299 résultats
178458163 Bände. Hamburg u. Kiel, C. E. Bohn, 1780 u. 1784. 8vo. (20,0 x 11,5 cm). 1: 16 Bl., 511 S., (1 S. Verbesserungen). 2: 2 Bl., 599 S., (1 S. Verbesserungen). 3: 1 Bl., X S., 484 S. Halblederbände d. Zt. mit Sprenkelpapierbezug u. goldgeprägtem Rückenschild.
17531764Imprimé à Amsterdam et se trouve à Paris, chez les Frères Estienne, 1753. 2 parties en 1 vol. in-12 de (6)-139 pp. ; 235 pp., veau havane, dos orné à nerfs, pièce de titre en maroquin rouge, tranches rouges (reliure de l'époque).
1788126576Rouen: 1788. Dupont de Nemours refuted First edition written in response to the Eden Treaty of 1786. Bound at the rear is Tableau du maximum des denrées et aliments dans le district de Rouen Rouen: de l'Imprimerie du District et du Journal de Rouen an 2e de la République 1793/4. Octavo 208 x 128 mm. Contemporary quarter roan spine lettered in gilt marbled paper boards and endpapers. Extremities rubbed boards scuffed contents generally bright with occasional soiling some chipping and unevenness to title leaf else a very good copy. Goldsmiths' 13590; McCulloch p. 145. hardcover
1729335S.l.n.d. (1729). In-8, 16 p., couverture muette.
17794973A Amsterdam, Et se trouvent à Paris, Chez la Veuve Duchesne, Libraire rue Saint Jacques, au Temple du Goût. M.DCC.LXXIX. 1779. 1779 1 vol. in-12° (170 x 106 mm) de : [2] ff. (faux titre, titre); 352 pp. (Erreur de pagination sans incidence sur le texte: p. 120 notée 012). Étiquette gravée du libraire Pallandre de Bordeaux collé au dos du premier plat. (Rares rousseurs, ensemble frais). Plein veau marbré glacé d'époque, dos lisse orné, titre de maroquin brun, filet doré sur les coupes, tranches marbrées. (Quelques défauts dusage à la reliure).
179826350LORIENT CAUDAN 1798 1 REÇU document ORIGINAL d'1 page manuscrite à l'encre brune, format : 9,5 x 15,6 cm, sur papier velin crème, ligné, et filigrané,signatures manuscrites : FRANCY (fondé de pouvoir pour CRUCY FRERES CHANTIER DE CAUDAN LOUIS CRUCY- LORIENT) et EVEN, LE 17 VENDÉMIAIRE AN 7 (8 OCTOBRE 1798),
180026301nantes 1800 1 document ORIGINAL, de 2 pages, connaissement pré imprimé en noir au dos, manuscrit au recto à l'encre brune, format : 22,5 x 11,8 cm, sur papier velin crème, ligné et filigrané : "au cor et couronne royale", signature manuscrite à l'encre brune : MAISON JOLIVET, NANTES, LE 23 FLORÉAL AN 8 (13 Mai 1800)
1797WRCAM3973Philadelphia 1797. 7pp. Dbd. Printed self-wrappers. Very good. This report raises the issue of the arming of merchant vessels. The harassment of American commerce by European powers was a chronic problem in the Adams Jefferson and Madison administrations. EVANS 33039. unknown books
179843744Philadelphia 1798. First edition. Removed. A very good copy lightly soiled and edge worn. 4 pp. 8vo. Nathaniel Cutter wanted relief from being re-taxed on goods that left Massachusetts where he had paid tax and then returned to the same port with the same goods because he was harrassed by the British and French and turned away in the Dominican Republic. The committee wisely wrote: "Your Committee however cannot find any good reason for relieving him against consequences of a risque which every exporter ought to calculate for himself." Cutter would continue to take risks suppling the French in Saint-Domingue and a claim was allowed him in 1803 by the American Commission in Paris for unpaid costs by the French See Greg H. Williams: The French Assault on American Shipping 1793-1813: A History p. 154. Evans 34754. ESTCW25464. unknown books
179743741Philadelphia: Printed by William Ross 1797. First edition. Removed. Very good mostly unopened uncut untrimmed copy minor browning at lower edge. 3 226-232 2 pp. 8vo. Evans dated it both 1797 and 1798. two petitions both concerning a waving of taxes on spirits the Orchard Cook and Abiel Wood case claiming the ship was wrecked on an island and the cost of recovering the cargo exceeded the cost of the mechandise and that their insurance had lapsed. In the second case Hooper claimed he was lax in filing papers for re-shipping a cargo overseas. Wisely both were declined as the committee felt the government is not in the business of insuring that a business is successful and well run. Ah to return to those days. Orchard Cook 1763-1819 and Abiel Wood 1772-1834 had a better idea. They both became U.S. Representatives from Massachusetts. OCLC locates eight copies. Evans 33015. Evans 34753. ESTCW15017. [Printed by William Ross] unknown books
