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1775PHO-1037Genève, Libraires associés, 1775. 2 volumes in-4 (sur 3) relié plein veau marbré époque , dos à nerfs orné avec pièce de titre rouge et tomaison verte ,tranches rouge , IV- VIII- 719pp- VIII- 662 pp- Portrait de l'auteur dessiné par Cochin , 4 figures gravées hors-texte, 2 vignettes d'en-tête par Marillier et 3 cartes dépliantes (golfe du Mexique, Amérique méridionale, Océan Indien et mer du Sud avec les Philippines et la Nouvelle Hollande).Manque le 3eme tome , coiffes usées ,manque aux dos, qlqs feuillets légèrement brunis , tome 2 mouillure marginale sur les 20 premières pages , traces de vieille humidité en fin d’ouvrage.
A Genêve, Chez Jean Leonard Pellet 1780, imprimeur de la Ville et de l'Académie. 10 volumes In-8 plein veau brun. Dos lisses très ornés à motifs dorés,pièces de titres vertes et de tomaison rouges, tranches marbrées, gardes de papier marbré, triples filets dorés en encadrement sur les plats, filet doré sur les coupes. Bien complet des gravures en frontispice à chaque volume dont le portrait de Raynal dessiné par Cochin, gravé par De Launay. Table des matières en-tête de chaque volume et table alphabétique en fin de chaque. XVI + 532,VIII + 582, VII + 580, VIII + 472, VII + 405, VII + 484, XVI + 558, VIII + 547, VIII + 412, VI + 538 pages. Complet des tableaux dépliants. Coiffe du tome 10 très légérement arasée sans aucune gravité et léger manque de papier en marge de la dernière page (table alphabétique) du tome 8 avec petite perte de texte. Intérieur des volumes en très bel état. Titres des gravures : Portrait de Raynal (Cochin) - Les Anglais demandent pardon à Aurengzeb qu'ils ont offensé (Moreau le Jeune) - Les Espagnols se rendent maîtres de Montezuma dans Mexico même (Moreau le Jeune) - François Pizarre assassiné par une troupe de Conjurés (Moreau le Jeune) - Voilà les tributs que paye le Roi de Portugal (Moreau le Jeune) - Ouragan aux Antilles (Moreau le Jeune) - Un Anglais de la Barbade vend sa maitresse (Moreau le Jeune) - Bienfaisance d'une famille sauvage du Canada envers des Français (Moreau le Jeune) - Penn achète des sauvages le pays qu'il veut occuper (Moreau le Jeune) - Esclaves conduits par des marchands (Moreau le Jeune). Bel exemplaire.
1774PHO-1474La Haye, Gosse et s.e., 1774-1781,11 volumes in 8°et 1 Atlas in-4, texte; XII-585, XII-386, XIII-586, XII-508, XII-407, VI-375 (1), XI-430 pages ,chaque volume comporte une gravure en frontispice d'après Eisen et une grande carte dépliante, et pour le supplément; XVI-604pp.,XV-574pp.,XV-492pp.,VIII-434pp.,avec un titre séparé Tableaux pour l’intelligence … 2ff. Et 23 tableaux dépliants ,reliure d'époque en plein veau ,dos lisse ornés,filets aux plats et roulettes à l’intérieur, tranches rouges , quelques coiffes usées, petits trous de ver,un tableau déchiré et son Atlas in-4 , 23pp. Et 50 cartes , relié pleine basane racinée époque, dos lisse avec pièce de titre et tomaison, petits frottements , coins usés
1774PHO-1489La Haye, Gosse, 1774, 7 volumes in 8°, XII-585, XII-386, XIII-586, XII-508, XII-407, VI-375 (1), XI-430 pages, chaque volume comporte une gravure en frontispice d'après Eisen et une grande carte dépliante, relié plein veau tacheté époque, dos à nerfs ornés avec pièce de titre rouge et tomaison noire, tranches tachetées bleues, exlibris manuscrit aux titres, quelques coins usés, petits accrocs, reliure en bel état, texte seul.
11 voll. cartonato azzurro della epoca. 10 voll. in-8. un vol. in-4 Atlas. Ritratto inciso 9 frontespizi incisi 50 mappe 23 tabelle ripiegate.Economics india arabia gulf africa america diderot rigobert bonne maps atlas arabic indian travels slavery colonialism Diderot
2 vol. in-16 (poche), 260-268 pages, cartes, broches, couverture illustree plastifiee. Tres bel ensemble, très frais. [@]
2021LFA-126743429Revue de 98 pages, format 200 x 265 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, bon état
1991R240027561HOTEL DES VENTES, LYON BROTTEAUX. 1991. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 80 pages. Premier plat illustré en couleurs. Nombreuses illustrations en couleurs et noir et blanc dans et hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
1376039Sao Paulo: LCTE Editora, 2008 in-8 (23 x 17 cm), 230 pages. Bibliographie. Broché, couv. à rabats, très bon état. Texte portugais brésilien. Edition originale.
243961Londres, George Allen & Unwin, New York, Barnes & noble, 1973 in-8, 179 pp., toile azur sous jaquette illustrée, tête bleue (reliure de l'éditeur).
