6 711 résultats
Napoli, 1927, febbraio 21, copertina fotografica in fascicolo originale completo di pp. 16 de "Il Mattino Illustrato" .
In 8, pp. (6) + 86. Danni al d. e mancanza al p. post. Br. ed. Opuscolo che presenta i discorsi al Parlamento Nazionale, a partire da Carlo Alberto fino a Vittorio Emanuele nel 1871.
In 8 , pp. 202. M. pl. Libro interessante che si erge a paladino delle belle arti contro il soffocamento della legge Martini.
1348169117.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1528445694.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
23069No place date or obvious purpose. One page 12mo fold mark sl. crumpled mainly good condition. Signatures of Liberal MPs; James Cropper Peter McLagan Theodore Fry Thomas Burt Samuel Smith Arthur Pease James. Bryce John Roberts E Stafford Howard Thomas X. Thompson J.F. Christian James Stuart Stewart Clark Stephen Williamson. No place date, or obvious purpose. unknown
17747London: William Ridgway 169 Piccadilly W. 1886. 64pp. 12mo. Frontispiece in red and black with diagrammatic pyramid with 'Rank and File or "Soldiers."' at the base and 'C. S. Parnell M.P.' at the apex. At foot of the frontispiece is printed 'The Assassination Oath of the I. R. B.' Disbound pamphlet without covers. In fair condition on lightly aged and worn paper. A detailed study printed in small type beginning: 'The world is governed by facts and once the facts about the Repeal of the Union Conspiracy are known I have little doubt Great Britainn will decide once and for ever against the concession of an independent Legislature to Ireland.' London: William Ridgway, 169, Piccadilly, W. 1886. unknown
22328no place 4 February 1898 . Two pages 4to bifolium second leaf blank apart from note in another hand on verso " Mr Huskisson's of the 4th Feby 98" good condition. Text: "mr Moodie was appointed Vice Consul to the Southern States of North America upon the late Consul obtaining leave of absence for the recovery of his health. Since that period upwards of four uears the whole duties of the Office have been executed by Mr. Moodie whose zeal and attention to the Interests of the British Merchants under circumstances of considerable difficulty and embarrassment are universally acknowledged. Mr. Moodie is a British Subject and his principles and character for many uears before his appointment to the Vice Consulship are well known. Upon these points Mr. Hammond may be referred to. Mr. Miller is lately deceased and it is hoped that Mr. Moodie's past Services & the circumstances above stated may entitle him to a favourable consideration upon the present vacancy." no place, [ 4 February 1898 ] unknown
22883'Miscellaneous. No. 11 1912.' London: Printed by His Majesty's Stationery Office. Folio ii 39 i. Stitched. Text clear and complete. Fair on lightly-aged paper with slight staining to fore-edge. Title-page bearing stamp and withdrawal stamp of the University of Hull. 'Miscellaneous. No. 11 (1912).' London: Printed by His Majesty's Stationery Office. unknown
1761297522London: J. Newbery at the Bible and Sun 1761. Soft Cover. Very Good binding. 8vo; a disbound pamphlet ii 82 pages. ~~Regarding the resignation of William Pitt the Great Commoner. Pitt refused to accept a title hence the moniker. Very Good binding. J. Newbery, at the Bible and Sun unknown
1997LFA01675Un bulletin de 22 pages, format 210 x 135 mm, Académie Delphinale (Grenoble) fondée en 1772
225979Paris, Chez Baudouin., (1790) in-8, 4 pp., dérelié.
24845Eyre and Spottiswoode Printers to the Queen's most Excellent Majesty 1858. Four pages sm. fol. bifolium. damaged at join not affecting text removed from bound volume. "Whereas the Commissioners for the Exhibition of 1851 have purchased Lands at Kensington Gore with a view to secure adequate space in the Metropolis for Institutions connected with Science and Art .". Eyre and Spottiswoode, Printers to the Queen's most Excellent Majesty, 1858. unknown
107603London George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode 1847. . Folio 30 x 19 cm; woodcut royal coat of arms single leaf; a few small tears to upper margin not affecting text unbound.<br /> An act of Parliament confirming the validity of 'Marriages amongst the People called Quakers and amongst Persons professing the Jewish Religion'.<br /><br />The statute was drafted in response to the notorious 1844 case of R vs. Millis in which the House of Lords held that all marriages conducted without the presence of a member of clergy in holy orders were invalid in English common law. The effect was to throw doubt on the legitimacy of the marriages of all Jews and Quakers. William Christie 1816-874 the Liberal MP for Weymouth brought in a motion to dispel these concerns which was duly codified into law as 10 & 11 Vic. c.58.<br /> London, George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode, 1847. unknown
107594London Charles Bill 1702. . Folio 27.5 x 17.5 cm; woodcut headpiece and initial black letter; single leaf from 'Anno Regni Annæ Reginæ Angliæ Scotiæ Franciæ & Hiberniæ primo. At the Parliament begun at Westminster the thirtieth day of December. 1701' acts of Parliament for the last year of the reign of William III and the first year of Anne; unbound; 453-454pp.<br /> An act of Parliament 'To the end that sufficient maintenance be provided and allowed for the children of Jewish parents who shall turn Protestants' p.453. <br /><br />The law arose from the curious case of Mary de Mendez Berta an eighteen-year-old who was disowned and expelled from the family home following her conversion to Protestantism. A petition was brought before Parliament in an attempt to make Mary's father Jacob de Mendez Berta pay for his daughter's upkeep after which it was resolved that a bill be produced to address her case. <br /><br />The resultant act had some effect in the eighteenth century and was considered by the Lord Chancellor Thomas Parker in the 1718 case of Vincent vs. Fernandez. Here it was found that the law could apply equally to the adult child of a Jewish parent in this instance a 44-year-old married woman who had been cut-out of her father's will. The law remained in effect until 1846 when it was repealed by the Religious Disabilities Act.<br /> ESTC N53589; Roth Magna Bibliotheca Anglo-Judaica p.246 no.1; Henriques The Jews and the English Law Oxford 1908. [London], [Charles Bill], [1702]. unknown
