6 711 résultats
1877653Lyon, Imprimerie de Louis Perrin (Alf. Louis Perrin et Marinet succes.), 1877 ; in-8,cartonnage rigide beige de l'éditeur ; 74 pp. et couverture grise imprimée.
1900273Lyon, Bernoux et Cumin, 1900 ; grand in-8, broché ; 218 pp., 10 planches hors-texte.
1754LV2072London:: Printed by Thomas Baskett Printer to the King's most Excellent Majesty 1754. 1754. Folio. pp. 2 227-230. Self-wraps. Title-page: Anno Regni Georgeii II. Regis Magnae Britanniae Franciae & Hiberniae Vicesimo Septimo. At the Parliament begun and holden at Westminster the Tenth Day of November Anno Dom. 1747 . . . Defender of the Faith &c. Relating to Duty taxes applied to the importation of all wines vinegar cider beer as well as all brandy wines 'strong waters' and the like coming to London or any other "ports creeks or places" in the kingdom of England. Full title: "An Act to continue the Duties for Encouragement of the Coinage of Money; and for removing Doubts concerning the Continuance of the Duty of Twenty Shillings for every Ton of Brandy Wines and Strong Waters imported." Printed by Thomas Baskett, Printer to the King's most Excellent Majesty, 1754. paperback
111451 volume petit in-folio, 139 folio chiffrés. Registre manuscrit sur papier bleuté, entièrement rempli, entre le 12 octobre 1774 au 29 mars 1780. Vélin souple de l'époque, liens en tissus conservés. Titre manuscrit en noir sur le titre. Très bon état.
110826Un volume in-12 de 165x100x20 mm environ, contenant 9 publications datées de 1752-1753, sans lieu ni mention d'éditeur, pleine basane marbrée fauve, dos à nerfs portant titres dorés sur pièce de titre en maroquin bordeaux, orné de caissons à riches motifs dorés, tranches rouges. Quelques rousseurs et pages brunies, rares petits défauts de marge, petites épidermures sur le cuir, sinon bon état
203741Paris, Baudouin, 1789 in-8, 7 pp., en feuilles.
21603ANGERS 1489 un document, de 8 lignes, manuscrit à l'encre brune d'une page sur velin parcheminé, format 24 centimètres de large par 12,5 centimètres de haut, Papier concernant ISABEAU DE HUSSON, DAME DE MATHEFELON (MATHEFLON - 49 Seiches-sur-le-Loir) ET DE DURTAL ET SON FILS FRANCOIS DE LA JAILLE, SEIGNEUR DE MATHEFLON, LE 6 NOVEMBRE 1489 (il epousa en 1489 anne de bourré , dame de Corzé, fille de jean seigneur du plessis-bourré, ministre de Louis XI, avec en dot Grez et Marans ), le nom de jacques de Beauvau conseiller du Roy est cité... Signature manuscrite de GUILLAUME DE CERISAY, greffier civil du parlement de Paris, ancien gouverneur de l'Anjou,
204784Paris, Baudouin, An II in-8, 31 pp., broché sous couverture d'attente de couleur rouge.
205795S.l.n.d. (1789) in-8, 8 pp., cousu.
204813S.l., (1790) in-12, 6 pp., dérelié.
202298S.l., 1789 in-8, 48 pp., broché. Une tache d'encre en marge des premières pages. Rousseurs.
203351S.l., 1789 in-8, 14 pp., dérelié. brochure sur beau papier.
107579A Paris, chez Grégoire, libraire, rue du Coq-St-Honoré, n° 135, et chez Touvenin, libraire, quai des Augustins, n°44, An XI de la République (1803), 1 volume in-8 de 205x130x5 mm environ, 1f.blanc, iv-130 pages, 2ff.blancs, demi-basane vert foncé, titres dorés sur dos lisse. Cuir décoloré et frotté avec début de fente sur les mors, coins émoussés, mors interne fendu mais structure solide, manque de papier dans la marge d'une page, notes manuscrites anciennes sur la première garde, rares petites rousseurs et légers défauts de marge.
176023665Amsterdam 1760 in-12 broché 1 fascicule, broché in-douze (paperback in-12) (16,4 x 10 cm), toutes tranches lisses rouges, sans illustrations (no illustration), [2]-21 pages, [S.l., 1760],
175823666Amsterdam 1758 in-12 broché 1 fascicule, broché in-douze (paperback in-12) (16,4 x 10 cm), toutes tranches lisses rouges, sans illustrations (no illustration), 53 pages, [S.l., 1758],
175823668Amsterdam 1758 in-12 broché 1 fascicule, broché in-douze (paperback in-12) (16,4 x 10 cm), toutes tranches lisses rouges, sans illustrations (no illustration), 23 pages, [(S. l.), 1758],
175523670Amsterdam 1755 in-12 broché 1 fascicule, broché in-douze (paperback in-12) (16,4 x 10 cm), toutes tranches lisses rouges, sans illustrations (no illustration) excepté une marque royale gravée sur bois en noir en bas du titre, 128 pages, [[S.l.] : [s.n.], 1755],
206729Troyes, Chez Audré, impr. du département., in-8, 32 pp., en feuilles. Brochure défraîchie.