179743741Philadelphia: Printed by William Ross 1797. First edition. Removed. Very good mostly unopened uncut untrimmed copy minor browning at lower edge. 3 226-232 2 pp. 8vo. Evans dated it both 1797 and 1798. two petitions both concerning a waving of taxes on spirits the Orchard Cook and Abiel Wood case claiming the ship was wrecked on an island and the cost of recovering the cargo exceeded the cost of the mechandise and that their insurance had lapsed. In the second case Hooper claimed he was lax in filing papers for re-shipping a cargo overseas. Wisely both were declined as the committee felt the government is not in the business of insuring that a business is successful and well run. Ah to return to those days. Orchard Cook 1763-1819 and Abiel Wood 1772-1834 had a better idea. They both became U.S. Representatives from Massachusetts. OCLC locates eight copies. Evans 33015. Evans 34753. ESTCW15017. [Printed by William Ross] unknown
179843744Philadelphia 1798. First edition. Removed. A very good copy lightly soiled and edge worn. 4 pp. 8vo. Nathaniel Cutter wanted relief from being re-taxed on goods that left Massachusetts where he had paid tax and then returned to the same port with the same goods because he was harrassed by the British and French and turned away in the Dominican Republic. The committee wisely wrote: "Your Committee however cannot find any good reason for relieving him against consequences of a risque which every exporter ought to calculate for himself." Cutter would continue to take risks suppling the French in Saint-Domingue and a claim was allowed him in 1803 by the American Commission in Paris for unpaid costs by the French See Greg H. Williams: The French Assault on American Shipping 1793-1813: A History p. 154. Evans 34754. ESTCW25464. unknown
175141756London: n.p. 1751. Modern marbled paper-covered boards. Minor wear to extremities browning to title page edge wear to last leaf still a near fine copy. 1 57 1 pp. Folio. "Very rare and valuable. It contains an Appendix of Premiums paid by the Irish Linen Board" Higgs Bibliography of Economics p.8. An important source document. There is also a 28 page edition. OCLC locates only four complete copies of this separate issue: Yale Amer. Textile Museum Univ. Mass. Univ. Minn. and nine of the 28 page extract. Kress 5155. Higgs 54. Goldsmiths'-Kress 08612.1. n.p. hardcover books
175141756London: n.p. 1751. Modern marbled paper-covered boards. Minor wear to extremities browning to title page edge wear to last leaf still a near fine copy. 1 57 1 pp. Folio. "Very rare and valuable. It contains an Appendix of Premiums paid by the Irish Linen Board" Higgs Bibliography of Economics p.8. An important source document. There is also a 28 page edition. OCLC locates only four complete copies of this separate issue: Yale Amer. Textile Museum Univ. Mass. Univ. Minn. and nine of the 28 page extract. Kress 5155. Higgs 54. Goldsmiths'-Kress 08612.1. n.p. hardcover
179231794Philadelphia: s.i. 1792. Very Good. Philadelphia: 1792-93. Single folded sheet 41.5 x 33.5cm; report in manuscript verso filled nearly to completion recto a quarter filled. Signed by Captain David Ross and two other parties; docket dated 1793 signed by Inspector Jeremiah Simmons. Stock exceedingly brittle with shallow chipping long closed tears along folds with old archival mending age-toning and light soiling as well as contemporary wax seal remnants. Overall a Very Good and legible survival. <br /> <br /> Cargo report executed in manuscript and dated November 9th 1792 listing materials shipped from Port-de-Paix Saint-Domingue modern day Haiti to Philadelphia for the firm Dutilh & Wachsmuth. The date places this report in the early days of the Haitian Revolution following the August 1791 enslaved peoples' revolt. The island was a vital source of commercial interests to Philadelphia and the burgeoning revolution was at the forefront of everyone's mind making this voyage and the survival of associated documents all the more significant. Dun cites one contemporary account "'No business is going on here' one letter told 'as every one is taken up with meetings committees and arming themselves.'" Dun p. 484. <br /> <br /> Goods