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Volume 367 of Seaby's Bulletin for December 1948. Rust marks from staple and dusty rear. No other marks or inscriptions. Very clean very tight pages. Pages 544-598. pp.
Disbound volume of 15 copies of Seaby's Bulletin over the period April 1951 to June 1952. Rust marks from staples. A few other light marks. Sunning to spine of oversize covers of which binder device broken. Very clean very tight copies. Pages 137-516 and pages 1-284. pp.
1970129681Kricheldorf-Verlag, Freiburg 1970. 71 Seiten. Mit 32 Medaillenabbildungen. Roter Original-Leinwand-Einband mit illustriertem Schutzumschlag. 22x15 cm
2010121915Musée du Louvre Éditions, Somogy Éditions d’Art 2010 In-4 cartonnage éditeur illustré sous jaquette. 30,8 cm sur 25,4. 743 pages. Nombreuses illustrations en couleurs in-texte. Jaquette en bon état. Très bon état d’occasion.
199017105<p>Very Good softcover. Staple-bound with thin card covers. Generally bright clean covers; light scuffing near cover joint; small chip at rear cover top edge; tightly bound; bright clean interior. 4to 96 pp; many illustrations.</p> Alexandria, VA: Russian Numismatic Society paperback
2003012268St Petersburg Russia 2003. 271pp/illus. Beautifully illustrated with color illustrations throughout. Covers history uniforms and insignia of the Russian Imperial Guard from 1700s to World War I. Russian text. Clean no marks. 1st Edition. Decorative Boards. Near Fine/No Jacket - Issued. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Hardcover
1967002260London: B. A. Seaby LTD. 1967. Fine condition in Very Good Dust Jacket. No owner's name or bookplate. No remainder marks. No underlining. No highlighting. No margin notes. Clean square tight and unmarked. Sharp corners. Pages are fresh and crisp. Illustrated throughout with hundreds of drawings of ancient coins. Numbered and arranged according to Babelon with historical notes. Bibliography/references. Index of Inscriptions on Republican Coins. Note the so-called Third Edition published in 1978 appears to be a reprint of this one with the same format number of pages and content. First Printing of Second Revised Edition. Hardcover. Publishers black cloth/Price Clipped Dust Jacket. 8vo. viii 168pp. . B. A. Seaby LTD. Hardcover
Dustjacket is protected in mylar. ; 0.72 x 9.48 x 6.2 Inches; 216 pages; Roman coins often shed light on Roman public life and society through the legends, portraits, and images they bear. The papers collected in this volume were originally presented at the Second E. Togo Salmon Conference on Roman Studies. The eight contributors are specialists in Roman coins or Roman history and in the relations between them. Coins are a unique source of information about the Roman world. In the case of the Roman Empire they were issued by or with the approval of the ruling power. The representations and legends they show therefore present an official view of contemporary affairs. The coins themselves, minted for official purposes such as paying the army, when studied carefully can help reconstruct official policies. They can also occasionally reveal what monuments now lost may have looked like. It is not infrequent to come across pleas that the ancient historian should make more frequent use of numismatic evidence. These essays make clear that efforts are being made both by numismatists and by historians to bring the two disciplines together. At the same time the papers reveal that the task is by no means a straightforward one. The survival of Roman coins is variable, and so attempts to reconstruct the size and distribution of issues calls for skilled and experienced analysis. This collection of papers provides evidence for the kind of deductions that the historian may make from Roman coins as well as the illustrations of the pitfalls that await the unwary. Those interested in Roman history, amateur coin collectors, and professional numismatists will all find much here to widen their knowledge of the public context of Roman coins. Contributors: William E. Metcalf, P. Bruun, Barbara Levick, R. P. Duncan-Jones, Anthony Barrett, Duncan Fishwick, C. E. King, Andrew Burnett.
0.72 x 9.48 x 6.2 Inches; 216 pages; Roman coins often shed light on Roman public life and society through the legends, portraits, and images they bear. The papers collected in this volume were originally presented at the Second E. Togo Salmon Conference on Roman Studies. The eight contributors are specialists in Roman coins or Roman history and in the relations between them. Coins are a unique source of information about the Roman world. In the case of the Roman Empire they were issued by or with the approval of the ruling power. The representations and legends they show therefore present an official view of contemporary affairs. The coins themselves, minted for official purposes such as paying the army, when studied carefully can help reconstruct official policies. They can also occasionally reveal what monuments now lost may have looked like. It is not infrequent to come across pleas that the ancient historian should make more frequent use of numismatic evidence. These essays make clear that efforts are being made both by numismatists and by historians to bring the two disciplines together. At the same time the papers reveal that the task is by no means a straightforward one. The survival of Roman coins is variable, and so attempts to reconstruct the size and distribution of issues calls for skilled and experienced analysis. This collection of papers provides evidence for the kind of deductions that the historian may make from Roman coins as well as the illustrations of the pitfalls that await the unwary. Those interested in Roman history, amateur coin collectors, and professional numismatists will all find much here to widen their knowledge of the public context of Roman coins. Contributors: William E. Metcalf, P. Bruun, Barbara Levick, R. P. Duncan-Jones, Anthony Barrett, Duncan Fishwick, C. E. King, Andrew Burnett.
