1 561 résultats
RO80227389l'école des loisirs. Non daté. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 95 pages. Exemplaire de bibliothèque recouvert d'un film transparent. Etiquette sur le premier plat et au dos. Tampon sur certaines pages. Range fichette sur la dernière page.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
1373697Paris: Karthala, 2007 in-8, 240 pages, 8 pages d'illustrations hors texte. Broché.
1888151841888 Nantes, G. Guchet éditeur, et Paris, Librairie d'Éducation de la Jeunesse, Bibliothèque morale et instructive, 1888. L'Histoire des opprimés de l'Antiquité à 1789, racontés aux enfants : esclavage, servage, condition ouvrière, Jacquerie. In-8 de 166 pp., avec 3 illustrations pleine page dont une en frontispice. Cartonnage rouge, ornements noirs et dorés sur les plats et au dos. Cartonnage usagé avec des manques en coiffes sur 1 cm., charnières fragiles. Intérieur en bon état.
Dakar, I. F. A. N., 1965; in-8, 46 pp., couverture, feuilles et cahiers agrafés. Extrait du Bulletin de l'I. F. A. N., T. XXVII, série B, n° 3-4, 1965.
Dakar, I. F. A. N., 1964; in-8, 48 pp., couverture, feuilles et cahiers agrafés. Extrait du Bulletin de l'I. F. A. N., T. XXVI, série B, n° 1-2, 1964.
Dakar, I. F. A. N., 1961; in-8, 26 pp., couverture, feuilles et cahiers agrafés. Extrait du Bulletin de l'I. F. A. N., T. XXIII, série B, n° 3-4, 1961.
198512736Club France Loisirs 1985 48 pages IN4. 1985. Album. 48 pages. Les Passagers du vent est une série de bande dessinée historique de François Bourgeon dont l'action se déroule en mer au XVIIIe siècle. Elle suit les aventures d'Isa une femme qui lutte pour sa liberté confrontée aux horreurs de la traite négrière. La série qui compte 9 tomes est considérée comme une œuvre majeure de la BD historique francophone
198512733France Loisirs 1985 48 pages IN4. 1985. Album. 48 pages. Les Passagers du vent est une série de bande dessinée historique de François Bourgeon se déroulant au XVIIIe siècle qui suit les aventures tragiques d'Isa une jeune femme exilée après une usurpation d'identité. Elle parcourt les océans subit guerres et prisons et découvre l'horreur des traites négrières tout en restant attachée à la vie
ORD-3741Paris. Michel Lévy. 1857. In-12 (120 x 184mm) dos lisse toile beige, plats marbrés, 311 pages. Reliure quelconque, des rousseurs, dernière feuille collée sur le dernier plat, sans perte de texte. Exemplaire très moyen mais édition originale, rare.
1963193431963. Paris Librairie Istra 1963 e.o. - Broché 17 cm x 25 5 cm XVI+ 637 pages - Thèse de Doctorat es Lettres de Jean Wagner importante bibliographie index - Très bon état
19526Herme, 2004. Format 20x28 cm, reliure souple a rabats de l'editeur, 206 pages.Tres bon etat.
2016RO20262291ALIA VOX / LA CAPELLA REIAL DE CATALUNYA - HESPERION XXI 3MA - TEMBEMBE ENSAMBLE CONTINUO. 2016. In-8. Relié. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 539 PAGES - quelques illustrations en couleur - Inclus 1DVD + 2 CD - en espagnol, italien, allemand, anglais et francais - Inclus des paroles de chansons, originaux + traduction (chants de griot) - 2 signets conservés - 3 photos disponibles. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
201833672Albin Michel - Arte 2018 in-8°
QWA-16709Hermé, 2004, in-4 br. (19 5 ( 29), 205 p., préfaces de Olayibi B. J. Yai et de Christiane Taubira-Delannon, abondante iconographie, couverture à rabats, cachet de bibliothèque, petit accroc à la couverture, intérieur très propre, bon état.
201820142018 Paris Albin Michel 2018 Un volume in°8 broché 212 pages Avec deux cahiers photographiques en milieu d'ourage LR13
19956468Albin Michel 1995 321 pages 23x15x3cm. 1995. Broché. 321 pages. Cet ouvrage rédigé par des membres du Centre Roger-Ikor analyse la persistance et l'évolution du phénomène sectaire notamment dans les domaines de la santé et du développement personnel. Il définit les caractéristiques des sectes décrit leurs méthodes de recrutement et de manipulation et propose des réponses pour prévenir les dangers et aider à en sortir
198526911P., Editions Caribéennes, 1985, in-8°, 287 pp, annexes, sources et biblio, broché, couv. illustrée, bon état
1990ABE-1725484189045240 PAGES-IN 8-NOMBREUX DOCUMENTS-(24F)
1990R320045934KARTHALA. 1990. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 235 pages augmentées de nombreuses illustrations en noir et blanc in et hors texte - 1er plat illustré en couleurs.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
2013R320141914Ouest-France. 2013. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 127 pages - nombreuses illustrations en couleurs et en noir et blanc dans et hors texte - couverture contrepliée.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
2004190599Paris Gallimard Paris, Éditions Gallimard, 2004. Collection Bibliothèques des Histoires. In-8 broché de 468 pages. Photographies en hors-texte et tableaux numériques dans le texte. Pliure en première de couverture, discrets morceaux de scotch en versos de couverture. Bon état
1975125973Couverture rigide. Broché. 344 pages. Pli à la 4e de couverture.
