1 369 résultats
1947601974Hamburg, Gesetz und Recht Verlag, 1947. 55 S. OKart.
19923307104Basel, Helbing, 1992. XXV, 186 S. OKart.
19163100919Stuttgart, Enke, 1916. VIII, 403 S. Hlwd (Stempel auf Titel).
1948635352Zürich, Schulthess, 1948. 376 S. Mit Porträt. Originalleinen (Rücken verblaßt u. mit Bibliothekssignatur, Rückdeckel innen mit Spuren eines entfernten Bibliotheksetikettes).
19933308537Bern, Haupt, (1993). 310 S. OPpbd.
19843307862Opladen, Westdeutscher Verlag, 1984. 262 S. OKart.
1988635322Tübingen, Mohr, 1988. X, 659 S. Originalleinen ( Rücken mit Bibliothekssignatur).
1971136294Köln, Heymanns, 1971. VII, 452 S. Mit Porträt. OLwd (mit OUmschlag).
179116684reliées en un volume in-24 (91x56mm), veau marbré, dos lisse à faux nerfs, décors et titre dorés, roulette décorative d'encadrement, roulette sur les coupes, tranches jaunes (reliure du tout début du XIXe) ; 1- La Constitution Française, décrétée par l'Assemblée Nationale Constituante, aux années 1789, 1790 et 1791 ; acceptée par le Roi le 14 septembre 1791. Paris, imprimerie de Didot Jeune, chez Garnery, 1791 ; 160 pp. (Précedée de la Déclaration des Droits de l'Homme et du Citoyen ; en 17 articles). 2- Acte Constitutionnel, décrété par la Convention nationale de France, en 1793, et présenté à l'acceptation du Peuple Français ; précédé du Rapport fait sur ce sujet, par Hérault-Séchelles, membre du corps constituant. Paris, Lepetit, 1793 (imprimerie de Rochette) ; 96 pp. Contient le Rapport sur la Constitution du peuple français, la Déclaration des Droits de l'Homme et du Citoyen (en 35 articles), la Constitution Républicaine. 3- Constitution de la République Française. Paris, chez Et. Gidde, imp. de Crapelet, an IV (1795) ; 159 pp. 4- Constitution de la République Française, avec les lois organiques. Paris, imp. de Munier ; chez Lepetit, jeune, an VIII ; 63 pp.
1767105368Londres, MDCCLXVII 1767 Tome 1er seul. In-8 22,5 x 14 cm. Broché, couverture d’attente, VIII-426 pp. Etat correct.
11310.Petit in 8° relié plein veau d'époque .Dos à nerfs orné de caissons dorés .Pièce de titre rouge .
178721085.99<p>"<i>We the People of the United States…</i>"</p><p>This rare complete printing of the Constitution appeared on the first day it was publicly available Wednesday September 19 1787. That same morning the Constitution was published by four other papers the <i>Pennsylvania Packet and Daily Advertiser</i> <i>Pennsylvania Journal Pennsylvania Gazette</i> and <i>Freeman's Journal.</i> The <i>Independent Gazetteer</i>is unique in that it is the only one of the five first-day printings whose type was evidently not used to print another stand-alone edition.</p> <b>U.S. CONSTITUTION.</b>Newspaper. <i>The Independent Gazetteer or the Chronicle of Freedom</i>. Philadelphia: Eleazer Oswald September 19 1787. 4 pp.<p><b><br /></b></p><p><b>Historical Background</b></p><p>This issue of <i>The Independent Gazetteer and Chronicle of Freedom</i> a daily Anti-Federalist newspaper prints the "<i>Plan of the New Federal Government</i>" in full followed by the Federal Convention's resolution submitting the Constitution to Congress and the accompanying transmittal letter. All three are signed in type by George Washington as president of the Convention.</p><p>The Constitution was approved by the Convention on Monday September 17. The text of the official version was set that evening and a very limited number were printed for the use of the delegates. After being drafted in complete secrecy the Constitution was first made public on the morning of Tuesday September 18 when it was read before the Pennsylvania General Assembly. The next morning Wednesday September 19 the five newspapers mentioned above all published the Constitution. It is often assumed that the <i>Pennsylvania Packet</i> was the first public printing as the publishers Dunlap and Claypoole were the official printers to the Constitutional Convention. In fact there is no evidence that the <i>Packet</i> actually was published first or appeared on the streets of Philadelphia that day any earlier than its four rivals. All five are considered first editions with surviving copies of the <i>Packet</i> the most common.</p><p>The dissemination of the Constitution in newspapers is of considerable interest and importance as it was through this medium that most Americans became familiar with the new form of government proposed by the Convention. One careful researcher Leonard Rapport of the National Archives has identified four Philadelphia newspapers which also carried the text of the Constitution on the same day this was after all news of the highest importance and one the Philadelphia <i>Evening Chronicle</i> which may <i>hypothetically</i> have carried the text in an issue dated 18 September "Printing the Constitution" pp. 69-90. But to date no copy of the <i>Evening Chronicle</i> of that date is known to be extant see Rapport's other article "Newspaper Printings of the Constitution".</p><p>The <i>Pennsylvania Packet</i> printing has been accorded primacy for two principal reasons. First the <i>Packet</i>was printed by John Dunlap and David C. Claypoole official printers to the Convention itself. Together as partners or separately Claypoole may originally have been a junior partner they had printed nearly everything issued by Congress since 1775 including the 1776 Declaration of Independence. Second with the exception of the Constitution's six-line preamble "We the people…" the text is <i>entirely printed from the same setting of type used for the official Congressional printing.