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5169077Short description: In Russian. Marat Jean-Paul. Pamphlets. Moscow: Sociekgiz 1937: 16 type of trust Polygraphbook. The image is provided for reference only. It may reflect condition of one of the available copies or only help in identifying the edition. Please feel free to contact us for a detailed description of the copies available. SKU5169077 unknown
9312241Short description: In Russian. Marat Jean-Paul. Pamphlets. Moscow; Leningrad: Academia 1934 Moscow: type. Creed proletarian . Please feel free to contact us for a detailed description of the copies available. SKU9312241 unknown
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19042101180107Boston Issued By The Bibliophile Society For Members Only 1904-01-01. Hardcover. Very Good. 2 volume set. Bound in publisher's cloth. Hardcover in slip case. Wear to slip cases. Cases splitting. Rear panel missing from one case. Shelf wear. Pages unmarked. This is an oversized or heavy book which requires additional postage for international delivery outside the US. [Boston] Issued By The Bibliophile Society For Members Only hardcover
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190481946Boston Issued By The Bibliophile Society For Members Only 1904. 1st Edition in this form. Hardback. Very good copy in the original gilt-blocked boards. Slightest suggestion only of dust-dulling to the spine bands and panel edges with a minor stain-shadow to the fron panel vol. 1. Remains particularly well-preserved; tight bright clean and strong. ; 1 pages; Description: 2 v. Facsims. ports. 24 cm. Biographical sketch by N. H. Dole. Related Names: Bibliophile Society Boston Mass. . ""Four hundred and forty-five copies of this work on Italian handmade paper and six copies on Japanese vellum have been printed for members. Ten additional copies have been issued complimentary to Mr. William K. Bixby. [Boston] Issued By The Bibliophile Society For Members Only hardcover
1810459901810. Paris ca. 1810 460 x 297 mm; beigelegt aus gleicher Serie das Portait seiner Mörderin Marie Anne Charlotte Corday D'Armans. Jean Paul Marat 24. Mai 1743 in Boudry Kanton Neuchâtel - 13. Juli 1793 in Paris war Arzt Verleger und Journalist. Er gilt als einer der radikalsten Führer der Französischen Revolution auf Seiten der Jakobiner. Beigelegt das Portrait seiner Mörderin Marie Anne Charlotte Corday d'Armont 1768-1793 Urenkelin des Dramatikers Pierre Corneille. Jean Paul Marat eigentlich MAKA "der bekannte Demagog und eines der berüchtigsten Häupter der französ. Revolution geboren 24. Mai 1743 zu Boudry bei Neufchâtel als Sohn des aus Cagliari ausgewanderten Arztes Giovanni M. studirte Medicin in Bordeaux Toulouse Paris und London. 1765 begann er in London in der Church-Street eine ärztliche Praxis 1770-72 finden wir ihn als Menschen- und Tierarzt in New-Castle on Tyne. Schon damals richtete sich sein Interesse aufgestachelt durch die Schriften Voltaires und Montesquieus auf politische Reformen; er schrieb sein erstes Werk einen Essay über die menschliche Seele; zwei Jahre später veröffentlichte er anonym in englischer Sprache sein erstes politisches Buch "Chaim of Slavery". 1775 wurde er M. D. an der St Andreas University in Dublin nach Bezahlung von 10 Guineen ohne Examen auf Empfehlung zweier Aerzte. Dann trieb er wieder in London Praxis. Er schrieb damals zwei medizinische Werke; einmal eine Abhandlung gegen Behandlung der Blennorrhoe mit Bougies: "Essay on Gleets" London 1775 wiederabgedruckt durch Bailey London 1891; frz. Rouen 1912 zum andern über eine Augenerkrankung nach Quecksilbergebrauch: "Enquiry into the Nature Cause and Cure of a singular Disease of the Eyes" London 1776 frz. Gazette de Santé 1777. Im Jahre 1777 verliess er London und ging nach Paris praktizierte hier einige Zeit und wurde dann Arzt der Leibgarde des Grafen von Artois nachmals Karl X. Er erlangte eine große Praxis auch unter den Bürgern der Hauptstadt besonders als Facharzt für Brustleiden und Augen. Er beschäftigte sich in den Jahren 1779-1784 viel mit Feuer Licht und Elektrizität und veröffentlichte viele Schriften über diese Themen deren Titel unten angeführt sind. Auch behandelte er als einer der Ersten damals seine Patienten mit Elektrizität. Sein Wunsch auf Grund seiner physikalischen Arbeiten in die Académie des Sciences aufgenommen zu werden wurde abgeschlagen. Später verließ er die Stellung beim Grafen von Artois und trieb ausschließlich Privatpraxis. Immer mehr aber wurde er von den revolutionären Ideen seiner Zeit erfaßt und seit 1788 der Fanatiker als welcher er allgemein bekannt ist. 1789 gründete er den "Ami du Peuple" das Kampfblatt der Revolution. Als Deputierter des Nationalkonvents seit 1792 wurde er der blutdürstige argwöhnische Tyrann. Am 14. Juli 1793 4 Jahre nach dem Sturm auf die Bastille wurde er von Charlotte Corday im Bade erstochen. - Von seinen