57 résultats
1699060748London.: Printed by Charles Bill and the executrix of Thomas Newcomb. 1699. Not Given . Hardcover. Very Good Plus. 8vo. LONDON : 1699. Hardback. Cloth spine; paper-covered boards; printed title to cover. Paper browned with feint old staining - minor wear only. Contemporary owner name; John White to title-page. No internal markings. VERY GOOD. iv 152 iii pages. Index. 8vo. Will be well-packed for posting/shipping. London : Printed by Charles Bill and the executrix of Thomas Newcomb. <br/> <br/> Printed by Charles Bill and the executrix of Thomas Newcomb. hardcover
164617558London: Printed by T.W. Thomas Warren for Ed. Edward Husband 1646. FIRST EDITION. Engraved frontispiece woodcut headpieces. Contemporary calf worn especially at spine joints somewhat tender; first blank appears to be torn out leaf with frontispiece repaired some browning and soiling mostly on edges. Overall a good copy from the library of the Earls of Macclesfield with their dated 1860 bookplate motto “Sapere aude†on the paste-down and blind embossed stamp of armorial on first three leaves. First edition. In 1640 King Charles I established the Long Parliament in order to acquire funds for the Bishop’s War against the Scots. However as soon as the Long Parliament took control they began dismantling the monarchy’s authority by removing the king’s advisors and sympathizers. The orders and ordinances collected in this copy begin at this crucial moment and cover the duration of the English Civil War from 1642 to 1646. It is therefore an excellent reference source for laws and statutes during the English Civil War. It also contains several matters of Colonial interest including An Order for advancement of the Plantations in New England; An Order to make the Earl of Warwick Governor of the Plantations in America; An Ordinance against Importation of Whale-oyl; and An additional Committee for ordering Foreign Plantations among others.<br /> <br /> Wing provides the name of the printer for this copy and lists several other volumes containing records of orders over a range of years. Printed by T.W. [Thomas Warren] for Ed. [Edward] Husband unknown
1652015677London: John Field printer to the Parliament of England 1652 Book. Poor. Hardcover. 1652 Good Condition Hardcover Half-leather with marbled sides. 4to 70 pp. newly bound and cut of shortly title page spotted very slight loss of text pp 59 60 some browning throughout A declaration of the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England relating to the affairs and proceedings between this Commonwealth and the States General of the United Provinces of the Low-Countreys: and the present differences occcasioned sic on the States part. And the answer of the Parliament to three papers from the ambassadors extraordinary of the States General upon occasion of the late fight between the fleets. With a narrative of the late engagement betvveen the English and Holland fleet. As also a collection of the preceedings in the treaty between the Lord Pauw Ambassador Extraordinary from the States General of the United Provinces and the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England. Friday the ninth of Iuly 1652. Ordered by the Parliament that no person whatsoever without particular license from the Parliament do presume to print the declaration . Nor any the papers therewith printed other then the printer to the Parliament. Hen: Scobell Cleric. Parliamenti. CONTENTS: title page A Declaration of the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England Relating to the Affairs and Proceedings between this Commonwealth and the States General of the United Provinces of the Low-Countries and the present Differences occasioned on the States part. The Answer of the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England to Three Papers presented to them by the Councel of State from the Ambassadors Extraordinary of the Lords the States General of the United Provinces upon occasion of the late Fight between the Fleets. A Narrative of the late Engagement between the English Fleet under the Command of General Blake and the Holland Fleet under the Command of Lieutenant Admiral Trump near Dover. A Collection of the Proceedings in the Treaty between the Lord Pauw Ambassador Extraordinary from the States General of the Vnited Provinces and the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England. The Lord Pauw's Speech at his Audience before the Parliament the Eleventh of Iune 