12462London: Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Spottiswoode Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty. 1834. 11pp. foolscap 8vo. Stitched and unbound. Aged and worn with closted vertical 5cm cut from bottom through all six leaves. The full drophead title reads: 'CAP. LXXVII. An Act to render valid and effectual certain Articles of Agreement between the Mayor and Commonalty and Citizens of the City of London Governors of the Possessions Revenues and Goods of the Hospitals of Edward King of England the Sixth of Christ Bridewell and Saint Thomas the Apostle and of the Hospitals of Henry the Eighth King of England called "The House of the Poor" in West Smithfield near London and of the House and Hospital called Bethlehem and the Presidents Treasurers and Acting Governors of the said several Hospitals.' Bearing a number of underlinings and marginal annotations in a nineteenth-century hand presumably by a member of the solicitors 'Clayton Cookson & Wainewright' whose name is written on the blank last page together with '22 Geo. 3. c. 77'. The involvement of the solicitors may result from 1860s legal action over the moving of St Thomas's Hospital from Southwark to Lambeth. Excessively scarce: no copy on COPAC. London: Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Spottiswoode, Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty. 1834. unknown
17451070London: Printed by Thomas Baskett. 1745. First edition. Folio 32 x 20cm. Unbound. 2 747-758. Woodcut coat of arms to the title page decorative woodcut initial to the first text page text in black letter. A very good copy with just a little toning and slight wear to the left-hand margin where once bound within a larger volume. An Act published in Public General Acts 1744-1745 regarding provision for the poor in Bristol including a law compelling ships bound for Ireland "to take in one Vagrant for every seven Tuns" carried. London: Printed by Thomas Baskett. unknown
17451071London: Printed by Thomas Baskett. 1745. First edition. Folio 32 x 20cm. Unbound. 2 639-643. Woodcut coat of arms to the title page decorative woodcut initial to the first text page text in black letter. A very good copy with just a little toning and slight wear to the left-hand margin where once bound within a larger volume. An Act published in Public General Acts 1744-1745 enacting an amnesty for those who have engaged in the activity of smuggling and laying out punishments for those who continue to partake in the crime transportation or death. The statutes of 1745 are considered to be the leading statutes for smuggling law in eighteenth-century England as they made the greatest effort to convict offenders and to sentence those convicted to death. These statutes part of the 'Bloody Code' further extended the means by which a person could be convicted for smuggling and put to death without benefit of clergy although other lesser penalties most notably transportation remained the more common outcome. London: Printed by Thomas Baskett. unknown
182676430unknown: unknown 1801 / 1821 / 1825 / 1826. 4to. 697-720; 221-224; 1497-1540; 1-30 pp manuscript. Half brown calf over marbled boards with a red leather title label bearing gilt lettering and ruling to the front board. Rubbing to the spine corners and boards. Some chipping and loss to the leather at the spine with a 2cm split at the front hinge. Some offsetting to the text alongside some spots markings and occasional pencil annotations to the Acts of Parliament. With copies of letters of correspondence relating to the use of land within Hanslope Park in Stony Straford dated to 1865 on embossed Hanslope Park paper loosley enclosed. Contains 4 Acts of Parliament relating to the Inclosure of Salcey Forest forming part of the Inclosure Acts of the 18th and 19th century which put previously common land into private ownership with manuscript Commisioner's minutes providing detail on the procedure land claimants and expenses at the rear. The four Acts include: 'An Act for consolidating in one Act certain Provisions usually inserted in Acts of Inclosure; and for Facilitating the Mode of proving the several Facts usually required for the passing of such Acts' from 1801; 'An Act to amend the Law respecting the inclosing of Open Fields Pastures Moors Commons and Waste Lands in England' from 1821; 'An Act for dividing allotting and inclosing the Forest of Salcey in the Counties of Northhampton and Buckingham; and of certain Lands in the Parish of Hartwell in the said County of Northampton' from 1825; and finally 'An Act for Subdividing alloting and inclosing the Allotment directed to be set out by an Act of the last Session of Parliament for inclosing the Forest of Salcey in the Counties of Northampton and Buckingham to the several Owners and Proprietors of Land claiming Rights of Common in and over the said Forest' from 1826. This volume provides a fascinating local insight into this hugely significant period of change in the history of English land ownership. . Very Good. Half Calf. 1826. [unknown] 1801 / 1821 / 1825 / 1826 unknown
2543London: Mark Baskett January 10th 1765. . Folio disbound first title still conjugate gutter showing evidence of previous binding. Second title third leaf detached; gutter showing evidence of previous binding The passage of these acts was probably spurred by an the likelihood of an outbreak of cattle plague on the British mainland which actually did occur in later in 1765. London: Mark Baskett, January 10th 1765. unknown
54186, Paris, Pagnerre 1849, ptt in-8, demi-chagrin noire, tit. doré sur dos à quatre nerfs ornés de filets estampés à froid, tr. mouchetées, (rel. légt usée, qq. annotations au crayon), bon état, 256p.
171060S.l., (1790) in-8, 28 pp.
203976Paris, Imprimerie nationale, An III in-8, 4 pp., dérelié.
201451S.l., février 1789 in-8, 60 pp., broché sous couverture d'attente jaunie.