502981Stockholm, Almqvist & Wiksell, 1981. In-4 broché, 161 pp., 3 planches de cartes en noir, dont 1 double, index. (Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis, 11:2).
QWA-21721Monnaie de Paris, 1972, in-4 br. (28 x 29), 78 p., avant-propos de Pierre Dehaye, plat sup. en relief argenté laissant apparaître des yeux en couleurs imprimés en page de garde, nombr. reproductions en n. et b. et en coul., photos, portrait de R. Bezombes, bon état.
180 pages plus 10 pages of black and white plates. Copy #55 of 500, of which 350 were distributed. The Canadian Numismatic Research Society Occasional Paper No. 2. "In view of the development of interest in recent years in all phases of Canadian numismatics, it became increasingly evident to the author that it was high time to collect between one pair of covers as much information as possible concerning the designers, engravers, and manufacturers of numismata relative to Canada, and to endeavour to correct the enormous number of errors, to say nothing of reprehensible omissions, currently haunting the serious numismatist in this blest Dominion of ours." - from original foreward. Clean, bright and unmarked with very light wear. Tight and square. Lovely copy. Book
199315073Steinau an der Straße, BDOS, 1993. mit zahlreichen schwarzweißen Abbildungen. farb. illustr. Orig.-Heft, 20 S., 4° (=30 cm)
47224London, Philip and Son, 1963, in 8°, cartonnage bleu de l'éditeur (légèrement fané), 301 pages ; nombreuses illustrations dans le texte en noir et 16 planches en couleurs ; quelques rares raousseurs ; traces de scotch sur les gardes.
2880London, George Philip,1974 ; 8°, cartonnage de l'éditeur, jaquette en couleurs. 642 médailles reproduites en noir et couleurs.
Book is in excellent condition in every respect with sharp corners, no edge wear, straight, solid spine, text block in flawless with no marking of any kind. 225 pages, in oblong formate, lavishly illustrated in color with tokens, awards, certificates, prizes,coins, awards, etc.
1981011470Sepulveda CA: Militaria Collector Inc 1981. 247pp/illus. This work explains how reproductions of Third Reich edged weapons can be recognized. The author has assigned reference numbers to the reproduction types making it possible to distinguish similar reproductions from each other as well as from the originals. Photographs illustrations and a bibliography are included. Clean. 2nd Printing. Illustrated Boards. Very Good/No Jacket. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Militaria Collector, Inc Hardcover
1876137392Washington D. C.: U.S. Naval Observatory 1876. Hardcover. fine. 1st Edition. 1-3 4-70pp. Tall octavo. Original limp blue cloth-covered boards. Gilt titles to front board. One corner lightly bumped and a few scratches to the cloth. Contemporary gift inscription to ffep. Small marginal tear to one page archivally repaired. Front and rear flyleaves age toned and a few spots of foxing else an excellent copy. With photographic frontis of Henry Grinnell's Advance Rescue medal. Text in French and English. A collection of the awards given by foreign associations to Elisha Kent Kane Isaac Hayes and Charles Francis Hall for their Arctic explorations. Includes the text of the proclamation associated with each award. With a photographic frontis of a medal. Rare in commerce. American Exchange records zero copies having appeared at auction. 1876 U.S. Naval Observatory hardcover
170112371Lyon, Louis Pascal (Imprimerie L. Langlois), 1701 ; petit in-folio, cartonnage rigide de papier marbré rose, tranches marbrées (reliure moderne) ; (2), 52 pp., 1 planche dépliante hors-texte ("Machine du Feu d'artifice").
Facsimile reprint of 1st edition published 1830. xvi, 228, 33
462061P. Leroux, 1904. In-4 br., 210 pp., 28 pl. de monnaies in-fine.
1828002220Paris De Bure, Frères, Rollin 1828
114658Librairie de Firmin Didot Frères, 1852, 1 volume de 235x320 mm environ, 246 pp., 82 planches (de 1 à 81+ 16 bis). Demi reliure moderne de cuir vert, dos à 4 nerfs plats, titres dorés, roulette dorée sur les nerfs, motifs en creux aux entre-nerfs, gardes marbrées de couleurs. Cuir de la reliure frotté par endroits, Page de faux-titre restaurée et deux planches restaurées, des mouillures dans les marges des pages, des rousseurs.