1 560 résultats
1993117124Couverture souple. Broché. 220 pages.
197538677GP Paris, GP 1975. In-8 broché de 217 pages, carte. Bon état
1960284171960 Paris, Club Français du Livre, 1960, in 8° relié pleine toile décorée de l'éditeur, jaquette rhodoïd, 295 pages ; illustrations ; bien complet de la carte dépliante volante.
P., Présence Africaine, 1981. In-8 broché, 345 pp. Quelques roussuers sur les tranches sinonTB état.
1981193293Présence Africaine Présence africaine, 1981. In-8 broché de 385 pages. Dans cet ouvrage, Aimé Césaire quitte le terrain de la poésie pour celui de la rigueur historique. Il y retrace le destin de Toussaint Louverture et analyse la révolution haïtienne (Saint-Domingue) non pas comme un événement périphérique, mais comme un affrontement central mettant à l'épreuve les principes universels de la Révolution française face au système colonial et esclavagiste. Envoi de l'auteur. Traces de scotch ancien au vers ode la couverture sinon bon état
30326P., Tallandier, 1933, in 12 broché, 254 pages.
1855GITe176Paris Au Bureau du Dictionnaire des Arts et Manufactures 1855. In-12 broché LVIII 358pp. Exemplaire frais et complet.
est30b1Dimension extérieur : 19,6 x 11 cm et image 14,6 x 9,8. Gravure en bon état malgré la présence de quelques rousseurs et épidermures. Elle fut réalisée par Charles Eisen (1720-1778), célèbre peintre et graveur français réputé pour avoir réalisé de nombreuses illustration pour les éditeurs de son temps.
RO20256076HACHETTE LIVRE / BNF / GALLICA BIBLIOTHEQUE NUMERIQUE. non daté. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 79 PAGES - 3 planches en noir/blanc ( 1 portrait, 2 cartes). . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
1854176351854. Abolition African Americana SUMNER Charles. Defence of Massachusetts. Speeches of Hon. Charles Sumner on the Boston Memorial for the Repeal of the Fugitive Slave Bill and in Reply To Messrs. Jones of Tennessee Butler of South Carolina And Mason of Virginia in the Senate of the United States June 26 and 28 1854. Washington D.C.: Buell & Blanchard Printers 1854. At the time that this description is being written just three copies are recorded in American institutions. OCLC search results are at best an estimate and can vary over time. The Memorial referred to in the title was a request by 2900 undersigners chiefly men of Boston Mass. to repeal the Fugitive Slave Bill of 1850. What follows is a transcription of Massachusetts Senator and famous abolitionist Charles Sumner's speeches in the ensuing debate: "Mr Jones. asks 'Can anyone suppose that if the Fugitive Slave Act be repealed this Union can exist' To which I reply at once that if the Union in any way be dependent on an Act-- I cannot call it a law-- so revolting in every regard as to that which he refers then it ought not to exist." Sumner goes on to argue amongst other things that the Fugitive Slave Act is parallel to the hated Stamp Act that sparked the Revolutionary War as well as to make spirited rebukes against the pro-slavery Senators Butler Mason and Jones: "The veteran Senator from Virginia Mr. Mason complained that I had characterized one of his "constituents" a person who went all the way from Virginia to Boston in pursuit of a slave as a Slave-Hunter. Sire I choose to call things by their right names. White I call white and black I call black. And where a person degrades himself to the work of chasing a fellow man who under the guidance of the north star has saught a freeman's home far away from the cofle and the chain that person whomsoever he may be I call a Slave-Hunter." Eight sheets folded to make one sixteen-page signature which is stitched along the left edge. Foxing throguhout pages chipped along margins. Dampstaining along two page edges. Delicate but in good condition. <br /> <br /> Charles Sumner January 6 1811 - March 11 1874 was an American statesman and United States Senator from Massachusetts. As an academic lawyer and a powerful orator Sumner was the leader of the anti-slavery forces in the state and a leader of the Radical Republicans in the U.S. Senate during the American Civil War. During Reconstruction he fought to minimize the power of the ex-Confederates and guarantee equal rights to the freedmen. During the war he was a leader of the Radical Republican faction that criticized President Lincoln for being too moderate on the South. Sumner specialized in foreign affairs and worked closely with Lincoln to ensure the British and the French refrained from intervening on the side of the Confederacy during the Civil War. As the chief Radical leader in the Senate during Reconstruction Sumner fought hard to provide equal civil and voting rights for the freedmen on the grounds that "consent of the governed" was a basic principle of American republicanism and to block ex-Confederates from power so they would not reverse the gains made from the Union's victory in the Civil War. unknown
