3 536 résultats
New Turkish Paperback. Cr. 8vo. (20 x 14 cm). In Turkish. 35, [1] p. 1. Dünya Savasinda Kuzey Kafkasyalilar. Genel bir tarihi özet. Translated by Ayten Berzeg. First Edition (In French) 1918. North Caucasians in the World War 1.
1936NOTE0544Prag, im Eigenvlg. o.J. [1936] (Notendruck: Paul, Prag). 27 x 34 cm. Tit., 15(1) S. OBrosch. Aus dem Nachlass des Dirigenten Ernst Latzko, mit einigen Bleistift-Einztragungen von dessen Hand im Satz. Vgl. OEM V, 2472. Der österreichische Komponist, Dirigent und Pianist Viktor Ullmann (1898-1944) besuchte ab 1909 ein Gymnasium in Wien. Seine musikalischen Neigungen und Begabungen verschafften ihm früh Zugang zu Arnold Schönberg und seinem Schülerkreis und 1918 wurde er auch in Schönbergs Kompositions-Seminar aufgenommen. 1919 ging er nach Prag, wo Alexander von Zemlinsky sein Mentor wurde und ihn als Chordirektor und Korrepetitor am Neuen Deutschen Theater verpflichtete. Es folgten weiter Engagements in Aussig und Zürich. Von 1931-33 betrieb er eine anthroposophische Buchhandlung in Stuttgart. Nach der Machtergreifung der Nationalsozialisten floh er nach Prag, wo er sich als selbstständiger Komponist und Pädagoge etablieren konnte. 1942 wurde er in das Konzentrationslager Theresienstadt eingeliefert. Hier war er bis zu seiner Ermordung in Ausschwitz kompositorisch tätig und organisierte musikalische Aufführungen. - Bis zur Deportation erreichte seine Werkliste die Opuszahl 41. Der größere Teil dieser Werke gilt als verschollen. Erhalten blieben 15 Drucke seiner zwischen 1936 und 1942 entstandenen Kompositionen, die Ullmann im Selbstverlag herausgegeben und einem Freund zur Aufbewahrung anvertraut hatte. [2 Warenabbildungen]
1983135375Une exposition réalisée par L'Institut Goethe et le Ministère des Relations Extérieures. Paris 1983. 4to. Mit zahlreichen, teils farbigen Abbildungen. 171 S. Or.-Kart. [4 Warenabbildungen]
125946. Februar 1957, Oslo, Von DIN A4 zweimal gefaltet auf Postkartenformat. An einen Herrn Rittermann einen Vortrag für den Rundfunk betreffend. Am Rand gelocht. Gutes Exemplar. Good copy. Hand signed by Tau.
196636070Ffm., Deutsche Bibliothek, 1966. 324 S. u. 40 Taf., ill. OKart. (=Sonderveröffentl. d. Dt.Bibliothek Nr.1),
1969132101[Ohne Verlag], 1969. 7, 98 S. ; 21 x 15 cm ; broschiert.
198037333Bln., LitPol, 1980. 222 S. m. Abb., OKart. (=LitPol - Lesebücher 3),
19503419BBStuttgart Wien St. Gallen, Verkauf, 1950. 8°. 95 S. OLn., 1Hakel, 1938 - 1945
1995211174Die erste Nachkriegs-Ausstellung verfemter deutscher Kunst (in) Überlingen. Konzeption von Hans-Dieter Mück. Überlingen 1995. Kl.-fol. Mit zahlreichen, teils farbigen Abbildungen. 359 S., 8 Bl. Or.-Pp. [5 Warenabbildungen]
19951143571Berlin : Verein Aktives Museum, 1995. 354 S. Mit zahlr. Abb. Originalbroschur.
New English Paperback. Pbo. Large demy 8vo. (21 x 16 cm). In Turkish and Greek. 67, [6], 71 p., color and b/w ills. 20 dolar 20 kilo. Cumhuriyet tarihinin en büyük sürgün hikayelerinden biri.= 20 dolarya 20 kila. Mia ap tis megaliteres istories eksorias stin istoria tis Turkikis dimokratias. [Exhibition catalogue]. Catalogue of the exhibition covering the 1964 expulsion of Greeks nationals living in Turkey to Greece. SOCIAL HISTORY Greek Non-Muslim minority Exile Turkish nationalism Greeks of Turkey Karaman Istanbul Constantinople. First Edition.
Mit zahlreichen Abbildungen.