14900Fécamp, "Mémorial Gauchois", Journal Républicain de Fécamp, 1893, 1 br. in-12 de 177 pp., portrait en frontispice ;
1024651509.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
183612488New York September 1836. Used; Like New/Used; Like New. Folio. 4 pp printed in four columns per page. Tears around edges creased and with significant toning to the upper front half and extensive foxing throughout. <br><br><br />This rare monthly an organ of the American Anti-Slavery Society began in July 1835 and ended with the February 1839 issue. Among other interesting features the present issue prints a "Form of a Petition for the Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia. To The Congress of the United States." Not in Lomazow Mott Sabin. OCLC records copies from all the other years but no copies of this issue. <br><br><br />While there was opposition to slavery in the nation's capital the greater forces against slavery came from the outside through newspapers and petitions. Many petitioned Congress to end slavery in the nation's capital and the organizing efforts in the District included the Washington Abolition Society which was organized in 1827. But the opposition to ending slavery and the slave trade in the District was such a contested issue that a gag rule instituted in 1836 prohibited a discussion of slavery on the floor of Congress. Though Abolitionists including John Quincy Adams vehemently opposed the gag rule standard-bearers of slavery in the District fought tirelessly for it. Eventually in 1848 the House of Representative passed a resolution to prohibit the slave trade in the District of Columbia. Although the resolution did not gain enough traction to end the slave trade in the District it played an influential role in the congressional debates over slavery and the slave trade. The Compromise of 1850 admitted California in the Union as a free state; the former Mexican territories were admitted as part slaveholding states and part free soilers states; and the slave trade in the District of Columbia was abolished. The 1850 Compromise provided the necessary momentum for the enactment of the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act of April 16 1862 that abolished slavery in the Nation's Capital. unknown books
18379Used; Like New/Used; Like New. An English tobacco box bearing the kneeling slave iconography of the abolitionist movement dating to the mid-19th Century. Height 4 x width 3.75 x depth 5.5 inches 10 x 9.5 x 14 cm. Oxidation and pitting from age handle is old but may not be original to the box else fine.<br style="">Josiah Wedgewood 1730-1795 a dedicated abolitionist and close friend of Thomas Clarkson designed the "logo" of the kneeling slave for the Society for the Abolition of Slavery in 1787. This was taken up by the American abolitionists and in 1835 Patrick Reason a young black engraver created a version of a kneeling woman that bore the caption "Am I not a Woman and a Sister" This image together with that of the infamous slave ship's hold are without question the most iconic of the anti-slavery movement on both sides of the Atlantic. unknown books
201347S.l., (1790) in-8, 15 pp., dérelié.
1371003Paris; Saint-Denis de la Réunion: Somogy; Association Les Cahiers de notre Histoire, 1998 in-4, 288 pages, nombreuses illustrations. Bibliographie, index. Reliure toile, jaquette, bon état.
188435270Chicago: Jansen McClug & Co 1884. First Edition. Wraps. Very good. Stitched wraps. Two copies. 8 pages. Original covers present and in very good condition. The Thirteenth Amenment passed the Congress in April 1864 officially ending Slavery. Jansen, McClug & Co unknown
185332820729<p>Two sixth-plate daguerreotypes cased together. Left: nurse and child "Bradford & Ellen Sherwood his nurse" right: parents "Jonathan P. Harrison & his wife Caroline Denny Harrison". White family's cheeks are hand-tinted and the baby's dress is hand-colored. Some spots edges tarnished.</p><p><strong>A tremendous pair.</strong> Jonathan P. Harrison born 23 December 1829 and his wife Caroline Denny Harrison born c. 1834 are in one portrait while their son Bradford born c. 1853 and his black nurse Ellen Sherwood are in the other.</p><p>The Harrison family moved from Talbot County on Maryland's Eastern Shore to Texas in the 1850s to pursue ranching and farming opportunities. According to the U.S. Census in 1860 the family lived in Corpus Christi Texas with Jonathan reported as 29 years old Caroline 26 and Bradford 7 indicating a date of 1853 for this photograph.</p><p>The Harrisons and Dennys were prominent Maryland and Texas families. Jonathan served with the 1st Texas Cavalry during the Civil War. Identified daguerreotype portraits of slaves are rare and linked pairs such as this set are very rare. It is conceivable that Ellen Sherwood was a free black but given the status of the Harrison and Denny families it seems probable that she was a slave.</p><p>This splendid pair of photographs vividly demonstrates the complexity of black-white relationships in the antebellum South.</p><p><strong>Provenance: "Jonathan P. Harrison & his wife Caroline Denny Harrison / Their child Bradford & Ellen Sherwood his nurse" identified in a manuscript note beneath the right daguerreotype in the hand of Jonathan's niece Patty Belle Tilghman 1851-1931.</strong> See Hanson <em>Old Kent: The Eastern Shore of Maryland</em> p. 96.</p>