1652. A Translation of the Letters Credential to the Lord Pauw. speaker's report and Parliamentary order The Lord Pauw's Speech at his Audience in the Councel of State. document order A Summary of what the Lord Adrian Pauw Extraordinary Ambassador of the States General of the Vnited Provinces of the Low Countries hath propounded to the Deputies of the Honorable Councel of State of the Parliament of England the 24 / 14 of June 1652. document A Paper from the Lord Pauw order Translation of the Letter of the Lord Pauw to the Lord President of the Councel of State. The Paper of the Three Extraordinary Ambassadors mentioned in the former Letter. Parliamentary resolution paper A Translation of the Paper of the Lord Ambassador Pauw 17 June 1652. The Answer of the Councel of State to the Summary of the Lord Adrian Pauw Extraordinary Ambassador of the States General of the Vnited Provinces presented to the Councel the 24/14 of this instant June. A Translate of a Paper of the Lord Ambassador Pauw of the 1/22 July June desiring a Conference with the Commissioners of the Councel of State. Another Paper of the Lord Pauw of the 21th of Iune 1652. Another Paper of the Lord Pauw 23 June 1652. The Answer of the Parliament to that part of the Paper given in by the Lord Pauw whereby he desires the Commissioners of the Councel to propound what they shall think reasonable and just to compose speedily the present Differences between this Commonwealth and the Lords the States General of the United Provinces. order A Paper of the Lord Pauw 26 Iune 1652. Another Paper of the Lord Pauw the same day. Another Paper of the same Date. A Paper of the three Ambassadors dated 28 Iune 1652. The Lord Pauw's Speech in Parliament at his taking leave 30. J. John Field printer to the Parliament of England hardcover
164337991London: Printed for Edw. Husbands 1643. 4to 19 cm 7.5". 63 pp. <br><br>The Irish rebellion of 1641 is nicely explained on the Trinity College Dublin library website http://1641.tcd.ie/historical-rebellion.php. Thousands of English and Scottish settlers were dispossessed during the uprising; many of those who fled to Dublin for safety were interviewed by crown authorities and their depositions taken. This publication contains abstracts of some of those eyewitness testimonies as well as the House's reasoning on the cause of the rebellion and a short narrative of its early months the latter with considerable emphasis on naval operations. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â ESTC R4373; Wing rev. ed. E2557. Quarter red morocco with French-swirl marbled paper sides and gilt spine lettering; binding signed with small rubber-stamp on verso of front free endpaper by the Macdonald Company of New York. Leather of joints lightly rubbed in places. Very good condition. Printed for Edw. Husbands hardcover books
16411409300024Printed at London : For M.S 1641-01-01. Hardcover. Very Good. Octavo. 2 48 226 pages. Bound in early 20th century 3/4 leather. Gilt letterig on spine. 5 raised bands. Cloth boards. Page ends washed red. Good binding and cover. Wear to extremities. Owners leather bookplate on inside board of Laurence Roberts Carton. Lacks the 4 portraits. Errata leaf present at end of text but well-worn showing only a quarter of original text. Clean unmarked pages with tanning. R13582. Wing P4018. <br><br> Like many Puritans abhorring decadent celebrations Prynne was strongly opposed to religious feast days including Christmas and revelry such as stage plays He included in his Histriomastix 1632 a denunciation of actresses which was widely felt to be an attack of Queen Henrietta Maria. This book led to the most famous incidents in his life but the timing was accidental. <br> About 1624 Prynne had begun a book against stage-plays; on 31 May 1630 he obtained a license to print it and about November 1632 it was published. Histriomastix is a volume of over a thousand pages showing that plays were unlawful incentives to immorality and condemned by the scriptures Church Fathers modern Christian writers and pagan philosophers. By chance the queen and her ladies in January 1633 took part in the performance of Walter Montagu's The Shepherd's Paradise: this was an innovation at court. A passage reflecting on the character of female actors in general was construed as an aspersion on the queen; passages which attacked the spectators of plays and magistrates who failed to suppress them pointed by references to Nero and other tyrants were