210 résultats
1865448728Berlin, Springer, 1865-66. X, 499 S., 2 Bl.; 3 Bl., 699 S., 2 Bl. Halbleder d. Zeit (beschabt, Ecken u. Kanten bestoßen). [2 Warenabbildungen]
1823470736Hamburg, Campe, 1823. VIII, 318 S., 1 Bl. Pappband d. Zeit (berieben u. bestoßen, Rückenkaschierung abgeplatzt, kleines Bibliotheks-Rückenschild). [2 Warenabbildungen]
185225702Paris E. Pick 1852 -in-8 bradel demi percale un volume, reliure bradel demi-percale bleu clair in-octavo (half hard-back percale in-8) (14,5 x 24 cm), dos long muet (spine without raised band), titre frappé "or", pièce de titre sur fond bordeaux avec 2 filets "or" de part et d'autre, Fleuron "or" au centre du dos, date "or" et double filet "or" en pied, papier peigné jaune, bleu-clair et rouge aux plats (cover with painting paper), tête lisse, gouttière et tranche de queue non-rognées, tampon Ex-Libris violet en haut de la page de garde : DEMOMBYNES, sans illustrations excepté 5 découpures d'articles de journaux de l'époque montés sur onglets sur Eugénie de Montijo + une affiche dépliante de la constitution de 1851 illustré un portrait gravé en noir de Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte en en tête montée sur onglet, mouillure claire en marge haute, 408 pages, 1852 Paris : E. Pick Editeur,
182110061821 Paris, Decle, 1821, in 8° relié demi-basane ancienne, dos lisse orné, 366 pages ; rousseurs et qq. petites mouillures marginales ; reliure très frottée, coiffes arrachées ; ex-libris manuscrit sur le titre ; cachet et ex-dono sur le contre-plat.
1888487792Freiburg, Mohr, 1888. 1 Bl., VIII S., 1 Bl., 339 S.; S. III-VIII, 307 S.; S. III-VIII, 118 S. Halbleder d. Zeit (Rücken u. Ecken beschabt, bestoßen u. verblaßt).
188881186Freiburg, Mohr, 1888. 2 Bl., VIII S., 1 Bl., 339 S.; VIII, 307 S., 2 Bl., VIII, 118 S., 1 Bl. Halbleder d. Zeit (Rücken u. Ecken berieben, Rücken verblaßt).
1884487926Paris, Larose et Forcel, 1884. IV, 608 S. Halbleder d. Zeit (teils beschabt, Rücken fehlt).
18305663Paris Imp. De Pihan Delaforest 1830 Fort In-8 XXXIV + 752 + 44 pp + 1ff errata, quelques pages froissées , couverture tachée, sur l'histoire et la constitution de Don Pèdre et des droits de Don Miguel
1833480351833 1 vol in-8 broché - N° 33 de février 1979 - Revue trimestrielle - Editions Larousse - 128 pages
189474420Couverture souple. Broché. 70 pages. Papier bruni.
18963454665Paris, Berger-Levrault, 1896. VII, 642 S. Halbleder (mit eingebundener OBroschur) (Stempel auf Titel, Rücken fehlt).
18803400553Paris, 1880. 154 S. OBroschur (Rücken leicht lädiert, unaufgeschnitten).
185748674Chez Bernardin, Libraire, successeur de M. Béchet 1857 In-16, reliure demi-basane noire, plats jaspés bruns, dos lisse orné, titre doré, 798 pp. 1er mors interne légèrement fendillé. Bon état. Ouvrage assez rare.
1887462335Paris, Rothschild, 1887. XI, 595; VIII, 567 S. Lwd.
189823978Couverture rigide. Reliure demi-toile. 402 pages.
188714152Paris, Plon, 1887. 348 S. Halbleder der Zeit (berieben, Stempel auf Titel, Rücken fehlt).
19003454230Paris, Berger-Levrault, 1900. 348 S. Halbleder (mit eingebundener OBroschur) (Stempel auf Titel, Rücken fehlt).
18933455168Paris, Charles-Lavauzelle, 1893/96/98. 612 S.; 558; 750 S.; 869; 507 S. Halbleder (mit eingebundener OBroschur) (Stempel auf Titel, Bibliotheks-Rückenschild, 2 Bände ohne Rücken).
1899462423Torino, Roux Frassati, 1899. 340 S. Lwd der Zeit (mit eingebundener Originalbroschur, Stempel auf Titel, Bibliotheks-Rückenschild).
