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N°3, de mai-juin 2004, 59è année, de la revue bimestrielle fondée par Marc Bloch et Lucien Febvre. Au sommaire, articles sur 3 thèmes: "Légitimité dynastique et formes de l'Etat" ("L'Etat dans la Chine des Song"), "Après l'esclavage - Terre, citoyenneté, mémoire" (Cuba, Martinique, Jamaïque, Colombie), "La valeur des femmes" (relecture des sources ethnographiques antiques à propos des Thraces); comptes rendus d'ouvrages sur la guerre. Français
1369474Abidjan: Université d'Abidjan, 1977 in-8, 110 pages. Broché. Sommaire: A. NEGRE: A propos de Mogadiscio au Moyen Age. - S. DAGET: Encore Théodore Canot: quelques années de la vie d'un négrier et quelques questions. - R. ANOUMA: Les sociétés indigènes de prévoyance, la caisse centrale de Crédit Agricole Mutuelle: organisation, fonctionnement et rôle en Côte d'Ivoire jusqu'à la veille de la 2è guerre mondiale. - J.-N: LOUCOU. Aux origines du Parti Démocratique de la Côte d'Ivoire.
1371925Abidjan: Université d'Abidjan, 1986 in-8, 171 pages. Broché, très bon état. Sommaire: KOUAME (N.), La dynamique de l'habitat baoulé. - TOURE (M.), Croissance urbaine et développement économique et social en Afrique au sud du Sahara. - OUATTARA (S.), Une problématique sociologique du phénomène migratoire. - TOURE (I.), Le syndicalisme de participation à l'épreuve. - MEMEL FOTE (H.), Conficius et l'esclavage: une philosophie problématique. - TRAORE (A.), Des conséquences de la sous-représentation statistique des femmes sur le développement national.
1955133601955. Fort-de-France (Martinique) Annales des Antilles n°1 1955 - Agrafé 16 cm x 24 5 cm 87 pages+ publicités locales - Présentation de René Cottrell textes de Maurice Thamar J. Petitjean-Roget Guy Desportes Maurice Nicolas ; relation de la Martinique par un R. P. Jésuite en 1701 titres de noblesse de la famille Tascher de la Pagerie - Bien complet de la brochure de présentation de l'association dos restauré sinon bon état
178643537Bergerac, J. B. Puynesge, 1786. 2 vol. in-4 de XXV-(1)-553-(1) pp. et XVIII-401-(1)-40 pp., demi-basane brune, dos lisse orné (relié vers 1820).
ORD-695Publiées avec l'approbation du Ministre de la Marine et des Colonies et sous les auspices de S. A. R. Mgr le Prince de Joinville. 32e Année. 3°série. Partie non officielle. Tome III. 2°section. Revue Coloniale. Tome 102 de la Collection. Paris. Imprimerie Royale. 1847. In-8 (133 x 198mm) dos lisse basane brune, filets et titres or, 680 pages, 3 planches dépliantes hors texte. Bon exemplaire.
179928145London: Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Strahan Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty 1799 1799. ESTC N60288 Lincoln's Inn Library and Wellcome Institute. Fine. 4to disbound paginated 637-652 untrimmed. An act passed by Parliament in the summer of 1799 delineated in 39 paragraphs that regulated the slave trade beginning in August 1800 - an act no doubt intended to placate the growing voices of opposition to the English slave trade. The act stipulates how many slaves could be stowed in a ship by mathematical formula according to the size of the ship but never more than 400; that slaves must be separated from other cargo; and that the space for the slaves "be full and complete perpendicular height of five feet." Nothing is said about their treatment other than that the ship's surgeon was required keep a log of illnesses and deaths of both slaves and crew. Much of the act is taken up with its enforcement and the penalties and fines for violations; it also regulates the conditions and treatment of the crew. The acts of Parliament were usually published separately and later issued in collections of the Public General Statutes; this one was issued as part of the collection of statues Passed in the Thirty-Ninth Year of the Reign of His Majesty King George the Third: Being the Third Session of the Eighteenth Parliament of Great Britain. This copy is disbound from such a volume. (London: Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Strahan, Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty, 1799) unknown
179928145London: Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Strahan Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty 1799 1799. ESTC N60288 Lincoln's Inn Library and Wellcome Institute. Fine. 4to disbound paginated 637-652 untrimmed. An act passed by Parliament in the summer of 1799 delineated in 39 paragraphs that regulated the slave trade beginning in August 1800 - an act no doubt intended to placate the growing voices of opposition to the English slave trade. The act stipulates how many slaves could be stowed in a ship by mathematical formula according to the size of the ship but never more than 400; that slaves must be separated from other cargo; and that the space for the slaves "be full and complete perpendicular height of five feet." Nothing is said about their treatment other than that the ship's surgeon was required keep a log of illnesses and deaths of both slaves and crew. Much of the act is taken up with its enforcement and the penalties and fines for violations; it also regulates the conditions and treatment of the crew. The acts of Parliament were usually published separately and later issued in collections of the Public General Statutes; this one was issued as part of the collection of statues Passed in the Thirty-Ninth Year of the Reign of His Majesty King George the Third: Being the Third Session of the Eighteenth Parliament of Great Britain. This copy is disbound from such a volume. <br/><br/> (London: Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Strahan, Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty, 1799) unknown books
23092Without date or place. 3pp. 12mo. Bifolium on ruled laid paper. Fair: aged with a 12.5 x 5 cm section cut away from the top of the first leaf before the writing out of the poem. 63 lines divided into six nine-line stanzas. The stanzas are numbered and the poem is complete. The stanzas are numbered and the poem is complete. Written from the slave's point of view with the first stanza reading: 'I'm weary yet I cannot sleep Dark thoughts of morning make me weep For at the rising Sun I'm told I'll be converted into gold There's no escape I must be sold Because my master wants the gold And I'm his Slave yes I'm his Slave Because my master wants the gold And I'm his slave'. Last stanza describing the slave's flight to Canada: 'At last my dreadful journeys o'er I'm safe upon the farther shore St Georges cross floats over me I've found the land of Liberty. My youths renewed no more I'm old That fear is gone of being sold For now I'm Free Yes now I'm Free The fear is gone of being sold For now I'm Free.' No indication has been found that the poem was ever published. Without date or place. unknown
1998192787Puf Paris, Puf, 1998. In-8 broché de 375 pages. Collection Quadrige. Bon état
1986104542PUF, coll. « Pratiques Théoriques » 1986 In-8 broché 21,6 cm sur 15. 375 pages. Très bon état d’occasion.