198437376Ffm., Deutsche Bibliothek, 1984. 233 S. m. Abb., OKart. (=Sonderveröffentlichung d. Dt. Bibl. 13),
193519387ABAmsterdam, Nederlandsch Syndicalistisch Vakverbond, 1935. 8°, S.1-144, typogr. OBrosch., Umschlagpapier etw. gebräunt, kl. Stmpl.; insges.(sehr) schönes Ex-Bibl.-Expl. 6 Nummern in 5 Heften,
1939SOKO0225Paris, Herausgeber "Weg und Ziel" o. J. [1939]. 23 S., OBrosch. Steiner II,629. Exilarchiv 4391 kennt lediglich die Ausführung als Tarnbroschüre.
1949116346ABLondon, Artrium Press, [1949]. Kl.8° (17,3 x 12,5 cm). 32 dreigeteilte farbige Bilder auf festem Karton. Original-Pappband mit Spiralbindung, Vorder- und Rückdeckel von Walter Trier farbig illustriert. (=Fun in fairyland).
196323322(Edition Michael Hasenclever, Köln - München) / Mourlot, Paris (Druck), (ca 1963). 1 Bll. 77 x 53,8 cm.
1942ZEIT1712London : Vydal tydenk "?echoslovák" 1942. 112 S., OKart., sehr gut erhalten. In tschech. Sprache
Very Good Armenian Original fine red cloth bdg. with decorative gilt on board. Spine is repaired masterfully. Large roy. 8vo. (25 x 18 cm). In Armenian. [24], 429 p., 1 folded Armenian map of Turkey (map size: 24x33 cm), 29 unnumbered full-page b/w plates (one is folded). Armenian Golgotha is a memoir written by Grigoris Balakian about his eyewitness account of the Armenian Events. The memoir was released in two volumes. Volume 1, about his life prior to and during the Armenian Deportation, was released in 1922. Volume 2, about his life as a fugitive after the Deportation, was released in 1959. Originally published in Armenian, the memoir was later published in various languages including an English translation by Peter Balakian, Balakian's great-nephew, with Aris Sevag. Grigoris Balakian [or, Palakean, Palakian, Balakean], was a bishop of the Armenian Apostolic Church, in addition to being a survivor and memoirist of the Armenian Events in the Ottoman Empire. Grigoris Balakian was born in Tokat in the Ottoman Empire and graduated from the Sanasarian College in Erzurum. He had been studying architecture in Germany for two years and got a degree in civil engineering. He became a celibate priest ordained under the monastic name Grigoris Balakian. On 24 April 1915, he was among the group of 250 leading Armenian figures of Constantinople who were arrested and deported. One group was deported to Ayas. Balakian was deported to Çankiri, north-east of Ankara with the rest of the 190 other deportees from the capital. Only 16 of them would survive. He marched with 48 deportees from Çankiri in the direction of Deir Al-Zor in the Syrian desert. On the way, Balakian won the confidence of captain of constabulary Shukri Bey and learned about the Ottoman government's plan to exterminate the whole Armenian population. Balakian was able to flee toward Islahie. He joined a group of workers on the Bagdad-railway where Turkish deserters did forced labor alongside Armenian refugees. While Armenian workers between Marash and Bartche were being slain, Balakian fled to another construction site on the Bagdad railway. He was helped by German engineers and finally succeeded - disguised as Herr Bernstein - in escaping from Constantinople to Paris. At the 1921 trial in Berlin against Soghomon Tehlirian, the murderer of Talât Pasha, Balakian appeared as a witness for the defendant together with Johannes Lepsius. Soghomon Tehlirian was ultimately acquitted. Balakian became prelate of Manchester, London, and finally bishop of Marseille. Two churches were built under his guidance in Marseille and Nice (St. Mary, 1928) as well as a number of chapels and schools. He died in Marseille. Balakian is the granduncle of Anna Balakian, an expert on symbolism and surrealism who chaired New York University's Department of Comparative Literature, and the great-granduncle of Peter Balakian, an Armenian-American writer and winner of the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. Balakian's memoirs in Armenian Golgotha are an important eyewitness account of the Armenian Events. He describes his experiences during the deportation. Balakian was one of the few surviving leaders of the Armenian community who gave an account of the deportation. Komitas (Gomitas) Vartapet belonged to the same group of detainees as Balakian. His information about the traumatization of the famous composer and founder of modern Armenian classical music is of eminent importance. OCLC: 1137218025. First Armenian Edition. Rare.
