5 709 résultats
0484283553.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
133416102X.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
B9783752520583Paperback / softback. New. paperback
0366975293.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0265836689.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1527788830.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1867103854Ottawa: G. E. Desbarats 1867. Three-Quarter Leather. Good . 496 p. 26 cm. Half green leather with pebbled cloth. Reads 1868 on spine. Chipped spine ends cracked upper front hinge corners worn. Owner's signature on front free endpaper. <br/><br/>Title continues: "Being an Index to Classified Catalogues Printed in 1857 1858 1864 and to the Books and Pamphlets Since Added to the Library Up to 1st October 1867." G. E. Desbarats hardcover
0243129181.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0666861323.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
13480On letterhead of Phesdo House Laurencekirk Kincardineshire N.B. 12 October 1903. 4pp. 12mo. In good condition on lightly-aged paper. Closely written. He feels that he can give an account 'sufficient for yr. purposes without risking inaccuracies wh. opponents might attack'. He begins as follows: 'You are probably aware that after the fiscal follies of the earlier part of the last century the people of the United States resolutely set their faces against taxation except for revenue purposes for the absolute necessities of the Govt. - this lasted till the outbreak of the Civil War when the extraordinary demands upon the Treasury required widespread taxation - & wherever home industries were taxed equivalent or greater import duties were levied.' There follows a detailed analysis of the question concluding: 'Free Trade v. Protection has been a lifelong study for me & I have been so mixed up with the question in the US & with Bright & Cobden in this country that it is difficult for me to believe that we are really committed to a further struggle to maintain the wonderful position wh. Free Trade has given to this country.' From the Evans family papers. On letterhead of Phesdo House, Laurencekirk, Kincardineshire, N.B. 12 October 1903. unknown
180555576Portsea: Williams Printer 1805. 8vo. 15 pp. Fifteen-page pamphlet. Lacks wrappers. Leaves slightly edgeworn. Scarce Portsea imprint. . Very Good. Wraps. 1805. Williams, Printer 1805 paperback
0365304891.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0332011941.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0332011925.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
9353361710.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
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
17411394690London: Thomas Baskett 1741. First Edition. Loose folio. Quarto pp. 2 699-700 two leaves. In Good plus condition. In an incomplete modern binding comprised of uncovered boards bearing pencil annotations; mull and sewing visible at spine. Corners of boards lightly bumped. Text block lightly age toned. BB Consignment. 1394690. Special Collections - Downstairs. Thomas Baskett unknown
17771224London: Printed by Charles Eyre and William Strahan. 1777. First edition. Folio 32 x 20cm. Unbound. 2 1083-1095. 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 some creasing to the foot of pp.1091-1092 due to an original paper flaw minor toning and a little wear to the left-hand margin where once bound within a larger volume. London: Printed by Charles Eyre and William Strahan. unknown
181449404House of Commons 1814. Sm. folio 32pp on laid paper some negligible age-staining; disbound a very good bright crisp legible copy ideal for framing and display. 54 Geo. III. Session 1813-14; granted Royal Assent 27 July 1814. House of Commons, unknown
1803246148United Kingdom: Houses of Parliament 1803. Book. Good. hardback. hardback foolscap Enclosure Act of Parliament dating from 1803 authorizing the enclosure of land in Gloucestershire later binding of quarter cloth and paper covered boards with paper title to upper board the first page of the Act has several ink splashes the remainder is clean and unmarked several blanks are bound at the rear. Houses of Parliament Hardcover
650411698. Folio. pp. ii 563-565 i blank. Extracted from the annual volume in very good condition. The Act was directed against apostates at the beginning of the deist movement in England particularly after the 1696 publication of John Toland's book Christianity not Mysterious. It was rarely applied: the legislation allowed only four days after the offence for a formal complaint to be lodged and the trial itself was required to be held within three months. As a result existing common law process continued to be the first line against heterodoxy in England and Wales. The Law Commission said that they were not aware of any prosecutions that had taken place under this Act. On 24 May 1966 the Law Commission said that the offence created by this statute was obsolete and recommended that the whole Act be repealed. Their recommendation was implemented by section 132 of and Part I of Schedule 4 to the Criminal Law Act 1967. 1698. Folio. unknown
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
180528475T Collins 1805. Sm. folio 28pp on laid paper with woodcut headpiece; disbound some mild age-staining else a very good bright crisp copy. 45 Geo III. The estates include Great Bardfield Bardfield Saling Blewgate Hall and others in Essex; and Brickstables near Mortlake and Deepden near Dorking in Surrey. T Collins, unknown
1777599<p>Anno Regni GEORGII III REGIS Magnae Britaniiae Franciae & Hiberniae DECIMO SEPTIMO. At the Parliament Begun and holden at Westminster the Twenty-ninth Day of November Anno Domini 1774 in the Fifteenth Year of our Sovereign Lord GEORGE the Third by the Grace of God of Great Britain France and Ireland King Defender of the Faith. </p><br /><p>FIRST EDITION 4 1039-1042 woodcut coat of arms on title woodcut floriated initial text in black letter unbound folio 320 x 200mm London Charles Eyre and William Strahan 1777</p><br /><p>This important act emphasised the Government's dedication to improving general science and navigation by offering rewards to those who could find an accurate method for determining longitude at sea. </p><br /><p>The first Longitude Act of 1714 was Parliament's response to the loss of 2000 lives in 1707 when four British navy ships ran aground after miscalculating the longitude. The Act offered prize money of £10000 reduced from £20000 for a reliable and accurate method of determining longitude at sea. Research and related experimentation were also encouraged and award money was made available for lesser discoveries and specific improvements. The competitions attracted the skill and imagination of the greatest scientific minds and mariners of the time.</p><p>The most prominent and successful competitor was John Harrison 1693-1776 who received disbursements of £22000 over a period of 35 years for his brilliant discoveries and invention of the marine chronometer. This was however not without a struggle for recognition. The marine chronometer was quicker but the preferred avenue of institutionalisation was the Lunar Distance Method. The Lunar Distance method was a method to determine longitude using certain astrological measurements and specific corrections marked in yearly almanacks. The Act of 1765 put caveats and conditions on the original act of 1714 and included stipulations that applied specifically to Harrison. It even named him in the opening language and described the current status of his contrariety with the board. Only with the relentless championing from his son and the personal intervention of King George III Harrison was awarded the monetary prize he was due. The Longitude Act 1777 reiterated specific goals of the program as revised by the 1774 Longitude Act and approved an additional £5000 for continued research work and experimentation and for awards to recognize lesser contributory discoveries as approved by the Commissioners of the Board of Longitude.</p><p>The Longitude at Sea program was successful in multiple ways and facilitated important advances in mathematics astronomy horology navigation and Arctic exploration. Over the life of the program a total of £53000 in prize money was awarded to more than sixty participants.</p><br /> Charles Eyre and William Strahan