</i>As Rapport notes the 5000 words of the Constitution represented "nearly one man-day of composition time" for the printer so sensibly to make use of the wider margins of the <i>Packet's</i> larger sheets they reset the preamble in large type with a large capital "W" below the masthead and simply reimposed the rest of their standing type to fit onto the paper's four larger-size pages. The case might be summed up by emphasizing that the present <i>Pennsylvania Packet</i> text of the Constitution was struck from the identical setting of lead type that had printed the sheets of the official Congressional printings sheets that Jacob Shallus calligrapher used when he copied onto parchment the engrossed document to which the delegates signed their names.</p><p>"By October 6 only twenty days after the Federal Convention at least fifty-five of the approximately eighty newspapers of the period had printed the.Constitution." Rapport "Printing the Constitution" p.89. With the text of the Constitution before the people thanks to a free press the great debate on its ratification would begin a debate which continued until ratification by the original thirteen states was completed in 1790 and culminated in 1791 by the adoption of the Bill of Rights. Despite the tremendous changes since 1787 in the nation and the people governed by the Constitution Bernstein meaningfully notes "the evolution of American politics and society continues to be shaped by the Constitution and by the principles and doctrines built into it by the men who drafted it. That the Constitution has worked as well as it has is a tribute to its flexibility and to the foresight of those who created it. That it may still be defective or capable of improvement is a challenge to us to equal the courage imagination and versatility of the Revolutionary generation of Americans" <i>Are We To Be A Nation</i> p.272.</p> Eleazer Oswald books
1845700771845. French-Language Account of Louisiana's 1845 Constitutional Convention Louisiana. Constitution of 1845. Foullouze Foulhouze James Reporter. Rapports Officiels Des Devats sic de la Convention la Louisiane. New Orleans: J. Bayon Imprimeur de la Convention 1845. i 460 11 pp. Text in parallel columns. Octavo 9-1/2 x 6-1/4. Later library cloth red and black calf lettering pieces and paper location label to spine endleaves added. Some soiling and light shelfwear some chipping to edges of lettering pieces. Light browning and foxing to text early mark sin pencil to a few passages lower corners lacking from a few leaves with no loss to text library stamp to title page "8049" in early hand to its verso. $1850. Only edition. Louisiana's first constitution was adopted in 1812 its second in 1845. More liberal than its predecessor it expanded white male suffrage established public schools and granted the right of appeal to felons sentenced to death or hard labor. The final 11 pages contain a French translation of the 1845 Constitution. Also issued in English Foullouze's report is not to be confused with the Official Reports of Debates 1844 a different account by an anonymous author. The French edition of Foullouze's report is scarce the English edition in rare. Jumonville Bibliography of New Orleans Imprints 1390. Babbitt Hand-List of Legislative Sessions and Session Laws 150. unknown books
7816P., Baudouin, (1789). In 8, 11 pp. Tel que paru.
7815P., Baudouin, 1789. In 8, 15 pp. Tel que paru.
14583A Moulins, chez les Associés Maine et Guinemant, An III, [1795] ; in-8. 34 pp.-1 f. bl., non cousus.
14584A Moulins, de l'imprimerie de S. Bouchardon, [1795] ; in-8. 18 pp.-1 f. bl., non cousus.
14585A Moulins, de l'imprimerie de Sébastien Bouchardon, [1795] ; in-8. 16 pp.-1 f. bl., non cousus.
14586A Moulins, de l'Imp. de Sébastien Bourchardon, rue de l'Égalité, 1795 ; in-8, 19 pp., non cousu.
166 pages. Author's trademark signature upon title page. "Canadians are taxed to the hilt, bored to distraction by the Constitution ad nagged to death over Quebec's possible separation. Yet through it all we have emerged as a most unique country.... Editorial Cartoonist Adrian Raeside takes a sideways look at the good, the bad and the bizarre that make Canada Canada." - from back cover. Lives up to author's high and hilarious standard. Gift greetings upon half-title page. Light to moderate wear. Glossy illustrated covers. Book
170428809le croisic 1704 1 document de 4 pages (1 feuillet plié en deux) manuscrites à l'encre brune sur papier vergé ligné et filigrané " , format : 33 x 21 cm, signature in-fine : Chessée, Notaire royal à guerande) , QUITANCE DE FRANCHISSEMENT POUR LE SIEUR JULIEN RIELLE, MAITRE DE BARQUES, VEUF DE JEANNE RENEE LARAGON, PORTANT CONSTITUTION D'UNE RENTE AU PROFIT DE SES HONORABLES BELLE-FILLES : JEANNE ET CATHERINE MICHEL, DE CINQ CENT LIVRES DE PRINCIPAL, FAIT AU CROISIC, LE 30 OCTOBRE 1704,
1970605886Erlangen, Palm u. Enke, 1830/33. Nachdruck Leipzig, 1970. XII, 370; VIII, 108 S. OLwd.
1970485322Erlangen, Palm & Enke 1830/33, Nachdruck, 1970. XII, 370 S., VIII, 108 S. Lwd.
1891612834Berlin, Liebmann, 1891. VIII, 309 S. Originalleinen (berieben, vorderes Innengelenk gebrochen).
190015342Paris, Chamuel, 1900 ; in-16, broché ; 80 pp., couverture jaune bouton-d'or.