17 080 résultats
237858Paris, Delaunay. Douai, Imprimerie de Villette, 1818 in-8, 2 ff.n.ch.-128 pp., dérelié.
183118843Augsburg, Matth. Rieger?sche Buchhandlung, 1831. 8°. 14 S., 1 Bl., Heftstreifen.
107695A Paris, Chez Rondonneau, s.d. (1810) in-4, 3 pp.
42010Paris, Les Laboratoires Deglaude, 1937 Gr. in-8°, 83p. Broché, couverture rempliée.
181416671Leipzig, gedruckt bei Benedict Gotthilf Teubner in Commission bei den Gebr. Hahn in Hannover, 1814. 8°. VIII, 240 S., Beduckte OBrosch.
VLE-69P., Plon, 1914, in-12, IV+337 pages illustrées d'un fac-similé dépliant broché
181425382ABParis, Delaunay, bzw. Eymery 1814. 8°. 39, (1), 16, 16, 94 S., 1 Bl. PpBd der Zt mit mont. hs. Rückenschild. Berieben und etwas bestoßen; teils leicht braunfleckig; wenige Bll. angestaubt; Läsion am letzten Bl. unterlegt; winziger Wurmgang im letzten Teil; Name am Vortitel.
1874100631874 demi-chagrin tête de nègre. in-8, 400pp., P. Lacroix 1874,
181328116Brünn, 1813. Gr.-8°. Jeweils 1 Bl. (3 Nummern mit 2 Bll.), Lose Bll.
5804Genève. Catalogue de vente publique salle Kundig. Juin 1939. Grand in-8° broché. 42 pages. 124 numéros.
1956866341956 Paris, NRF, Gallimard (Bibliothèque de la Pléiade), 1956, 2 volumes in 12 relié pleine cuir vert de l'éditeur, une seule jaquette rhodoïd, CXII-1230 et 1515 pages ; sans étui.
200915503Paris, Chez delacour lenormant nicolle , 1810 ; in-12, 376 pp., reliure veau dorure sur le dos . Tome 1 histoire ancienne.
201202217Paris, Librairie Arthème Fayard, 1925 ; in-8, 154 pp., cartonnage de l'éditeur.
200907181Paris, Hachette collection les vies privées, 1939 ; in-12, 255 pp., broché.
201105767Paris, Payot, 1979 ; in-8, 380-467-484 pp., broché (sous coffret d'éditeur). Les 3 volumes. Très bon état.
200919412Paris, E. dentu éditeur, 1981 ; , 248 pp., broché (feuillet de reliure très abimé des manques texte bon. 8e edition.
200402926Paris, Firmin Didot Frères, 1857 ; in-8, cartonnage de l'éditeur. Etudes de moeurs et de caractères au XVIIe siècle. TRoisième édition enrichie de nouveaux documents inédits-demi-basane rouge.
200402927Paris, Firmin Didot Frères, 1858 ; in-8, 390 pp., cartonnage de l'éditeur. Deuxième édition revue et corrigée. Moeurs et caractères au XVIIe siècle-demi-maroquin rouge.
180298836HBParis:, Dentu, An x (1802). 2 Bände: 2 Bll., viii, 380 Seiten; 2 Bll., 429 (1) Seiten, goldgeprägte OHLdrbde., farbiger Blattschnitt, 19,5 x 12 cm.
181723281Boston: Printed by John Eliot 1817. Wraps. Good overall. An extremely caustic review of Dr. William Warden's 'Letters written on board His Majesty's ship the Northumberland and at St. Helena'.<br /> <br /> William Warden 1777-1849 was a British surgeon in the Royal Navy who was appointed to HMS 'Northumberland' when she was ordered to transport Napoleon to exile on St Helena. <br /> <br /> Warden published the Letters in 1816 with the title 'Letters written on board His Majesty's ship Northumberland and St Helena in which the conduct and conversations of Napoleon Bonaparte and his suite.are faithfully described'. It went through 5 editions but was soon found to be of little value. Warden spoke little French and had to rely on a somewhat untrustworthy interpreter; Napoleon himself later disavowed much of the content. <br /> <br /> The Letters gave a favorable view of Napoleon causing an uproar in England which resulted in Warden being found in breach of discipline and removed from the Admiralty's list of surgeons.<br /> <br /> 8vo 32pp. String binding; the rear blue wrapper present chipped at edges. Contemporary owner name at top of title page "Kimball". Pages slightly chipped at edges tide marks to later pages not affecting legibility of text scattered fox spotting. Shaw & Shoemaker 40880. OCLC 36147438 locates 7 copies. Printed by John Eliot paperback
1806ABC_49310Paris 1806. Small 4to. Imprimerie impériale Mid-19th-century gold-tooled quarter brown calf with a brown morocco title label lettered in gold on the spine and the initials "P. T." lettered in gold at the foot of the spine marbled paper sides marbled edges marbled endpapers. With a woodcut decorative border on the title page and a woodcut Islamic headpiece at the start of the work. 306 pp. First edition of a rare Arabic work celebrating Napoleon's victories during the Battle of Austerlitz 1805. It describes the battle which is seen as one of Napoleon's tactical masterpieces and the aftermath until the Peace of Pressburg 1805. The work was printed using an early 17th-century Arabic type which is sometimes considered the most beautiful ever created Conidi.After the French campaigns in Egypt and Syria between 1798 and 1801 Napoleon Bonaparte 1769-1821 remained a famous figure in the Arab and Ottoman Worlds. The present work was printed in Arabic in order to present his victories of 1805 to the Middle East. It makes use of the bulletins written during the battle either by Napoleon himself or under his supervision which offer important military information as well as fascinating political and social