delivered include wine sugar and coffee and were delivered to Dutilh and a handful of others including Captain Ross himself who received a hogshead of molasses. Ross eventually rose to the rank of Continental Navy Lieutenant during the Quasi-War with France and is remembered for commanding the privateer Belvedere guiding her back to Dover after an engagement with a French brig "leaving Belvedere with 50 round shot in her hull and her sails and rigging further shredded." <br /> <br /> References: James Alexander Dun "What Avenues of Commerce Will You Americans Not Explore! Commercial Philadelphia's Vantage onto the Early Haitian Revolution." The William and Mary Quarterly July 2005 Third Series Vol. 62 No. 3 pp. 473-504<br /> <br /> See also the Destroyer History Foundation website. [s.i.] unknown
173028563Saint-André (des Eaux) 1730 une renonciation de succession, de 12 pages manuscrites à l'encre brune sur papier vergé ligné et filigrané, format : 33 cm de haut par 22 cm de large, 1 cachet fiscal en haut de 1ère page, en noir : "generalité de LA ROCHELLE" trois sols , RENONCIATION DE LA SUCCESSION DE JACQUES RASTEAU L'AINÉ PAR LA FAMILLE RASTEAU AU PROFIT DES DIVERS CRÉANCIERS DEVANT LE LIEUTENANT GÉNÉRAL DE LA SÉNÉCHAUSSÉE DE LA ROCHELLE, FAIT A LA ROCHELLE LE 17 MAI 1769, COPIE DE LA RENONCIATION EXPÉDIÉE EN JUILLET 1769,
179517633Paris, Maradan an-IIIe - 1795 ; in-8, broché ; (4), 292 pp. , carte dépliante «Des Etats mitoyens de l'Amérique unie dressée d'après les Autorités les plus nouvelles et les mieux choisies par Thomas Cooper (gravé par P.F. Tardieu)».
1741AQ25221London: Sold by J. Roberts 1741. 40pp. Uncut. Stitched as issued. A trifle dusty. Scattered spotting. The sole edition of an anonymous pamphlet written in reply both to Samuel Webber's An account of a scheme for preventing the exportation of our wool London 1740 and William Webster's 1689-1758 The consequences of trade. London 1740 which called for reforms to woollen manufactory. ESTC T46871. First edition. 8vo. Sold by J. Roberts unknown
17542840A Leyde, , 1754. In-12 de VI-(8)-408 pp., veau porphyre, dos orné à nerfs, double filet doré d'encadrement sur les plats, pièce de titre en maroquin vert (reliure de l'époque).
1796PHO-543Paris, Denné le jeune, Bocquillon, Poisson, an IV [1795]. 2 volumes in-8(220x135mm), demi basane époque , dos lisse orné pièce de titre rouge (Reliure de l'époque)coifes et coins usés , mors fendu. Chadenat, n°6357. - Cordier, Sinica, 2387.
1793233811793 1793, cahier registre manuscrit in folio,à colonnes de 31 pages et 5 p.blancs,beau titre,belle ecriture ,de janvier 1793 à juillet 1793,fournisseurs français et étrangers ( Hambourg,Copenhague,Stockolm etc.)
1778WRCAM37240Madrid: Pedro Marin 1778. 219262pp. plus engraved leaf with royal coat of arms. Quarto. Contemporary mottled calf gilt spine gilt extra. Edges of covers slightly worn corners heavily worn. Modern bookplate on front pastedown old book dealers' descriptions on front pastedown. Contemporary ownership inscription "Castillo" on titlepage. Occasional minor soiling and dampstaining in upper margins of a few leaves remainder of text fresh and clean with wide margins printed on heavy paper. Very good plus. Detailed rules and regulations governing Spain's late 18th-century commercial policy in Latin America with a preliminary section of nineteen pages providing a summary of the articles and tariffs documented in the main portion of the text. With this REGLAMENTO. the Crown terminated Cadiz and Seville's monopoly of trade with Spanish America allowing other cities of the realm to participate. In addition to much information on commerce and numerous tariffs on a large variety of Spanish and American goods several sections discuss shipping ports and other maritime activities directly related to commercial activity. The work also includes the text of concessions granted to Louisiana. PALAU 255843. SABIN 68890. MEDINA BHA 4845. Pedro Marin unknown books