171112255This Act of Parliament made it illegal to harvest trees that were "fit for masts not being the property of any private person" in many of the North American colonies. The fine for felling such a mast-worthy tree was one hundred pounds sterling for each offense. In addition the Act instructed the Surveyor General of Her Majesties Woods "to mark with the broad arrow all such trees as now are or hereafter shall be fit and proper to be taken for the use of her Majesties Royal Navy and to keep a register of the same." An early act asserting Mother England's authority over natural resources in the colonies. ICN 7519.1. Printed by the Assigns of Thomas Newcomb, and Henry Hills, deceased...
30755Despatch from the Right Honorable Lord Glenelg to His Excellency Sir George Gipps stating that the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury do not disapprove of the increase of the Police Establishment at Port Macquarie but suggest the apportionment of the expence sic between the Colonial and Convict Funds. No.3. Downing Street 14th October 1837 . and Enclosure to the foregoing. Treasury Chambers 7th October 1837. London : s.n. 1837. Single sheet 253 x 162 mm letterpress on laid paper watermarked 'J. & J. Town / Turkey Mill / 1832' printed on both sides; very light creasing and toning else fine. This separately issued British government circular reproduces two items of correspondence pertaining to the funding of the proposed expansion of the penal establishment at Port Macquarie New South Wales in 1837. The first is a copy of the despatch from Lord Glenelg Secretary of State for War and the Colonies to Governor Gipps dated 14 October 1837 informing him that the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury deem that any expenditure required for the expansion of the establishment should not be drawn from the Convict Services purse alone but rather that the responsibility for such costs ought to be shared by the Colonial Government. The reasoning behind this stance is elucidated in the second item of correspondence a copy of the communication sent to Lord Glenelg by A. Y. Spearman on behalf of the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury dated 7 October 1837. Spearman writes: '. my Lords are not disposed to object to the arrangements for the increase of the Police Establishment at Port Macquarie reported in Depatch from the Governor of New South Wales of 1st November 1836 so far as regards the number or rates of pay of the persons employed; but as he has averted to the great influx of free Settlers to the fertile country in the neighbourhood of that Penal Station as forming one of the grounds for the increase it appears to my Lords that the additional expense should not fall entirely on the funds applicable to Convict Services but that a large proportion if not the whole of it should be defrayed by the Colony.' The circular was published in The Sydney Herald 15 August 1838. Trove locates no copies. unknown
1727AQ22496London: s.n. 1727. 3pp 1. Docket title printed to verso of final leaf. Disbound. Old folds. A remarkably rare survival of a Georgian act for preventing frauds and abuses within the dying trade in particular the 'deceitful practice' of dying of woollen goods black 'without using Woad Indigo of Mather' and marking such goods with falsified signs of authenticity. ESTC records copies at a single copy in the British Isles BL and one further in North America Chicago. ESTC T16387. First edition. Folio. [s.n.] unknown
1727AQ22495London: s.n. 1727. 3pp 1. Docket title printed to verso. Disbound. Old folds. A rare survival of a Georgian parliamentary bill never enacted for preventing the importation of thrown silk from the Italian states 'but what shall have visible Spinning and be doubled and twisted' and entirely excluding shipments of low quality tram silk material that is reeled rather than spun. ESTC records copies at a single location in the British Isles BL and one further in North America Chicago. ESTC T16381. First edition. Folio. [s.n.] unknown
1723AQ23050London: s.n. 1723. 3pp 1. Stab-stitch holes and remains of binding to gutter. Docket title printed to verso. Separated into two leaves along fold. A trifle creased. A rare survival of an early eighteenth-century parliamentary act for regulating the sale of footwear and related manufacturing materials by journeyman cobblers. Two editions were published concurrently one printed by John Basket the other as here without an imprint. Both are scarce this edition in particular; ESTC records just a single copy Guildhall. ESTC N56275. Folio. [s.n.] unknown
1799AQ24867London: s.n. 1799. 12pp. Docket title to verso of final leaf. Stitched as issued. Three early horizontal folds. A trifle creased and browned. A rare survival of a Georgian bill Private Acts 19 Geo.II.c.68 amending previous legislation regarding the appropriation and privatisation of common land in the town of Mildenhall Wiltshire for agricultural purposes. ESTC records copies at two locations in the British Isles BL and Cambridge and none elsewhere. ESTC T76912. Folio. [s.n.] unknown
1727AQ25475London: s.n. 1727. Single bifolium. 3pp 1. Docket title to verso of second leaf. Shave at head a trifle creased leaves separating at gutter. A rare survival of an early example of Parliamentary lobbying literature opposing a bill read 9th March 1727 that would see the chapel of St. John Clerkenwell Middlesex become a parish church. ESTC records copies at two locations in the British Isles BL and Senate House and three further in North America Harvard Huntington and Yale. ESTC T12570. Folio. [s.n.] unknown