taken as attacks on the king Charles I. <br>William Noy as attorney-general instituted proceedings against Prynne in the Star-chamber. After a year's imprisonment in the Tower of London he was sentenced 17 February 1634 to be imprisoned during life to be fined to be expelled from Lincoln's Inn to be deprived of his degree by the university of Oxford and to lose both his ears in the pillory. Prynne was pilloried on 7 May and 10 May. On 11 June he addressed to Archbishop Laud whom he regarded as his chief persecutor a letter charging him with illegality and injustice. Laud handed the letter to the attorney-general as material for a new prosecution but when Prynne was required to own his handwriting he contrived to get hold of the letter and tore it to pieces. In the Tower Prynne wrote and published anonymous tracts against episcopacy and against the Book of Sports. In one he introduced Noy's recent death as a warning. Elsewhere he attacked prelates in general 1635. An anonymous attack on Matthew Wren bishop of Norwich brought him again before the Star-chamber. <br> On 14 June 1637 Prynne was sentenced once more to a fine to imprisonment for life and to lose the rest of his ears. At the proposal of Chief-justice John Finch he was also to be branded on the cheeks with the letters S. L. signifying 'seditious libeller'. Prynne was pilloried on 30 June in company with Henry Burton and John Bastwick and Prynne was handled barbarously by the executioner. He made as he returned to his prison a couple of Latin verses explaining the 'S. L.' with which he was branded to mean 'stigmata laudis' sign of praise. He was released by the Long Parliament in 1640. The House of Commons declared the two sentences against him illegal restored him to his degree and to his membership of Lincoln's Inn and voted him pecuniary reparation as late as October 1648 he was still trying to collect it. He supported the Parliamentary cause in the English Civil War particularly in the press and in many pamphlets while still pursuing the bishops. Printed at London : For M.S hardcover
166715762London: n.p. 1667. First edition. Hardcover. Very good. London 1667. 4to. 5-1/2 x 7-1/2'. 32pp. Bound to style in quarter leather; maroon lettering label gilt; marbled paper boards in a Stormont design. Light blindstamp of a seminary library on title and marginal acquisition number two tiny closed marginal tears on the title one of the affecting the 'e' of 'Printed' else a very good copy. Wing T.2471. ESTC R23832. n.p. hardcover
166715762London: n.p. 1667. First edition. Hardcover. Very good. London 1667. 4to. 5-1/2 x 7-1/2'. 32pp. Bound to style in quarter leather; maroon lettering label gilt; marbled paper boards in a Stormont design. Light blindstamp of a seminary library on title and marginal acquisition number two tiny closed marginal tears on the title one of the affecting the 'e' of 'Printed' else a very good copy. Wing T.2471. ESTC R23832. n.p. hardcover books
16851249771685 A Lyon, Chez Pierre Guillimin - M. D.C. LXXXV. (1685) - Première édition - In-12 (9x15cm environ), reliure pleine peau d'époque, dos à 5 nerfs avec titre et caissons ornés de fleurons en doré - 206 pages + Table
165258941London: Printed by John Field Printer to the Parliament of England 1652. Tall 8vo. 2 1829-1890 pp. Recent maroon cloth with gilt lettering to spine. New endpapers. Original wrapper bound in and repaired. Cloth clean. Internally clean. Black-letter text. Lacking final blank. ESTC : R209365 . Very Good. Cloth. 1652. Printed by John Field, Printer to the Parliament of England 1652 hardcover
16622201280001London : Printed by John Bill and Christopher Barker printers to the Kings Most Excellent Majesty 1662. First Edition. Paperback. Very Good. Customs act 1662 Unbound. 2 209-242 p. : coat of arms ; 29 cm fol. Text in black letter. Ten-line decorated initial on first page. Royal arms on cover title page: approximately 8 x 6.5 cm. Crawford arms 66. See Crawford J.L.L. Bibliography of royal proclamations of the Tudor and Stuart sovereigns and of others published under authority 1485-1714 II page 511. Public General Acts. 1662. 14 Car.II.c.11. "Anno regni Caroli II. Regis Angliae Scotiae Franciae & Hiberniae decimo quarto. At the Parliament begun at Westminster the eighth day of May anno Dom. 1661. In the thirteenth year of the reign of our Most Gracious Soveraign Lord Charles by the grace of God of England Scotland France and Ireland King Defender of the Faith &c. And there continued till the nineteenth of May in the fourteenth year of His Majesties said reign : And thence prorogued to the eighteenth of February then next following London : Printed by John Bill and Christopher Barker, printers to the Kings Most Excellent Majesty paperback
