86 422 résultats
1985235584Potsdam-Babelsberg, Akad. d. Staats- u. Rechtswiss. 1985. 111 S. (Aktuelle Beitr. d. Staats- u. Rechtswiss. 323).
xxii + 451pp., 24cm., brochure originale, dans la série "Pontificium Athenaeum Salesianum, Facultas Juris Canonici. Studia et textus historiae juris canonici" volume 2, bon état, R103654
1964R118547Zürich, Pas Verlag 1964 xxii + 451pp., signé avec d"dicace par l'auteur à Lucien Ceyssens O.F.M. (spécialiste belge en matière du Jansénisme), 24cm., brochure originale, dans la série "Pontificium Athenaeum Salesianum, Facultas Juris Canonici. Studia et textus historiae juris canonici" volume 2, bon état, [Joint: un article de B.A. van Kleef: "Zeger-Bernard van Espen 1646-1728", pp.75-89, published in the "Kirchliche Zeitschrift" (1966], R118547
IN HEBREW. SINGED BY AUTHOR. 240X175 mm. 16+140 pages. Hardcover. Cover slightly curved. Cover corners slightly bumped. Spine slightly faded. Pages yellowing. Else in good condition.
1921242894Ljubljana, 1921-50. Bibl.-Hlwd. bzw. OBr. Angestaubt. St. verso Tit. Teilw. unaufgeschn. (Univerza Srbov, Hrvatov in Slovencev v Ljubljani/Univerza Ljubljani pravna fukulteta)
1967227546Beograd, 1967. M. 2 Faks. u. 4 Taf. XV, 1007 S. OLwd.
1897227931Novi Sad, Popovic, 1897. X, 200 S. Teilw. m. farb. Unterstreich. Umschl. fleckig.
1933190703Warszawa, 1928-1933/34. Lwd. Seiten teils etwas gebräunt.
1971237222Lódz, 1971. 90 S. (Prace Lódzkie Towarz. Naukowe 2, 78).
1961237202Wroclaw, 1961. 252 S. (Prace Wroclawskiego Towarz. Naukowego A, 75).
1970237624Katowice, 1970. 143 S. (Uniw. Slaski w Katowicach 19).
1970816271Poznan, 1970. 289 S.
8vo (155 x 230 mm). 2 vols. (8), 286 (instead of 288) pp. (4), 428 pp. Contemporary maroon cloth with gilt titles to spine. Three of only four issues (in two volumes) of the "Dawn", an extremely uncommon journal of revolutionary Marxism edited by the Iskra group in Stuttgart. Here Vladimir Ulyanov famously first used the pseudonym "Lenin" to sign a published article (he had begun to use the pseudonym in letters in 1901). - Issue no. 1 contains an article "Sluchainyi zametki" (Random observations) signed by the earlier pseudonym "T. Kh", which he also used for two articles in issue no. 2-3. The third long article, "The Agrarian Question and the 'Critics of Marx'" ("Gg. 'kritiki' v agrarnom voprose") is signed "Lenin". The journal propagated the ideas of revolutionary Marxism and criticized the Narodniks and other more moderate movements. Among the leading contributors were G. Plekhanov, Z. Zasulich, P. Aksel'rod, Iu. Martov, A. Potresov and others. - Issue no. 1 also contains a translation of the memoirs of Karl Kautsky. Also included is a four-page pamphlet (single folded leaf) about a dispute within the editorial team, entitled "Kto vydumal plokhuiu vydumku' ("Who thought up the bad idea?"), written by the economist and philosopher Boris N. Krichevskii (1866-1919). Both volumes are from the famous collection of the Marxist bibliophile and scholar Chimen Abramsky (1916-2010), who fled to London from the Soviet Union in the early 1930s and became a leading specialist in both Judaica and socialist thinking. His collection, parts of which were auctioned after his death, has recently been commemorated in his son's biography, "The House of Twenty Thousand Books" (2014). - Bookplate of the London School of Economics, with withdrawal stamp and Chimen Abramsky's hand-written note inside front wrapper, noting that he exchanged these volumes in 1970. No. 1 one lacks the final leaf. Very scarce in the trade. Emig p. 197. Schwarz p. 166.
1960237601Torun, 1960. M. 7 Taf. 129 S. (Roczniki Towarz. Naukowego w Toruniu 63/2).
19973630693Zagreb, Organizator, 1997. 896 S. OPpbd.