1827163198London: Printed for the London Society for the Mitigation and Abolition of Slavery in the British Dominions 1827-32. A new age of abolitionist agitation First collected editions being the full run under its original title of Zachary Macaulay's abolitionist magazine the leading organ of British abolitionist thought and campaigning. It was afterwards renamed the Anti-Slavery Reporter and has lasted under changing titles to this day. The journal "systematically collected information on the abuses of slavery" ODNB. "Highlighting the rise of abolitionist petition drives antislavery discussions in church and government venues and debates over unfree labor throughout the empire the paper celebrated a new age of abolitionist agitation" Newman pp. 44-45. The volumes collect the monthly issues from June 1825 to December 1831 with collective title pages and contents tables. 4 vols. octavo 216 x 129 mm. Contemporary half calf rebacked black morocco labels marbled sides edges speckled brown. Wear at extremities inner hinges reinforced a little browned and spotted: still very good copies. Richard S. Newman Abolitionism: A Very Short Introduction 2018. unknown
1873189241873. Saint-Quentin Imprimerie Ch. Poette 1873 - Broché 15 cm x 23 cm 44 pages - Texte de Camille Demoulin - Sans couv. sinon bon état ; extrait du tome XI troisième série de la Société Académique de Saint-Quentin
239927Paris, Imprimerie de Firmin Didot frères, 1839 in-8, 39 pp., en feuilles, cousu.
2019LFA-126747177N° 574 (Mars 2019) : revue de 82 pages, format 215 x 285 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, bon état
S. l. (Paris), S. é., 1987; in-8, 32 pp., couverture et feuilles agrafées. Extrait d'Enquêtes et Documents (Centre de Recherches sur l'Histoire du Monde Atlantique). - Tome XIII — 1987. G. I. R. I.
1962G113697Sao Paulo, Difusao Europeia do livro 1962 312pp., 21cm., text in Portuguese, original softcover, in the series "Corpo e alma do Brasil" volume 7, ex-libris on first title page, text is clean and bright, good condition, G113697
18732024Cuba 1873. About very good. 3 folio leaves. Light wear at edges a couple of small chips at lower left edge of each leaf. Light tanning and foxing. Accomplished in a neat legible script. Scarce manuscript listing of slaves and indentured servants from a Cuban sugar plantation. The present list was made in January 1873 on the Ingenio Tartesio east of Havana near the small village of Las Pozas. On two separate sheets nine Chinese and twenty-eight African or Criollo men are listed as rented to the farm; on a third sheet eighteen slave births for 1873 and 1874 are recorded giving names mothers and dates of birth. The Chinese men are identified simply by first name and owner; the African and other slaves are listed with additional details such as nationality age owner. A section for additional observations notes which slaves have run away and at least one death. A fascinating document of slave hires on an isolated Cuban plantation during the 1870s. unknown books
197284285Couverture rigide. Reliure rouge de l'éditeur. 360 pages. 26 x18 cm. pages brunies.
2006R200133319Autrement. 2006. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 79 pages, couverture contrepliée, nombreuses cartes en couleur dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
26014Paris Félix Juven In-12 carré 316 pp, photographies hors-textes, quelques rousseurs, bonne reliure , Ex-Libris , couvertures conservées
26034Paris Félix Juven In-12 carré 316 pp, photographies hors-textes, le livre a pris l'humidité par le quatrième plat , les derniers ff ont des traces d'humidité et de moisi mais secs et stabilisés, la couvrure du 4 ème plat est absente, le dos est très correct, le reste aussi, les couvertures n'ont pas été conservées
18644Tours, Mame, 1897, 1 pleine percaline, triple encadrement estampé à froid, au chiffre de l'école Saint-Louis de Gonzague, au Trocadéro à Paris, dans une couronne de chêne doré, 1 mors légèrement fendu. in-8 de 192 pages, illustrations ;
187588071875 Paris, Didier et Cie (deuxième édition), 1875 In-12, demi-chagrin vert, dos à nerfs, frontispice-portrait de Cochin - 412 pages. Il est question de" l'engagement de Cochin en faveur de l'abolition de l'esclavage : " il entreprend de démontrer que l'esclavage, loin d'être une source de richesses, est une cause de ruine, que loin d'être nécessaire à la culture, il en multiplie les difficultés, diminue la population et restreint le commerce, tue les noirs, corrompt les blancs, et, pernicieux aux deux races, fait peser sur toutes les deux un joug également funeste.