathered in what appear to be congregational or instructional settings suggesting scenes staged or selected to illustrate the success of missionary work conversion and Christian instruction. The images collectively reflect the visual language commonly employed in missionary propaganda of the period presenting both everyday village life and scenes of religious participation as evidence of missionary influence.<br /> <br /> Archive of 49 glass lantern slides circa 1910-1920 depicting village communities missionary encounters and daily life scenes in what visual evidence suggests is the Upper Guinea forest region of West Africa. Slides measure approximately 3.25 x 3.25 inches.Slides show thatched village compounds constructed with wattle walls and palm or grass roofing agricultural work food preparation and communal gatherings. Several images portray individuals wearing raffia or fiber skirts and other forms of dress historically documented among forest societies of Sierra Leone and Liberia including Mende Vai and related communities. Other photographs show agricultural carrying baskets worn on the back with shoulder straps a method of transport widely used in the forest regions of Liberia and Sierra Leone for carrying crops and forest products. Additional slides depict domestic labor including a woman grinding plant material in a bowl on the ground within a village compound scenes consistent with food preparation and herbal processing practices recorded in ethnographic studies of Upper Guinea Coast societies. One photograph shows a man standing beside a river or coastal fish trap constructed from wooden stakes a fishing technology historically documented along the riverine and coastal systems of Sierra Leone and Liberia where fishing formed a major component of subsistence economies. The slides are mounted within glass frames typical of magic lantern projection the visual format widely used by missionary organizations for illustrated lectures and fundraising presentations.<br /> <br /> Architectural environmental and material culture details visible in the photographs strongly support identification within the Upper Guinea Coast rather than East Africa. The combination of rectangular wattle-and-thatch houses raffia fiber clothing agricultural basket transport mortar-based grinding of foods and herbs and coastal or riverine fishing structures corresponds closely with practices documented among forest and coastal societies of Sierra Leone and Liberia in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The surrounding vegetation including palm ecology and dense tropical growth aligns with the Guinea forest zone extending from Guinea through Sierra Leone and Liberia into Côte d'Ivoire. Missionary activity intensified in this region during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries through American and European Protestant societies including Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian and Anglican missions which established schools churches and mission stations while producing photographic material for lecture circuits abroad. Light surface wear minor abrasions to several mounts and scattered handling marks consistent with projection use; 2-3 images have cracks to glass but no loss to image overall condition good. A substantial visual archive illustrating missionary propaganda village life and early twentieth century cross-cultural encounters in the mission fields of the Upper Guinea Coast. unknown
18681235631868 Bruxelles, J. Vandereydt, Imprimeur / Paris, E. Repos, Libraire - 1868 - In-8; reliure demi-chagrin; dos à 4 nerfs; titre, filets et fleurons en dorés au dos, toutes tranches dorées - 604 pages -