165735345London: Printed by Henry Hills and John Field Printers to His Highness the Lord Protector 1657. First edition. Caption title woodcut illustration. 4 pp. 8vo. Disbound the two leaves separated along fold some offsetting and browning else very good. First edition. Caption title woodcut illustration. 4 pp. 8vo. Intended to raise monies to maintain the Army and Navy without raising the land tax. Kress Supplement S.1133; Wing E1113. Kress Supplement S.1133; Wing E1113 <br/><br/> Printed by Henry Hills and John Field, Printers to His Highness the Lord Protector unknown
16976159Printed by Charles Bill and the Executrix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty 1697. Sm. folio 51 leaves BLACK-LETTER with fine woodcut arms of William III on front cover woodcut head-piece neat contemporary signature on front cover front cover a little dusty and age-soiled; sewed as issued extracted from bound volume a remarkably bright crisp clean copy ideal for framing and display. 8 & 9 Gulielmi III. Printed by Charles Bill, and the Executrix of Thomas Newcomb, deceas'd, Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty, unknown
16973184Printed for Charles Bill and the Executrix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty 1697. Sm. folio 10pp BLACK-LETTER sewed as issued but disbound fine woodblock royal arms of William III on front cover uncut a remarkably crisp clean copy ideal for framing and display. 8 & 9 Gulielmi III. Printed for Charles Bill, and the Executrix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd, Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty, unknown
165726937London: Printed by Henry Hills and John Field Printers to His Highness 1657. 1st edition Wing E-1046. Not in Gabler nor Goldsmith. Printed self-wrappers. VG split developing along fold. Now housed in archival mylar sleeve. 2 2 pp. Commonwealth seal to t.p. Folio: 2. 10-5/8" x 6-3/4" <br/><br/>Gabler though not listing this item does briefly discuss & list divers tracts & pamphlets written in the early 1640s voicing public outrage over a contract between Charles I and the Vintner's Company of London- under said contract the Vintners agreed to pay a 46 shilling tax on every ton of Spanish & French wine & also agreed to annually buy a certain amount from English importers. In return the vintners were permitted to sell cooked victuals a proviso not in their original charter & allowed to recoup the tax by charging a penny a quart more that the officially published price. The ultimate effect was to give the Vintners' Company a monopoly on the wine trade all the while enriching the coffers of Charles I. Needless to say wine drinkers were livid. Parliament eventually responded in the consumers' favor. Gabler pp. 2-3. This act of Cromwell's establishes limitations on prices for Spanish & French wines a proclamation issued perhaps in memory of the Vintner's Company earlier attempts at profiteering Printed by Henry Hills, and John Field, Printers to His Highness unknown books
16973465Printed by Charles Bill and the Executirix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd Printers to the Kings most Excellent Majesty 1697. 6 leaves folio BLACK-LETTER with fine woodblock arms of William III on upper cover; disbound sewed as issued a remarkably crisp clean copy ideal for framing and display. The Act deals in detail with the provisions to be made for 'such registered Mariners or Seamen Watermen Fishermen Lightermen Bargemen Keelmen or Sefaring Men'. Towards the end of the Act particular provision is made for the Cinque Ports 'Whereas in the whole Jurisdiction of the Cinque-Ports and their Towns and Members on the Coasts of Kent and Sussex there are not any Justices of the Peace nor Divisions.Such Certificate as aforesaid shall be sufficient where no Justice of the Peace shall be residing or inhabiting within Three Miles of such Port or Town'. The nature and condition of this Act makes it very suitable for framing and display. VERY SCARCE. Printed by Charles Bill, and the Executirix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd, Printers to the Kings most Excellent Majesty, unknown