physikal. Schriften in denen er namentlich auch NEWTON bekämpfte citiren wir: "Decouvertes sur le feu L'électricité et la lumière" Paris 1779 - " Recher ches physiques sur le feu" Ebd. 1780 - "Decouvertes sur la lumière etc." London et Paris 1780; 1782 "Recherches physiques sur l'électricité" Paris 1782 - "Oeuvres de physique" Ebenda 1784 - "Mém. sur l'électricité médicale" Ebenda 1784 preisgekrönt von der Akadémie von Rouen - "Nouveaux decouvertes sur la lumière' Ebenda 1788 ebenfalls von der Académie in Rouen preisgekrönt handelt über Farbenlehre und Anderes. Bemerkenswert ist ferner noch die Schrift: "De l'homme ou des principes et des lots de l'influence de l'âme sur le corps et du corps sur l'âme" Amsterdam 1773 3 voll. welche die Veranlassung zu einem Streit mit VOLTAIRE wurde. Marat's physikalische Schriften sind deutsch von WEIGEL Leipzig 1782-84 übertragen worden." Hab. Hirsch-H. IV pp.65-66 siehe - Dechambre 2. Série IV p. 761; L. Didelot. M. Physician Arch. Anthrop. crim. 6 1891; Cabanès M. inconnu l' homme privé le médicin le savant Paris 1911; Rondelet M. als Elektro-Therapeut. Internat med. Monatshefte 1911 Nr. 1 p.6; A. Riquez Le docteur M. et son systeme physiologique Paris 1908; Charles Vellay La correspondance de Marat Paris 1908; Mamlock College M. Dtsch. med. Wschr. 45 1919 pp.365-366; Hermann Schelenz Münch med. Wschr. 66 1919 pp. 752-753; C. Edward Wallis Marat. Janus 24 1919 pp. 76-81; E. B. Scarlett. Ann. med. History N. S. 2 1930 pp. 71-79; Max Cohn Z. f. Psychother. 8 1920 pp. 835-856. unknown
1020325992.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
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1780S14167Paris :: Cl. Ant. Jombert 1780. 1780. 8vo. 4 202 2 pp. Half-title engraved frontispiece portrait tipped-in title vignette 7 folding engraved plates by Madame Ponce; some waterstaining. Contemporary full mottled calf raised bands spine tooled spine compartments maroon leather label; spine ends worn front joint starting rubbed. Very good. 290 First edition. Marat "practiced in Paris well-known for his activities in the French Revolution; Benjamin Franklin was interested in his electrical experiments but his works especially on fire and heat were discredited." – Cole. / There is apparently one known copy with a portrait plate perhaps spurious or added to the work and yet most every copy does not mention a portrait. Cole notes two copies without a portrait and one at Oklahoma University he saw only in microprint where a portrait was present – Cole says "appears to have a portrait." Of several copies found for sale none had a correct portrait. I inquired about the Oklahoma copy and they verified that it does not in fact have a portrait see above. Net result: the book was not issued to the public with a portrait. Copies mentioning a portrait will thus be referencing a tipped-in plate from another source presumably an unknown source. / "In this book Marat attempts to give a mechanical explanation of the phenomena of heat by the use of his theoretical 'fluide igne.' Some 166 experiments are described in support of his views." – Cole. / NOTE: "Jean-Paul Marat was a leader of the French Revolution along with others like Danton and Robespierre. In 1793 he was assassinated while soaking in a bath—one of the most famous murders in French history. While there is no question about who killed him the reason he was in the bath has confounded historians for centuries. And this mystery may have just been solved." "Marat bled profusely when he was stabbed and his blood soaked the papers he was working on. These were kept by his sister and eventually found their way to the National Library of France. / French forensic scientist Philippe Charlier working with a team of specialists was recently able to extract DNA from these centuries-old papers. As well as finding DNA that confirmed Marat's ancestry French and Italian the team found a number of non-human DNA fragments. / These fragments ruled out many of the popular theories—no syphilis no scabies no leprosy or tuberculosis. But there was strong evidence of an advanced fungal infection of Malassezia restricta. This would explain his pain and sores and would probably have damaged his immune system as well leaving him open to other infections. / While the answer can't be known for sure modern technology seems to have validated the belief of Marat—ever the scientist—that the sewers of Paris were his undoing." – Keith van Sickle The Good Life. REFERENCES: Bolton 1899 284; Cajori History of physics 1929 p. 122; Chevremont p. 14; Cole 909 without portrait; Duveen 388 without portrait; Ferchl 337; Partington III p. 607; Poggendorff II 39; Waller 11396. See: C. Connor Jean Paul Marat: Scientist and Revolutionary. Atlantic Highlands NJ: Humanities Press International 1997. Cl. Ant. Jombert, 1780. hardcover
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