17789984Madrid: Pedro Marín 1778. First Edition Primera edición. Hardcover Tapa dura. 284x197mm. 11¼x7¾". Madrid Pedro Marín 1778. En folio 284 x 197mm. Frontispicio con el escudo real de España grabado al cobre 2 19 262 pp. Encuadernación en piel de época sin el tejuelo de la lomera. Primera edición del Decreto de Carlo III por el que se establece el comercio libre con América y Filipinas y se finaliza con el monopolio del comercio a las Indias que venían ejerciendo Cádiz y Sevilla permitiendo a otras ciudades que lo soliciten comerciar con el nuevo continente. Este Reglamento articulado en 55 puntos fue promulgado por Carlos III como parte de las reformas borbónicas con el fin de incrementar el intercambio comerical entre España y América; se habilitaron 13 puertos españoles y 24 puertos americanos: San Juan de Puerto Rico Santo Domingo Monte-Christi Santiago de Cuba Batabanó La Habana Isla de Margarita Trinidad Campeche Golfo de Santo Tomás de Castilla Omoa Cartagena de Indias Santa Marta Río de la Hacha Portobelo Chagres Tierra Firme Montevideo Buenos Aires Valparaíso La Concepción Arica Callao y Guayaquil. Se excluyó a Venezuela hasta 1788 para proteger los intereses de la Real Compañía Guipuzcoana de Caracas que se disolvió en 1785 y a México por el temor de que la prosperidad de este territorio provocara la despreocupación hacia otras zonas menos activas lo que iba contra la idea rectora del proyecto. Cuatro años más tarde en 1789 se amplió el comercio libre a México y en 1797 a otros países de Europa. Ejemplar en gran papel de amplios márgenes. Pedro Marín hardcover
177810011Madrid: Pedro Marín 1778. First Edition Primera edición. Hardcover Tapa dura. 265x195mm. 10½x7¾". Madrid Pedro Marín 1778. En folio 265 x 195mm. Frontispicio con el escudo real de España grabado al cobre 2 19 262 pp. Encuadernación en piel de época sin el tejuelo de la lomera. Primera edición del Decreto de Carlos III por el que se establece el comercio libre con América y Filipinas y se finaliza con el monopolio del comercio a las Indias que venían ejerciendo Cádiz y Sevilla permitiendo a otras ciudades que lo soliciten comerciar con el nuevo continente. Este Reglamento articulado en 55 puntos fue promulgado por Carlos III como parte de las reformas borbónicas con el fin de incrementar el intercambio comerical entre España y América; se habilitaron 13 puertos españoles y 24 puertos americanos: San Juan de Puerto Rico Santo Domingo Monte-Christi Santiago de Cuba Batabanó La Habana Isla de Margarita Trinidad Campeche Golfo de Santo Tomás de Castilla Omoa Cartagena de Indias Santa Marta Río de la Hacha Portobelo Chagres Tierra Firme Montevideo Buenos Aires Valparaíso La Concepción Arica Callao y Guayaquil. Se excluyó a Venezuela hasta 1788 para proteger los intereses de la Real Compañía Guipuzcoana de Caracas que se disolvió en 1785 y a México por el temor de que la prosperidad de este territorio provocara la despreocupación hacia otras zonas menos activas lo que iba contra la idea rectora del proyecto. Cuatro años más tarde en 1789 se amplió el comercio libre a México y en 1797 a otros países de Europa. Ejemplar en gran papel de amplios márgenes. Pedro Marín hardcover
17631730471763. Grain policy in the ancien régime First edition of this exceptionally scarce economic tract on the grain trade. We trace only two institutional copies worldwide: at the University of Chicago and the BnF. The recent spine label attributes this work to Louis Paul Abeille 1719-1807 an early convert to physiocracy and a friend of Quesnay and Mirabeau. Abeille served as secretary of commerce under Louis XV & XVI from 1769-83. A series of subsistence crises brought concerns over public access to grain to the forefront of French economic debate in the mid-18th century. In the absence of public granaries government policy was to regulate more strictly the distribution of grain by private commercial interests but periodic subsistence crises revealed the inadequacy of this policy. Over the next decade the physiocrats continued to promote deregulation of the grain trade which contributed to spiralling prices and the Flour War of 1775. The attribution to Abeille is presumably based on his publication in 1760 of the Corps d'observations de la Société d'agriculture de commerce et des arts établie par les États de Bretagne années 1757 & 1758 which brought him to the attention of Quesnay and Mirabeau in Paris. Abeille was the secretary of the Agricultural Society of Brittany a learned society for agricultural improvement. Duodecimo 159 x 92 mm. Recent marbled paper boards gilt label to spine edges sprinkled red. Minor foxing and browning: a very good copy. Not in Black Goldsmiths' or Kress. hardcover