16967122Printed by Charles Bill and the Executrix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty 1696. Sm. folio 3 leaves BLACK-LETTER throughout with fine woodblock arms of William III on front cover and woodblock illuminated capital on first page of text; disbound uncut a remarkably crisp clean copy. 8 Gulielmi III.The death of Queen Mary in 1695 isolated William as an object of Jacobite hatred; the motive for his assassination being the stronger since his death would no longer leave her in occupation of the throne. In February James II moved to Calais and the Jacobite conspirators moved to action. As William drove home to Kensington Palace from his weekly outing in Richmond Park he had to pass along a narrow and muddy lane near Turnham Green. Here he was to be surrounded and murdered. This was the most serious of the several plots against him but the plotters' security was lax and on 24 February William announced in parliament knowledge both of the plan and of the proposed invasion from France.This act arraigns Sir George Barclay and a number of lesser Jacobites including Johnson alias Harrison Durant alias Durance Michael Hare Major George Holmes Philip Hanford alias Browne Richard Richardson John Maxwell Bryerly Plowden and Hungate.Conspirators already languishing in Newgate are named as Counter Major John Bernardi Robert Cassells Robert Meldrum James Chambers and Robert Blackbourne. Printed by Charles Bill, and the Executrix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd, Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty, unknown
168927134London Glasgow: No publisher/printer 1689. Small 4to 19 cm; 7.5". 7 1 blank pp. <br><br>A petition for redress and significant changes in the king's relations with Scotland. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â Wing rev. ed. A561; McAlpin IV 341; ESTC R11006. Removed from a nonce volume. Clean. No publisher/printer] unknown books
164237985London: Printed for John Wright 1642. 4to 19 cm 7.5". 8 pp. <br><br>First edition. This ordinance made provision for privateers to hinder aid reaching the Irish during the Rebellion of 1641 although the rebellion wasn't entirely quelled until Cromwell's New Model Army reconquered Ireland in 1653. The war was almost certainly the most destructive in Irish history and its abiding legacy was the wholesale transfer of land ownership and political power from the old Catholic elite to a Protestant one in part newly installed and in part pre-existing the war. The publisher of this wartime proclamation was an official printer for the Parliament of England and published several early newspapers and ballads. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â ESTC R19001; Wing rev. ed. E1765. Quarter red morocco with French-swirl marbled paper sides and gilt spine lettering; binding signed with small rubber-stamp on verso of front free endpaper by the Macdonald Company of New York. Leather of joints rubbed. Very good condition. Printed for John Wright hardcover books
164520454London: Pr. for John Wright 1645. Small 4to. 1 f. 6 pp. <br><br>A parliamentary action on ordination: The ordinance sparked some controversy immediately and there was at least one immediate publication that examined its import.<br>Â Â Â Â => Bibliographically interesting. Wing records four different issues of this ordinance the telling points being on the title-page: the spelling of "classical" or "classicall" and the form of the date whether "12 Novemb. 1645" or just "1645" and combinations thereof. ESTC fails to distinguish them. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â Wing rev. ed. E1894A; ESTC R176130. Removed from a nonce volume and dusty; in modern wrappers. All edges a bit chipped and lower margins of leaves A2 and A3 with loss of blank paper. All leaves age-toned. Pr. for John Wright unknown books
1664002881S.l. Grenoble : s. n. 1664. Very good. First edition thus OCLC lists one copy at Yale with the same title but different text and date - 1638; this edition not in OCLC; 8 3/4 x 6 1/4; single leaf removed text to recto only; illustrated with a woodcut border above the title; a small manuscript note to top margin; minor spotting to left margin; in very good condition. Reaffirming a royal edict first issued in 1556 the document dealt with prostitutes or women who had conceived in a dishonest way and concealed their pregnancy and after giving birth killed their infants and burried them or threw them away. The women were to be punished by death the manner of which was to be determined depending