42 résultats
First edition, 8vo, vi, [2], title lightly soiled with slight fraying to bank margins, disbound pamphlet.
pp. 1275, (5) [Publisher's catalogue] + Frontis and Engraved Half Title + Numerous full page engravings. Text drawings. Paper of some engravings very browned but not brittle. Double column. All edges marbled. 4to. Original full leather binding, boards ruled in gold. Spine elaborately decorated in gold. Spine repaired. Hardbound. Very good. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! RELIGION BOX 8
Lomo fatigado, manchitas de óxido.
8vo., First Edition; printed wrappers, wire-stitched as issued, a near fine copy. A SCARCE SURVIVAL.
433p. Illustrated. Interior hinges cracked. Rear endpaper soiled and torn. 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Worn. Hardbound. L19
Book rebound in dark brown boards. Rubbing and edgeworn boards. Spine cover colour has mostly flecked off exposing board underneath. Gilt Spine label with gilt tooling intact. Some foxing and light browning to pages. Scholar's name stamped to ffep (Dr. R. Ten Kate). Endpapers browned. ; Vol. 2.1: (1838) 256 pp; Vol. 3.2 (1839) 279 pp; 2 Volumes Bound in 1 Book. Bibliotheca Patrum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum Selecta, Vol. 2.1 & 3.2
Fuller Title: THE CLERK'S ASSISTANT IN THE PRACTICE OF THE ECCLESIASTICAL COURTS Containing the Method of Proceeding Therein. Extracted from the Best Books of Practice. Interspersed with some Observations in Matters of Law. by the Rev. William Cockburn. To which are added three appendixes, the first containing a short summary of the method of proceeding in causes in the Ecclesiastical Courts by a late most reverend and learned prelate. A collection of modern rules of practice and cases adjudged in the courts of doctors commons, digested under their proper heads in alphabetical order, extracted from The proctor's practice by Philip Floyer. A list of the fees in the Consistory court, carefully revised and corrected from the errors of the former table, published in Robbins's Abridgment of the Ecclesiastical Statutes. The Fourth Edition. pp. [2], xxxviii, 219, [1] [2], 14; 92. The appendices have separate pagination and Register. Age stained. 8vo. 210 mm. Original full leather binding, worn; boards detached. ** Early manuscript ownerships (2) of John Read, Jr., son of George Read, a signer of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. John Read (1769-1854) was a lawyer, financier, and philanthropist in 1787 he graduated from the College of New Jersey (Princeton) and then studied law in his father's office in New Castle, Delaware. In 1789, he moved to Philadelphia and married Martha Meredith. Read was appointed Agent General of the United States under the Jay Treaty in 1794 and served in that capacity until 1809. Read was active in Pennsylvania politics, and a leader of the Federalist Party. He held several elected offices, and was a member of Pennsylvania State Senate. From 1819 to 1841, he was president of the Philadelphia Bank, as well as head of other powerful corporations. Significant American ownership. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! W151
In- 8°; pp. IX, testatina e capolettera incisi su legno Pagine montate su foglio in-4°. Senza legatura. taglio all’ultima carta. clemente XIV ordine benedettini san benedetto francia france monasteri conventi diritto ecclesiastico law ecclesiastical
160 pages. Index. Glossary. Notes. Above-average wear. Binding intact. Moderate quantity of markings. Decent working copy. Book
4to., First Edition, with a frontispiece (original tissue guard present), title in red and black, and 114 pages of plates; original green cloth, upper board blocked in blind, gilt back, lower hinge starting else a very good, clean copy. A standard reference, and uncommon in this condition.
pp. (3), (1) Blank, (5)-615. + Engraved frontis. Pencil note says: 'From the Library of Henry Wirth.' Double column. Very foxed. 8vo. 215 mm. Original full leather binding, very worn. Hardbound. Fair. Henry Wirth (1814-1893) was born in Lebanon County PA. He died in Wabash County, IL. 'Charles Buck (1771-1815) was an English Independent minister and theological writer, best known for this Theological Dictionary. 'Buck's Dictionary was a significant work in antebellum America, running to 50 reprints. It was conservative and evangelical in editorial line, making it a counterbalance to the A View of Religions (1817) of Hannah Adams which was of Unitarian and liberal tendency.' - Wiki. S&S/AI 23959. ** PRICE JUST REDUCED!! PAIMP 20
pp. (3), (1) Blank, (5)-615. Lacks Frontis and front fly leaves. XLib bookplate of Gettysburg Theological Seminary Library. Double column. Very foxed. 8vo. 215 mm. Original full leather binding, very worn. Hardbound. Good. S&S/AI 23959. PAIMP 20
pp. (3), (1) Blank, (5)-615 + Frontis. Double column. Very foxed. Some signatures very browned. Early autograph ownerships of Elizabeth Williamson, August 9, 1828 on fly leaf and title page. 8vo. 215 mm. Original full leather binding, worn. Spine worn with loss at tail. Hardbound. Fair. 'Charles Buck (1771-1815) was an English Independent minister and theological writer, best known for this Theological Dictionary. 'Buck's Dictionary was a significant work in antebellum America, running to 50 reprints. It was conservative and evangelical in editorial line, making it a counterbalance to the A View of Religions (1817) of Hannah Adams which was of Unitarian and liberal tendency.' - Wiki. S&S/AI 23959. PAIMP 22
pp. (3), (1) Blank, (5)-615. Three full page woodcuts, worn with margin loss. Double column. Foxed. Early manuscript ownership of Henry Pleasants on title page. 8vo. 215 mm. Original full leather binding, rubbed. Front board detached. The owner was probably: Henry Clay Pleasants (1833-1880) was a Pottsville, PA coal mining engineer and a brigadier general in the Union Army during the Civil War. He is best known for organizing the building of an underground tunnel filled with explosives under the Confederate lines outside Petersburg, Virginia, resulting in the Battle of the Crater on July 30, 1864, an opportunity for Union troops to break the defense of Petersburg. S&S/AI 37967. PAIMP 24
62 p. Early penciled ownership of Isaac Kulp on title page. Another ownership clipped from top of title page with loss. Dampstained. Foxed. Lacks fly leaves. Bookseller's label of Leary, 5th & Walnut, Phila. on front paste down. 235mm. Original silk spine over paper covered boards. Binding very stained and worn. Inked signature of Isaac Ress and Isaac Kulp on rear board. The Council of Nicaea was a council of Christian bishops convened in Nicaea in Bithynia (present-day I.znik in Turkey) by the Roman Emperor Constantine, held in 325 to combat the heresy of Arius (Arianism). AI 36335. RELIGION BX 11
Madrid, Joseph de Urrutia, 1790, 4 tomos en 2 volúmenes, 24 x 19,5 cm., holandesa piel de época, 44 + 262 págs. = portada + 1 hoja + 332 págs. + 1 hoja = 256 págs. + 2 hojas = 334 págs. + 17 hojas.
8vo., First Edition, with an engraved frontispiece, title in red and black, 21 fine engraved plates, and very numerous engraved illustrations (many full-page) in the text, neat contemporary monogram on title, rear free endpaper lightly foxed; original blind-blocked cloth lettered in gilt, very neatly rebacked with old backstrip gilt laid down, uncut, a notably bright, clean, crisp copy. With 2pp publisher's advertisement bound in at end. First appearance of a standard work in the early resurgence of 'Gothic'. Dedicated to the Oxford Society, Barr's study is eminently practical and very well organised by architectural feature. As usual with Parker's publications, the plates and illustrations (which include a number by Jewitt) are both delightful and detailed. Uncommon in this condition.