8vo; 343 pages; Original Publisher's Cloth. 8vo. 343 pages. The first Jews settled in the area in the 1600s. Originally the community was Sephardic, later Ashkenazic. The Jewish community provided many soldiers for the Civil War. Photo endpapers compliment this thorough Southern Jewish community history. 8 pages of plates. 22 cm. Includes index. Bibliography on pages 267-325. Subject : Jews -- South Carolina -- Charleston. Wear to corners of cover. Otherwise, very good condition. (k-mx-1-5)
8vo; 343 pages; 1st edition. original Publisher's cloth. 22 cm. 8 pages of plates. Includes index. Bibliography on pages 267-325 . The first Jews settled in the area in the 1600s. Originally the community was Sephardic, later Ashkenazic. The Jewish community provided many soldiers for the Civil War. Photo endpapers compliment this thorough Southern Jewish community history. Subject : Jews -- South Carolina -- Charleston. Institutional stamp on endpage. Otherwise fresh and clean. Great condition. (AMR-41-21)xxxx
8vo; 343 pages; Original Publisher's Cloth. 8vo. 343 pages. The first Jews settled in the area in the 1600s. Originally the community was Sephardic, later Ashkenazic. The Jewish community provided many soldiers for the Civil War. Photo endpapers compliment this thorough Southern Jewish community history. 8 pages of plates. 22 cm. Includes index. Bibliography on pages 267-325. Subject : Jews -- South Carolina -- Charleston. Edges worn and dusty, otherwise very good condition. (AMR-41-44)
8vo; 343 pages; Original Publisher's Cloth with dustjacket. 8vo. 343 pages. The first Jews settled in the area in the 1600s. Originally the community was Sephardic, later Ashkenazic. The Jewish community provided many soldiers for the Civil War. Photo endpapers compliment this thorough Southern Jewish community history. 8 pages of plates. 22 cm. Includes index. Bibliography on pages 267-325. Subject : Jews -- South Carolina -- Charleston. Ex-library. Otherwise, very good condition. (MX-35-20)
1730PHO-2325Paris, Guérin, 1730-1731. 2 volumes in-4 (25,5 × 20 cm). XXVIII, 482 p., 29 ff. ; XIV, 506 p., 30 ff., reliures postérieures en demi-veau, pièces de titre et tomaison, coins et coupes légèrement frottés et émoussés, petits manques aux coiffes. Légèrement bruni, légères galeries de vers et traces d’humidité dans la marge intérieure au début du tome I ; les pages 17-20, 221/222, *19/*20 du tome I ainsi que les plans « Plan de la ville de San-Domingo » (tome I) et « Plan du Cap François » (tome II) sont déreliés ; petit déchirement restauré au pli de la garde de la « Carte de l’Isle de Saint-Domingue » (tome II). Ex-libris Jack Grout.
1979GITh811Paris Fernand Nathan 1979. In-8 broché 4 feuillets non chiffrés dont 2 cartes à pleine page 172pp. Exemplaire en bon état et complet. (4692)
1993191602L'Harmattan Paris, L'Harmattan, 1993. In-8 broché de 303 pages, photos hors-texte. Bon état
2001119075Fort-de-France, Martinique, Société des amis des archives et de la recherche sur le patrimoine culturel des Antilles 2001 In-8 23,5 x 15 cm. Broché, couverture illustrée, titre en noir sur le dos et le premier plat, 143 pp., notes en bas de page, sommaire. Exemplaire en très bon état.
5075Paris, Blériot et Gautier, Libraires-Editeurs, 1883 , reliure pleine toile noire, pièce de titre cuir rouge, titre doré, 12x18 cm, 240 pages.
29515Ed. Fayard, 2007 - fort in-8 broché, couv. illustreé, 497 pages + 16 pages d'illustrations hors texte couleurs et N&B - Etat neuf
2007843602007 Paris, Fayard, 2007, grand in 8° broché, 497 pages ; illustrations hors-texte en couleurs ; couverture illustrée.
200089392000 P., Bayard, 2000, in 8° broché, 432pp. (sans le CD).
185718536Chicago: Printed at the Daily Times Book and Job Office 1857. First Chicago edition. Light damp-stain to the upper third of the sheet small stain to the lower outer corner; a very good copy. Original self-wrappers 10.25 x 6 inches 15 pages untrimmed. Unopened. Per Byrd "This speech was the first public expression of his views on the Dred Scott decision. In it he accepted the decision and insisted that 'the whole principle of Popular Sovereignty and self-government is sustained and firmly established by the authority of this decision.' " Byrd also notes this pamphlet was intended to lay the groundwork for his 1858 re-election. An edition printed in Springfield and an 8-page edition without an imprint also appeared the same year as well as an edition in German. Flake Mormon Bibliography 2985; Ante-Fire Imprints 250; Byrd 2635. Printed at the Daily Times Book and Job Office, unknown books
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. 208 pages. Previous owner's name label inside.
ORD-2301Extrait de la Revue Maritime et Coloniale. 1865. In-8 (148 x 210mm) couverture en carton souple bleu, imprimée (couverture factice), pages 431 à 446 de la revue, à la fin pages 447 à 452: Bulletin bibliographique de la Marine et des Colonies. Bon état.