1965237231Poznan, 1965. 197 S. (Prace Komisji Nauk Spolecznych 12, 3)
8vo. 13, (1) pp., final blank. Original printed wrappers. Extremely rare pamphlet by Lenin concerning the party's historic split into Bolshevik and Menshevik factions, titled in German: "Parteibeho[e]rden gegen die Partei" (the Russian title translates as: "Declaration and documents concerning the schism between central institutions and party"). The pamphlet was printed in January 1905 by the Russian Social Democatic Workers' Party. - In this harsh and bilious text Lenin criticizes three party members, Glebov-Avilov, Valentin, and Nikitich, whom he accuses of double-dealing and anti-Bolshevik agitation. All three were members of the Central Committee, as was Lenin himself. Although Bolsheviks and Mensheviks formally constituted two different parties in 1905, they were in fact still close, and what Lenin calls the three members' "treason" was merely their sympathy and agitation for the Mensheviks. Unlike Lenin, most Bolshevik leaders were still prepared to co-operate with their former allies and even harboured hopes for reunification. Lenin's views of the time, as evidenced in this brochure, held a fringe position even within his own faction. His text, however, was widely distributed among the local committees and helped Lenin achieve increasing popularity. A suggestion voiced by "Vpered" that the work be translated into all European languages as soon as possible never materialized. OCLC 85287907.
8vo. 13, (1) pp., final blank. Original printed wrappers. Extremely rare pamphlet by Lenin concerning the party's historic split into Bolshevik and Menshevik factions, titled in German: "Parteibeho[e]rden gegen die Partei" (the Russian title translates as: "Declaration and documents concerning the schism between central institutions and party"). The pamphlet was printed in January 1905 by the Russian Social Democatic Workers' Party. - In this harsh and bilious text Lenin criticizes three party members, Glebov-Avilov, Valentin, and Nikitich, whom he accuses of double-dealing and anti-Bolshevik agitation. All three were members of the Central Committee, as was Lenin himself. Although Bolsheviks and Mensheviks formally constituted two different parties in 1905, they were in fact still close, and what Lenin calls the three members' "treason" was merely their sympathy and agitation for the Mensheviks. Unlike Lenin, most Bolshevik leaders were still prepared to co-operate with their former allies and even harboured hopes for reunification. Lenin's views of the time, as evidenced in this brochure, held a fringe position even within his own faction. His text, however, was widely distributed among the local committees and helped Lenin achieve increasing popularity. A suggestion voiced by "Vpered" that the work be translated into all European languages as soon as possible never materialized. - From the collection of Marcel Bekus with his small oval stamp on the reverse of the title page. Binding loosened; upper cover and title page loose. A few pencil notes to wrappers, but well-preserved. OCLC 85287907.
1966241323Torun, 1966. 139 S. (Studia Juridica 7/2).
1967237628Wroclaw, 1967. 163 S.
1967237197Wroclaw, 1967. 206 S. OBr. Umschlag lichtrandig u. angestaubt. (Prace naukowe wyzszej szkoly ekonom. we Wroclawin 9).
1963237205Wroclaw, 1963. 148 S. (Prace Wroclawskiego Towarz. Naukowego A, 87).
1920227801Beograd, Kon, 1920. 432 S.
8vo. 38, (2) pp. Original printed wrappers. Stapled. First edition of this manifesto of Leninism: the very scarce elucidation and expansion of the "April Theses", Lenin's statement of the principles that the Bolsheviks must adopt in the evolving revolution. Developed into a coherent party platform, the work was printed in September 1917, one month before the Bolsheviks seized power and put the policies into action. - In April 1917 Lenin returned from exile, and moved to take control of the Bolshevik Party and reorientate it according to his own vision. He wrote and presented his desired policies the same month, urging the Bolsheviks to withdraw their support from the Provisional Government, withdraw from the war, distribute land to the peasantry, and seize power for the Soviets, who would control the production of goods. These policies, since known as the "April Theses", were published in Pravda under the same title as the present pamphlet (The Tasks of the Proletariat in Our Revolution). Despite initially being rejected by a gathering of Social Democrats and then the Bolshevik committee, they were adopted by the party's seventh all-Russian conference in late April. The principles became very popular among the workers and soldiers of St Petersburg, broadening the Bolshevik Party's reach and support. Lenin subsequently developed and expanded the principles of the April Theses into a coherent party platform, which was printed in the present pamphlet in September, comprising effectively a manifesto of Leninism which guided the Bolsheviks as they overthrew the Provisional Government and secured their power. The pamphlet includes a postscript written by Lenin since the first printing of the April Theses, and is appended with the 1915 Zimmerwald Conference resolution calling for the end of the World War. - Wrappers detached; small tears to spine, slightly spotted. Only a handful of library copies traceable, none outside the US or the UK. Last seen at auction in 1972. Zalesky 3526. Lenin, Complete Works XXXI, 149-186. Lenin Collected Works 24, 55-92. OCLC 49450035.
1956825623Sofija, 1956. 193 S. OHlwd. Einbd. beschabt.