24 425 résultats
Publicado en la Revista General de Legislacion y Jurisprudencia.
Pamplona, Diputación Foral, 1982. 4to. menor; 138 pp., 3 hs. Cubiertas originales.
A new, unread book in excellent condition. Inscribed by author to sex columnist Dan Savage.
rel. pl. toile bicolore or/noir, très bon état
50 pages. Reprint of the 2002 first printing. Loaded with vital information for every American - from elementary school to the retirement community. Subjects include: Laws of the Land; Declaration of Independence; Signers of the Declaration; U.S. Constitution; Bill of Rights; Rule Book for Jurors; Citizen Oath. Clean, bright and unmarked with very light wear. A nice copy. Book
pp. xiii, 175 + Frontis by C. Stanfield. Text foxed. 185 mm. Original quarter leather with marbled boards binding. Spine perished. Boards worn. In January 1842, Charles Dickens set sail for a lecture tour in America, accompanied by his wife Catherine and her maid. In America he received a reception reminiscent of those that met mop-headed rock stars of the 1960's. Americans, expecting him to be grateful for their warm reception, were staggered when this young British goodwill ambassador, at a dinner held in his honor in Boston, dared to criticize them as copyright pirates. Though crowds began to get a bit angry, he did not back down. A week later, in Hartford, he argued that a native American literature would flourish only when American publishers were compelled by law to pay all writers their due, rather than being able to publish the works of any foreign author for free. He argued that it was a bad custom that only served to discourage literary production by American citizens. Before Dickens' visit the American people were generally uninterested in the question of the United States's joining the International Copyright Union. Book, newspaper, and magazine publishers, though, were utterly opposed, and successfully lobbied against any such move in Congress. Undaunted, Dickens circulated a pro-copyright letter which he and a number of other British writers had signed, firm in the belief of the righteousness of their cause. Dickens showed great courage but little tact in assailing American public opinion on this vexing matter while the United States was paying him honors worthy of a national liberator. That he had not mentioned this issue in advance meant that his adoring audiences, taken by surprise, felt chagrined by the criticisms of this obviously mercenary young upstart who had come to their shores to take their money at the theater door and again in the bookshop. The work itself concentrated on his (not always positive) impressions of American life. Of particularly interest are those aspects of social welfare which he took a reformer's interest in, such as the prison system, or care for people with disabilities like blindness. He also was lavish in his stinging condemnation of slavery. TRAVEL BX 5
pp. viii, 531. XLib bookplate of Lancaster Mechanics' Library Association on front paste down. XLib stamp on title page and elsewhere. 8vo. 225 mm. Original full leather binding, worn. Boards fragile. Hardbound. Good. SCARCE. PAIMP 20
96 pages. Features: Endangered species Act of 1973 - (Public Law 93-205); Orchidomania - A Brief Look; Growing Orchids in a Climatic Cabinet; Coelogyne and Pleione - Collector's Item; Dendrobium Smilliae F. Muell.; Chilean Orchids; Scanning Electron Microscope Studies of Orchid Pollen; angraecum sororium; Deciduous Calanthes; India: Major Dendrobium Habitat of the World; Effects of Paphthaleneacetic acid on seed Germination; Orchids and Sphagnum. Light signs of handling. Book
71, (1) SS. Ungeheftete, gefalzte Bögen. 4to. Im zweispaltigen Paralleltext zweisprachig lateinisch-französisch gedruckte Denkschrift über die Ursachen des im Vorjahr ausgebrochenen Dritten Schlesischen Kriegs. - Unbeschnitten und unaufgeschnitten in losen, gefalzten Bögen. Spuren alter Heftung. Der Mailänder Schriftsteller Pietro Verri zeichnet ein unschmeichelhaftes Porträt des aus Ligurien gebürtigen Diplomaten Cristiani, langjähriger Gouverneur und späterer Geschäftsträger Maria Theresias in Modena, Mirandola und der Lombardei, der sich bei der Umsetzung der kaiserlichen Feudalreformen als fähiger Verwaltungsbeamter bewährte: "Un uomo d'oscuri e poveri natali; d'una figura grossolana e quasi deforme; senza il dono della parola, anzi balbuziente; trascuratissimo nella persona sino all'indecenza; che lordo di tabacco il naso, la bocca, il vestito, inciampava e urtava per vista inferma; che non aveva coltura di spirito e ignorava ogni bell'arte [...]" (Memoria sul Conte Beltrame Cristiani, in: Lettere e scritti inediti di Pietro e di Alessandro Verri [ed. C. Casati], Bd. 4, S. 435-441).
vii + 366pp., 24cm., text in English, Doctoral Dissertation (Dissertatio ad Doctoratum in Facultate Iuris Canonici Pontificiae Universitatis Gregorianae), softcover, stamp at verso of title page, text is clean and bright, good condition, R112648
Madrid, Tucar Ediciones, 1976. 4to.; 206 pp., 1 h. Encuadernación original.