185823739.02Washington 1858. No binding. Very Good. Pamphlet. Kansas-Lecompton Convention. Speech of Senator Douglas of Illinois on the President's Message. Delivered in the Senate of the United States December 9 1858. Washington: Buell & Blanchard. 1858. 16 pp. Inscribed in period ink ""From Hon. John Sherman."" ConditionDisbound; toned overall but very good. books
18651260191865. First Edition. CONSTITUTION. Journal of the House of Delegates of the State of Virginia. for the Session of 18645. Alexandria: D. Turner 1865. Octavo original front printed wrapper respined renewed rear wrapper original string stitching; pp. 1-3 4-83 1. Housed in a custom chemise and clamshell box. $4500.First edition one of 500 copies of the momentous Journal featuring its February 9 1865 entry on the Alexandria Virginia government's passage of the 13th Amendment mere days after the U.S. Congress the first of the four Unionist southern states to pass the Amendment also featuring the governor's Message noting: ""though we have in inherited from our fathers of the revolution the blessings of a great nation yet they also left to us an inheritance of African slavery which has proved a bitter dreg in our cup of freedom"" a vital record of forces for constitutional change near the end of the Civil War.Soon after the 1860 election amidst southern secession ""the great questions of union or disunion war or peace hung in the balance. Probably the crucial weight on the scale was Virginia as long as the federal government did not seek to coerce the states Virginia secessionists were unable to achieve a majority. When Lincoln responded with force to the attack on Fort Sumter however the vote in Virginia went in favor of secession."" Subsequently a Virginia convention ""met in Wheeling on May 13 1861 it elected as Governor Francis Pierpont a western Virginian and ardent Unionist and arranged for the creation of a legislature to replace the body sitting in Richmond in July 1861 the new legislature met at the 'Restored Virginia' capital of Wheeling in a special session called by Pierpont."" Against its ""claim to represent a majority of Virginians"" a new state of West Virginia was created in 1863 and Pierpont's government moved to Alexandria to govern areas of Virginia under Union occupation Harrison Lawfulness of the Reconstruction Amendments 380-83.Scholars observe that the 13th Amendment its fellow amendments and Reconstruction as ""both a political process made possible by military successes and constitutional thought grew from wartime as well as post-Appomattox developments"" Hyman and Wiecek Equal Justice 247. This rare first edition of Journal of the House of Delegates substantiates that in documenting passage of the 13th Amendment by Pierpont's Virginia government mere days after the U.S. Congress passed the Amendment on January 31 1865. With that Virginia became the first of the four Unionist southern states that ratified the 13th Amendment. Of those Louisiana followed on February 17 with Arkansas and Tennessee that April. The 13th Amendment is the focus of the Journal's entry for February 9 1865 which states: ""Mr. Brownley called up Senate bill No. 12 entitled 'An Act to ratify the joint resolution of Congress passed January 31 1865 proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United States.' The bill was read the first and second time and the rules were suspended and the bill read the third time and the bill passed."" Also notable herein is the complete printing of Governor Pierpont's opening Message where he notes: ""though we inherited from our fathers of the revolution the blessings of a great nation yet they also left to us an inheritance of African slavery which has proved a bitter dreg in our cup of freedom."" He speaks at length of the rights due people of color and the abolition of laws such as those that prohibit ""negro testimony"" or proscribe a ""different punishment for persons of African dissent"" from that of ""white persons.""""The legislature met for its second session on December 5 1864 The governor's message was a long and important document and indicated the changes of opinion that the war was bringing about. Pierpont gave his views upon the all-important negro question. He congratulated the constitutional convention which had met in the spring on the abolition of slavery in Virginia and advocated sweeping changes in the laws concerning negroes. The act prescribing different punishments for blacks should he said be altered in accordance with the amended constitution as well as the law for apprenticing them. The law prohibiting the education of negroes should be abolished His language was on the whole very moderate. He advised the legalizing of the marital relations of negroes and most important the establishment of public schools Notwithstanding the governor's advice no acts of great importance passed the legislature On February 9 1865 the assembly ratified the 13th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. It adjourned on March 7"" Eckenrode Political History of Virginia During the Reconstruction. Faint ""U.N.C. Duplicate"" stamp to front wrapper.Text fine; just a bit of faint soiling and a tide line to fragile front wrapper. An excellent copy of this elusive item. unknown
1865462580Duisburg, Falk und Volmer, 1865. 266 S., 1 Bl., 2 Bl. Anzeigen. Halbleder d. Zeit (berieben). [2 Warenabbildungen]
188435270Chicago: Jansen McClug & Co 1884. First Edition. Wraps. Very good. Stitched wraps. Two copies. 8 pages. Original covers present and in very good condition. The Thirteenth Amenment passed the Congress in April 1864 officially ending Slavery. Jansen, McClug & Co unknown
1899462229Torino, Fratelli Bocca, 1899. XVI, 539; XIV, 507 S. OLwd (minimal bestoßen, Stempel auf Titel, Bibliotheks-Rückenschild).
18153286953Berlin, Nicolai, 1815. XVIII, 766 S. Mamorierter Ppbd der Zeit mit farbigem Rückenschild (Rücken oben bestoßen).