on the gruesomeness of the particular case. The paper contained an extract of the original 1556 edict as well which also required all unmarried women to officially declare their pregnancy and ordered the death penalty for any such mother whose infant died before receiving proper baptism regardless if an infanticide had actually occured. In early modern Europe pregnant unmarried women could face punishment for fornication and if they had a miscarriage or the newborn died they could be accused of infanticide but the courts rarely saw such cases as the magistrates were aware of the physicians' limitations in diagnosing and distinguishing a stillbirth a natural-cause death and a murder. It all chaged throughout most of Europe in the 16th century arguably beginning with the above-mentioned 1556 edict in France which was followed by similar ones in England and Germany in the 1600s and the early-1700s. s. n. unknown books
169828977Saintes: De L'Imprimerie de Marie Bichon 1698. 2 pages. Ornamental headpiece. 1 vols. 4to. Disbound. Minor marginal discoloration tear in right margin of first page not affecting text else excellent. 2 pages. Ornamental headpiece. 1 vols. 4to. The law against "Filles & des Femmes qui celent leur grossesse & leurs accouchemens faisant perir leurs enfans durant leur grossesse par des avortemens ou aprés leur accouchement par le fer ou autrement & en l'un & l'autre de ces cas; Il a été imposé des peines trés severes par les Lois divines & humaines soit que l'engrant dont la Femme se fait aborter fût formé ou vivant & animé parce que l'action par laquelle une Femme empêche un Homme d'Ietre formé & animé est un homicide." The decree issued by Dalon Avocat General du Roy this being the an issuance from Saintes. De L'Imprimerie de Marie Bichon unknown
1694276241 placart au format 47 x37 cm, Bordeaux, 1694, collationné et signé par Roger, greffier.. Rappel du titre complet : Arrest de la Cour du Parlement de Bordeaux du vingt-septième Aoust 1694 [ Affiche : Lutte contre la spéculation sur le blé et les grains au lendemain du "grand hyver" de 1693-1694 ] "Sur ce qui a été représenté par le Procureur General du Roy, que bien que la Recolte des Bleds ait été assez considerable la presente année dans tout le Ressort de la Cour, & qu'il soit même informé de plusieurs endroits que selon les apparances, celles des menus Grains que nous appelons Bled d'Espagne, Millets, & autres, la sera encore davantage à proportion ; Néanmoins, le prix desdits Bleds se trouve aussi excessif après la Récolte qu'auparavant, ce qui est causé par l'avarice de plusieurs Particuliers, lesquels touchez par les profits immenses qu'ils ont faits sur la vente de ces sortes de Denrées les années précédentes, enlevent à quelque prix que ce soit tous les Bleds qui se portent aux Marchez des lieux, soit par eux ou par personnes interposées, les vont même achepter dans les maisons des Particuliers, à un prix beaucoup plus haut que ceux qui se vendent ausdits Marchez, pour en faire des amas secrets, contre la disposition des Arrests que la Cour à cy-devant donnez pour prevenir ces inconveniens" ... "La Cour faisant droit de la Requisition du Procureur General du Roy, a fait inhibitions & défenses, comme autrefois, à toute sort de personnes de quelque qualité & condition qu'elles soient, de faire amas de Bleds & autres Grains au delà de leur provision, à la reserve des Marchands publics, lesquels seront obligez d'exposer lesdits Grains en vente, & les envoyer aux Marchez des lieux voisins ; En telle sorte que lesdits Marchez soient suffisamment pourvus".
1684127644à Rennes, chez Pierre Garnier, M. DC. LXXXIX 1684 Fort in-8 24,5 x 19 cm. Reliure de l’époque veau havane, [14]-964-XXXIX-LXXXIV pp. Dos réparé, manque 2 pp. 965-967 in fine table des matières, intérieur assez frais.
161481114Paris, Chez Michel Sonnius, rue sainct Jacques, 1614, in-4 (17x23cm), reliure plein parchemin à couverture rempliée, titre manuscrit au dos, 936p. Traduit par Gabriel Michel de Roche-Maillet. 47ff Tables des principales matières contenues en ces trois Livres des Commentaires. Solide exemplaire, dans son vélin d'origine; quelques mentions manuscrites sur les gardes blanches et la page de titre. Hormis un légère marque de mouillure sur les huit premières pages et en marge des dernières pages ainsi que dans la Table, texte en bon état de fraîcheur.
161610228À propos de voies de fait contre les habitants de Noves En feuilles moyen Agen s.n. 1616 1 plaquette in-4°