(30), 974, (1) SS. Mit Holzschnittvignette am Titel und 2 gest. Münztafeln. Pergamentband der Zeit mit hs. Rückentitel. Dreiseitiger Farbschnitt. 8vo. Nur Teil 1 (von 2). - “[Schelhorns] bedeutendstes Werk, die ‘Amoenitates historiae [...]’, welche, für Gelehrte bestimmt, ebenfalls in lateinischer Sprache verfaßt sind, in wissenschaftlichen Kreisen hervorragende Beachtung fanden und den Verfasser auch mit dem gelehrten Cardinal Quirinus in Beziehung brachten” (ADB). - Der Memminger lutherische Theologe J. G. Schelhorn (1694-1773) widmete sich “neben seiner Tätigkeit als Seelsorger [...] kirchenhistorischen und literaturwissenschaftlichen Studien und edierte seltene Quellen und Dokumente zur Kirchengeschichte” (DBE). “Seiner Sammelleidenschaft ist eine Reihe v. kirchenhistorischen u. literaturwissenschaftlichen Beiträgen zu verdanken, die zusammen mit Quellen vor allem in den »Amoenitates literariae« und seinen Nachfolgereihen veröffentlicht wurden” (Bautz). - Untere Ecken bestoßen. Das Doppelblatt mit den Medaillonstichen als Frontispiz lose. Anfangs am unteren Rand wasserrandig bzw. mit Papierschäden (am Titel mit Berührung des Impressums), sonst sauber und fleckenfrei. Bautz, BBKL IX, 78f. Ebert *20517. ADB XXX, 758.
pp. 286, (2) [Publisher's catalogue]. Last signature damp stained with old mold damage. Penciled ownership of Geo. F. Griminger, Aug. 24, 1866 on title page. 12mo. Original full publisher's cloth binding. Rear board mold and damp stained. Hardbound. "Edmund Kirke" was the pseudonym of James Roberts Gilmore (1822-1903). A scarce and interesting book. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! SHELF W29
Sello del propietario.
EL VIAJE DEL DERECHO CONSTITUCIONAL HACIA SU EFECTIVIDAD, estudio preliminar de Raul Canosa Usera.
br., bon état, ENVOI DE L’AUTEUR
First Edition, oblong 8vo, short tear on final leaf (no loss of text), viii, 558, [38] pp., contemporary calf, rubbed, hinges cracked, morocco label. Later editions are in the quarto format. Contains a long list of 1,532 "Offences" that includes, Buggery, Burglary, maiming Cattle, counterfeiting Coins, Forging bank-bills, apprehending Highwaymen, killing Deer, destroying Mines, Murder, payments to the Poor, Rape, Robbing the Mail, Smugglers, etc., and the "Penalties and Punishments" to be applied. Sweet and Maxwell, 138, (2).
pp. (1) [title page], lvii, 468, (28) [Index]. Dampstained. Foxed. Early stamped and autograph ownership of James Diemer (a judge in Reading, PA from 1791-1819) on title page and elsewhere. 8vo. 215 mm. Lacks front fly leaves. Original leather binding, lacks rear board; worn and rubbed. Original leather spine label, tooled in gilt. Hardbound. Good. Title continues: 'To Which Is Added, An Appendix Containing A Variety Of Precedents (Adapted To The Several Acts) For The Use Of Justices Of The Peace, Sheriffs, Attornies And Conveyancers'. These J.P. Manuals were extremly valuable guides for many in early America. A second volume was published in 1804 by H. Maxwell, Philadelphia. S&S/AI 1214. PAIMP 20
148 p. + Frontis portrait of Muir engraved by John Scoles. 8vo. 210 mm. Early Henry family autograph ownership. ExLib stamp of the Lancaster Mechanic's Society. Age stain, but still good. Thomas Muir [the Younger of Huntershill](1765-1799) was a Scottish political reformer. As a student he embraced controversy, and he soon developed a reputation as a lawyer who was willing to appear in court on behalf of poor clients who could not afford to pay a fee and was a fierce critic of a legal system that he believed was biased in favor of the rich. As a young Whig he helped form Friends of the People branches were formed throughout Scotland. Muir was arrested January, 1793, and charged with sedition. After being interrogated for several hours he was released on bail. Muir now traveled to London where he had talks with other leaders of the Friends of the People. The leaders of the movement were concerned about the violence taking place in France. Muir agreed to go to France and join Tom Paine in his attempts to persuade the leaders of the revolution to abandon the plan to execute Louis XVI. Muir was unsuccessful and after having talks with the Girondist leaders, he returned to Scotland, and was promptly arrested. Edinburgh he was tried for sedition before Lord Braxfield and a hand-picked jury of anti-reformers. Muir was found guilty and sentenced to fourteen years' transportation. Afraid that Scottish reformers would attempt to rescue Muir, he was quickly removed to London. Radicals in the House of Commons immediately began a campaign to save the men now being described as the Scottish Martyrs. Attempts to stop the men being transported failed and in May 1794, the ship Surprise left Portsmouth and began its 13,000 mile journey to Botany Bay. The men arrived on 25th October to join the Colony of 1,908 convicts. As a political prisoner, Muir was given more freedom than most convicts and he was allowed to buy a small farm close to Sydney Cove. After two years at Port Jackson, New South Wales, Thomas Muir escaped with the help of Francis Peron, the chief mate of the American ship, the Otter of Boston. Muir reached Vancouver Island but after being offered help by a Spanish captain, he was arrested and taken on board the Ninfa. While on the way to Cadiz the Ninfa was attacked by the British warship Irresistible. During the battle Thomas Muir was hit by a glancing blow from a cannonball which smashed his left cheekbone and seriously injured both his eyes. For several days Muir's condition was so bad he was expected to die. When the French government heard about what had happened to Muir they tried to persuade the Spanish authorities to release him. The Spanish eventually agreed and Muir arrived in Bordeaux in November 1797. Muir joined up with Tom Paine in Paris where they continued the fight for parliamentary reform in Britain. However, Muir had never fully recovered from the wound he received on the Ninfa and his health began to deteriorate at the end of 1798. He was taken to Chantilly where he died on 26th January, 1799. First American Edition. Evans 27633. EVANS2