1858660371858. Dividing Prize Money After the Capture of a Slave Ship Slavery. United States. In the Senate of the United States. February 21 1858-Ordered to Be Printed. Mr. Polk Made the Following Adverse Report To Accompany Bill S. C. of C. 108.: The Committee of Claims To Whom was Referred the Opinion of the Court of Claims in the Case of O.H. Berryman and Others Report: The Claimants in this Case are the Officers and Crew of the United States Schooner "On-Ka-Hy-E" drop-head title. Washington DC: S.n. 1858. 13 pp. Octavo 9" x 5-1/2". Disbound light rubbing to extremities some toning and light foxing. $100. 35th Congress 1st Session Senate Rep. Com. No. 33. This speech disputes the distribution of prize money between the Federal government and the crew that captured the slave ship Laurens. unknown
1858660371858. Dividing Prize Money After the Capture of a Slave Ship Slavery. United States. In the Senate of the United States. February 21 1858-Ordered to Be Printed. Mr. Polk Made the Following Adverse Report To Accompany Bill S. C. of C. 108.: The Committee of Claims To Whom was Referred the Opinion of the Court of Claims in the Case of O.H. Berryman and Others Report: The Claimants in this Case are the Officers and Crew of the United States Schooner "On-Ka-Hy-E" drop-head title. Washington DC: S.n. 1858. 13 pp. Octavo 9" x 5-1/2". Disbound light rubbing to extremities some toning and light foxing. $100. 35th Congress 1st Session Senate Rep. Com. No. 33. This speech disputes the distribution of prize money between the Federal government and the crew that captured the slave ship Laurens. unknown books
198753774Harvard University Press, 1987, in-8°, xxxvi-306 pp, 16 illustrations à pleine page (5 photos dont 4 portraits, 8 fac-similés, un plan et 2 cartes), chronologie, notes, index, broché, couv. illustrée, bon état. Texte en anglais
1808WRCAM54959New York: Samuel Wood 1808. Broadside 16 1/2 x 13 inches with main text printed in two center columns flanked on both sides by seven woodcut illustrations with descriptive text. The entire broadside surrounded by an ornamental border. Old folds minor chipping to edges short repaired tears small smudge in right column. Backed on acid-free tissue. Very good. A rare and powerful illustrated broadside describing in text and images the cruelties suffered by Africans in the West Indies slave trade. The main text is largely adapted from a work published in London in 1793 REMARKS ON THE METHODS OF PROCURING SLAVES WITH A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THEIR TREATMENT IN THE WEST- INDIES in support of an abolitionist boycott of West Indian goods with information gleaned from Parliamentary reports. It describes slave auctions and the "scrambles" by which sickly Africans are sold and gives details of the treatment of field and house slaves. The illustrations are horrifying showing slave families being separated at auction and then branded floggings at the hands of black overseers and various restraints to keep the slaves from eating or escaping including head-frames and mouthpieces neck braces weights leg spurs and shackles and yokes. The printer of this broadside Samuel Wood was a noted Quaker- reformist and the illustrations are credited to pioneering New York wood engraver Alexander Anderson. <br> <br> OCLC locates eleven copies and gives a publication date of 1802 though Pomeroy the American Antiquarian Society and Princeton give a date of 1805 to 1808 based on Samuel Wood's address as noted in the imprint. The Gilder Lehrman Institute also holds a copy as does the Rosenbach Museum. Rare and very interesting and a powerful manifestation of the growing abolitionist sentiment in the United States in the early 19th century. POMEROY ALEXANDER ANDERSON 169. HAMILTON EARLY AMERICAN BOOK ILLUSTRATORS AND WOOD ENGRAVERS 252. OCLC 33989651 476101156 945084251. Samuel Wood unknown books
226959Douai, Pierre Bogart, 1635 in-16, titre-frontispice gravé, 264 pp., typographie en petit corps, manquent les pièces liminaires, dont la dédicace ([6] ff. n. ch.), veau brun granité, dos à nerfs cloisonné et fleuronné, tranches rouges (reliure de l'époque). Coins un peu abîmés.
16365(Blois), 1789. 2 parts in 1 volume. 140 pp.; 60 pp. 8vo. Modern half morocco, gilt lettering to spine. Not in Kress; not in Goldsmiths; not in Einaudi; not in INED; Stourm, p. 154; Martin & Walter 19727. One of two different editions from the year of the first publication. The first part is entitled Instructions, the second part Observations sur le rapport fait au Roi dans son conseil par le ministre des finances, le 27 décembre 1788. Pp. 73-75 of the first part contains arguments in favour of the abolition of slavery under certain conditions. Discusses the various reforms deemed necessary for France: criminal justice, the parlements, the meeting of the estates general, the procedure for voting, the ancient constitution, legislation, financial matters, the various trading compagnies, royal power and authority, freedom of the press, etc. etc. all with remarkable short historical references.
1845332998United States 1845. 16pp. 8vo. Self-wrappers dampstaining. 16pp. 8vo. An anti-slavery work in German written in the form of a dialogue between Gottlieb who argues that the slave trade is a sin and Nabob who begins by arguing in defense of slavery but is swayed by Gottlieb's arguments. unknown