Very Good Armenian Original half bound leather bdg. Large demy8vo. (22 x 15,5 cm). In Armenian. 675 p. Prior to Soviet rule, the Dashnaksutiun had governed the First Republic of Armenia. The Socialist Soviet Republic of Armenia was founded in 1920. Diaspora Armenians were divided about this: supporters of the nationalist Dashnaksutiun did not support the Soviet state, while supporters of the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) were more positive about the newly founded Soviet state. From 1828 with the Treaty of Turkmenchay to the October Revolution in 1917, Eastern Armenia had been part of the Russian Empire and partly confined to the borders of the Erivan Governorate. After the October Revolution, Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin's government announced that minorities in the empire could pursue a course of self-determination. Following the collapse of the empire, in May 1918 Armenia, and its neighbors Azerbaijan and Georgia, declared their independence from Russian rule and each established their respective republics. After the near-annihilation of the Armenians during the Armenian Genocide and the subsequent Turkish-Armenian War, the historic Armenian area in the Ottoman Empire was overrun with despair and devastation. A number of Armenians joined the advancing 11th Soviet Red Army. Afterward, Turkey and the newly proclaimed Soviet republics in the Caucasus negotiated the Treaty of Kars, in which Turkey resigned from its claims to Batumi to Georgia in exchange for the Kars territory, corresponding to the modern-day Turkish provinces of Kars, Igdir, and Ardahan. The medieval Armenian capital of Ani, as well as the cultural icon of the Armenian people Mount Ararat, were located in the ceded area. Additionally, Joseph Stalin, then acting Commissar for Nationalities, granted the areas of Nakhchivan and Nagorno-Karabakh (both of which were promised to Armenia by the Bolsheviks in 1920) to Azerbaijan. From 12 March 1922 to 5 December 1936, Armenia was a part of the Transcaucasian SFSR (TSFSR) together with the Georgian SSR and the Azerbaijan SSR. The policies of the first Soviet Armenian government, the Revolutionary Committee (Revkom), headed by young, inexperienced, and militant communists such as Sarkis Kasyan and Avis Nurijanyan, were implemented in a highhanded manner and did not take into consideration the poor conditions of the republic and the general weariness of the people after years of conflict and civil strife. Such was the degree and scale of the requisitioning and terror imposed by the local Cheka that in February 1921 the Armenians, led by former leaders of the republic, rose up in revolt and briefly unseated the communists in Yerevan. The Red Army, which was campaigning in Georgia at the time, returned to suppress the revolt and drove its leaders out of Armenia. Convinced that these heavy-handed tactics were the source of the alienation of the native population to Soviet rule, in 1921 Moscow appointed an experienced administrator, Alexander Miasnikian, to carry out a more moderate policy and one better attuned to Armenian sensibilities. With the introduction of the New Economic Policy (NEP), Armenians began to enjoy a period of relative stability. Life under the Soviet rule proved to be a soothing balm in contrast to the turbulent final years of the Ottoman Empire. The Armenians received medicine, food, as well as other provisions from the central government and extensive literacy reforms were carried [.] Only one copy is located in OCLC: 782028953 (National Library of Israel - Jewish National Library).
197677496Wiesbaden: Edition Klaus Blahak 1976. 211 Ss. 8°. Grüner Kst. mit goldgeprägt. Rücken- u. Deckeltitel u. Umschl.
1940c1403160415xbvkParis, Felix Béroud Imprimeur; (1940). 29 (1) pages. - Couverture originale; 8vo.(ca. 21 x 14 cm).
19791226Press & The Whittington Press London und Andoversford, Acorn, 1979. (88) nn S, illustrierter OPappband im farbigen Schuber (mit Schabspuren), Fadenheftung, Handsatz, durchgehend farbige Original-Linolschnitte von Weissenborn. "350 copies hand-set in Bell-type and printed from the original perspex blocks on Basingwerk Parchment at The Whittington Press and bound by Weatherbys. This is copy no: 241". Im Impressum von Weissenborn handschriftlich signiert. HW (1898 Leipzig - 1982 London), er war von 1918-1925 an der Akademie für Graphische Künste und Buchgewerbe Leipzig, von 1926-1938 lehrte er an der Leipziger Akademie, 1939 Emigration nach England. 1946 zusammen mit seiner Frau Lesley Macdonald Gründung der Acorn-Press. Gutes Exemplar. Good copy.
1931144446Verlag Degener & Co. Inh. Oswald Spohr. Leipzig 1931. IX, (1), 478 Seiten (pages) and 89 Seiten (pages) "Namensregister angefertigt nach der Ausgabe von 1880 von Ernst Wecken. Breitrandiges, unaufgeschnittenes Exemnplar. Originalbroschur in guter Erhaltung. (Erste Lage lose). 19x11,5 cm