commentary. The end of the text contains the Arabic translation of the Peace of Pressburg signed on 26 December 1805 by Charles Maurice de Talleyrand for France as well as Johann I Joseph Prince of Liechtenstein and the Hungarian Count Ignác Gyulay for the Austrian Empire. The Arabic type used for the present work was created in the early 17th century with the support of François Savary de Brèves 1560-1628 a French ambassador in Istanbul and an orientalist who had the ambition to establish a polyglot printing press. He was finally able to do so when he was dispatched to Rome for a diplomatic mission between 1608-1614. He called his press the Typographia Savariana and ordered the cutting of new Arabic types based on the calligraphic scripts found in the manuscripts he had brought from the Middle East. These new types were well received and he printed many publications with them until his printing press unfortunately ran out of business in 1618. After the death of Savary de Brèves his types were acquired by Cardinal Richelieu for the Kingdom of France to promote the spread of Catholicism in the Levant. They were then kept in the royal library until 1692 after which they were handed to the Imprimerie Royale and fell into disuse. They were rediscovered and identified by the French Orientalist Joseph de Guignes 1721-1800 in 1787. Napoleon then used these elegant Arabic typefaces as the foundation for his new printing press in Egypt the Imprimerie Nationale which was the first modern printing press in the Arab world. They were used among others things for the first editions of the newspapers Courier and Décade. The types were brought back to Paris when the French were driven out of Egypt in 1801 and given to the new Imprimerie impériale in 1804 that used them for the present work.The edges and corners of the boards are very slightly scuffed. Barely noticeable foxing on some of the leaves the head margin has been cut slightly short with the loss of a small portion of the decorative headpiece. Otherwise in very good condition.l Schnurrer C. F. von Bibliotheca Arabica 1811 p. 497 no. 429; WorldCat 1472886006 85092075 1356910650 57018842 13021778 7 copies; Zenker Th. J. Bibliotheca orientalis vol. 1 no. 948; cf. Conidi E. Arabic type in Europe and the Middle East 1514-1924 pp. 397-412 the present Arabic type. hardcover
1906626509London: Arthur L. Humphreys 1906. 4 187 1 pp. 16.5 x 13 cm. Polished calf in green with five raised bands tooling and titling in gilt on spine and gilt dentelles; top edge gilt. Text in French and English. From half title page: Reprinted from the Collection of Napoleon's Maxims by A.G. de Liancourt and translated by J.A. Manning. Rubbing and some light wear to all edges with some toning to spine. Light dampstains along either side of spine with a few small splash marks to front board. Previous owner's bookplate Theodore Phillips Burgess on front pastedown with other owner's name and date in pencil on free front endpaper. Some light foxing scattered sparsely throughout. Bookseller's ticket on rear pastedown. Binding firm. . Hard Cover. Very Good. Arthur L. Humphreys Hardcover
182523292London: Printed for Henry Colburn 1825. First edition. Hardcover. Very good condition. A work describing the illness and death of Emperor Napoleon by Francois Carlo Antommarchi 1780 - 1838 an Italian physician who served as Napoleon's physician from 1818 to his death in 1821. Antommarchi performed an autopsy the day after Napoleon's death; controversy concerning the cause of death lingered for years.<br /> <br /> Antommarchi was one of a series of doctors who treated Napoleon on St. Helena sent there in 1819 by Napoleon's uncle. Napoleon rejected many of their treatments; he appears to have suffered from a variety of ailments. A 2007 study by American Swiss and Canadian researchers using modern methods and accounts such as Antommarchi's came to the conclusion that the cause of death was an advanced case of gastric cancer.<br /> <br /> Two volumes with Signet Library gilt embossed stamp at front covers.<br /> <br /> 8vo Vol I: viii 416pp. Vol II: 286pp; ads 2pp. Tan calf raised bands at spine. Rebacked with the original labels laid down; new end papers. OCLC: 4273460. Printed for Henry Colburn hardcover
AQ32431London: Milner and Company s.d. c. 1890 x 440pp. With a hand-coloured engraved frontispiece. Original publisher's decorative red cloth. Rubbed and cocked joints starting. Text block attached to binding by lower hinge only. Blind-stamp of John Fowles to FFEP near contemporary inked gift inscription to verso of frontispiece. A biography of Napoleon Bonaparte consisting of various extracts covering his youth military victories voyage to Egypt and the battle of Waterloo. John Fowles 1926-2005 English novelist notable works include The Magus 1965 and The French Lieutenant's Woman 1969. . 16mo. Milner and Company, [s.d., c. 1890] hardcover
222937Paris, Imprimerie de la République, ventôse an XI (mars 1803) in-4, 15 pp., dérelié.