1418106697<p> Letter Signed 2 pp. folio letter sheet stampless address leaf. Two full pages of text. Folds with a couple of small tears or holes at folds normal aging and browning; otherwise very good.The letter is by Caroline F.R. Morgan to A.J.Walker in Milton North Carolina. Probably written in another hand but apparently her own verbiage with underlinings for emphasis and corrections. A strong legal statement by the widow Morgan of her rights as administrator of the Estate of her "late lamented husband" and his father responding to a Doctor's claim in a property sale in Milton North Carolina. Stating equivocally that "I administered his estate" with "Double powers of attorney if I may so express myself" and refusing to send a copy of her husband's will which "I consider a foolish request" and "would not do…for only the small amount of property in Milton but not for the whole of Milton."Most slave-owning women in the antebellum South were the widows of slave plantation owners who relied on overseers to manage often distant estates. A very few were more actively involved in the business affairs of the estates they had inherited. In Yalobusha County Mississippi two widows owned plantations with hundreds of slaves. One of these was Sarah Childress Polk of Tennessee widow of the 11th President of the United States. But her slave-holdings were exceeded by those of 42 year-old Caroline Fitz Randolph Morford Morgan of Lynchburg Virginia. Born in New Jersey to the grandson of a Quaker founder of Princeton University she had married a Virginia medical student whose father owned much of the city of Lynchburg as well as having real estate and slave holdings throughout the South. When he died in March 1847 she was left with three children and vast property in which she took an active interest not common "for a woman of her time and station." While she had many charitable interests – she was a charter member of a Female Missionary Society – records indicate that she personally bought and sold slaves both for the Morgavin Plantation in Mississippi and for her Virginia properties owning more than 100 African-American men and women including one "Aunt Sally" aged 104. She remained a widow for two years until she re-married to a younger man a Doctor who had come to Lynchburg to treat her family and slaves during an epidemic of yellow fever. That marriage ended contentiously in the 1850s and by the start of the Civil War she resumed her legal status as an independent woman ahead of her time. Apparently impoverished by the War she died in 1883. gavegarden.org</p>
1816100537Pamphlet formate folio disbound first pamphlet 3 leaves printed on recto only second 7pp. third 6 pages and folding chart. Pamphlet extracted from larger volumne chipping along spine and edges not affecting text second papmple completely disbound paper browned and somewhat dry These pamphlets are rare and represent an important source of information on the numbers and values of slaves in early 19th century America. The first title presents the value assigned to slaves in 11 states including New York. The second lists the number and values of slaves in the various counties in the state of Maryland. The final pamphlet presents real estate values and values on dwellings including slaves in the counties of Pennsylvania. The information in these reports was compiled by Alexander James Dallas 1759-1817 who was the Secretary of the Treasury. Dallas born in Kingston Jamaica settled in Pennsylvania and practiced law there. Eventually he would become Secretary of the Treasury in 1814 when the nation was almost bankrupt. He managed to reorganize the department get the country out of debt created a surplus and even helped promote what would become the Second Bank of the United States. ANB. William A. Davis,
182035023Washington D.C.: Printed by Gales & Seaton 1820. First Edition. Wraps. Fair. Disbound wraps. Approx. 9" x 4". 12 pages. Toning to the paper. First 4 pages have a small edge chip not affecting the print. Wraps spine backed with later tissue paper. Pages 3-6 are loose. Scarce. 10 copies located in OCLC. The Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves promoted by President Thomas Jefferson was passed in 1807 and took effect in 1808.<br /> <br /> From the 1820 letter submitted by the Treasury Department Spain and individuals were responsible for the illegal importation of Slaves into the United States. Secretary of Treasury William Crawford writes "From information recently received by this Department there is just reason to believe that Sir Gregor MacGregor has taken military possession of Amelia Island Florida in the name of the Spanish Patriots" Continued on the same page "In addition to the circumstances already communicated the disposition which has been manifested by the vessels of Spain engaged in the African Slave Trade to introduce illicitly into that section of the Union the persons who in the prosecution of their traffic have been subjected to their control seems to require the presence of a force sufficient to enforce the due execution of the laws against the introduction of slaves into the United States." The Treasury Department recommends "To guard against the unlawful introduction of slaves and to repress any attempt that may be made by the foreign belligerent force collected in that neighborhood to excite domestic insurrection among the blacks it appears to me to be absolutely necessary that a land and naval force be stationed at St. Mary's." <br /> <br /> Soon after this letter was published Florida was ceded to the United States by Spain in 1821. Florida was a territory until 1845. Printed by Gales & Seaton unknown