710 résultats
19904Villegly, CNEC, Centre René Nelli, 1993, - 17x24 - broché, 135 pages ; illustrations. n° 20
2005LFA-126734312Revue culturelle sur la vie au Moyen-Age : 82 pages, format 230 x 295 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, bon état
1951_201516670S. l., L'Union latine d'Éditions, 1951 ; in-folio (246 x 328 mm), 266 pp., reliure d'éditeur plein cuir, coloris ocre rouge, dos à 4 nerfs, tête dorée, sous emboîtage en papier marbré (légèrement fendu, coin arraché avec petit manque). Exemplaire numéroté 163/1050, sur papier vélin de Renage. Édité pour l'Union latine d'Éditions par le Club bibliophile de France, sous la direction de Maurice Robert. Adapté au français moderne par Pierre d'Espezel. Tirage en fac-similé des 22 aquarelles d'Yves Brayer. Très bon état.
S. l., L'Union latine d'Éditions, 1951; in-folio (246 x 328 mm), 266 pp., reliure d'éditeur plein cuir, coloris ocre rouge, dos à 4 nerfs, tête dorée, sous emboîtage en papier marbré (légèrement fendu, coin arraché avec petit manque). Exemplaire numéroté 163/1050, sur papier vélin de Renage. Édité pour l'Union latine d'Éditions par le Club bibliophile de France, sous la direction de Maurice Robert. Adapté au français moderne par Pierre d'Espezel. Tirage en fac-similé des 22 aquarelles d'Yves Brayer. Très bon état.
2002LFA-126726379Une revue de 74 pages, format 220 x 280 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, Bayard, bon état
1969C3077Paris - Genève, Librairie Droz, 1969 ; in-8, 283 pp., broché. Très bon état.
Paris - Genève, Librairie Droz, 1969; in-8, 283 pp., broché. Très bon état.
1867B3989Tours, Mame, 1867 ; in-8, 392 pp., reliure demi-chagrin brun, dos orné à nerfs, 19ème siècle. Bon état.
Tours, Mame, 1867; in-8, 392 pp., reliure demi-chagrin brun, dos orné à nerfs, 19ème siècle. Bon état.
1970E1708Paris, le Club Français du Livre, 1970 ; in-8, 677 pp., reliure d'éditeur. Très bon état.
Paris, le Club Français du Livre, 1970; in-8, 677 pp., reliure d'éditeur. Très bon état.
2003LFA-126741624N° 37 - Janvier 2003 : Revue culturelle sur la vie au Moyen Age : 100 pages, format 210 x 300 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, bon état
2001790592001 Paris, Actes Sud, Sindbad, 2001, in 8° broché, 405 pages ; couvetrure illustrée.
1980LFA-126732286Un ouvrage de 306 pages, format 155 x 215 mm, illustré, broché couverture couleurs, publié en 1980, Desclée de Brouwer, bon état
189554465London: T. Nelson & Sons Paternoster Row 1895. 8vo. 163 1 pp. Frontisp. woodcut engraving woodcut-engraved extra-illustrated title 36 woodcut engraved plates. Brown pictorial publisher’s cloth cover art of Crusaders in battle in black gilt & black lettering minor rubbing edgewear minor wear to corners still VG copy w/ former ownership markings on endpapers. Early printing of this concise illustrated history of the Crusades encompassing the Council of Clermont Peter the Hermit the First Crusade Frederick Barbarossa Richard the Lionhearted the Crusade of St. Louis and finally the Ninth Crusade joined by King Edward I. T. Nelson & Sons, Paternoster Row, hardcover
1849105904Paris, Furne et Cie, éditeurs 1849 4 volumes. In-8 23 x 14 cm. Reliures de l’époque demi-chagrin violine, dos à nerfs ornés et encadrés de filets dorés, tranches dorées, VII-528-502-510-494 pp., notes en bas de page, frontispices, table des matières à la fin de chaque volume, table analytique et carte repliée à la fin du vol. IV. Ex-libris marquis de Monteynard. Très bons exemplaires, avec infimes rousseurs.
185623011Paris, Imprimerie Impériale 1856 -in-8 broché un volume, broché bleu-ciel in-octavo Editeur (24 x 15,6 cm), dos muet, 1ère de couverture imprimée en noir et orné de la marque gravée en noir de l'imprimerie Impériale, manque de papier (trou) en haut à gauche sur 1 cm2, toutes tranches non-rognées en partie non-coupé, sans illustrations, II + 138 pages, 1856 Paris : Imprimerie Impériale Editeur,
202400601Paris, Editions saint clair, 1966 ; in-8, cartonnage de l'éditeur. Tome 5 seul.
202400600Paris, Editions saint clair, 1966 ; in-8, cartonnage de l'éditeur. Les 6 volumes. En 6 volumes très bel état avec leurs rhodoides.
1872860071872 Lyon, Vingtrinier, 1872, plaquette grand in 8° brochée, 47 pages ; cachets ; couverture effrangée.
1937LFA-126721060Une revue de 36 pages, format 165 x 250 mm, brochée, Académie Florimontane (Annecy) paraissant depuis 1860, rare
1747AAI211Amsterdam, chez J. Rickoff, fils, 1747.
1596305297Geneva: Jacques Chouët 1596. Reprint of 1595 edition. xx iv blanks 320 12 2 blanks pp. Collation: 12 A-O12. 12mo. Contemporary vellum red morocco spine label. Front free endpaper removed title-leaf rough at edges text toned. Reprint of 1595 edition. xx iv blanks 320 12 2 blanks pp. Collation: 12 A-O12. 12mo. Jean de Joinville's Life of St. Louis a history of the reign of Louis IX of France 1214-1270. Includes an important chronicle of the 7th Crusade in which Joinville fought. Brunet notes two Geneva printings 1595 & 1596 which conform to a 1547 Poitiers printing translated from the middle French by Antoine-Pierre de Rieux. Brunet III 557; Tchemerzine III 774; Adams J-308 1595 edition. Provenance: Gilbert Brunet Lord Bishop of Salisbury 1643-1715 bookplate on verso of title; James Smith armorial bookplate signature on verso of title Jacques Chouët unknown
2001LFA-126720933Un ouvrage de 217 pages, format 150 x Z210 mm, illustré, broché couverture couleurs, publié en 2001, Editions du M.J.C.F., bon état
Fine Turkish Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). Reprint in Arabic; large introduction, and annotations in Turkish. [4], [xLvi], 236 p. El-Bark el-Sâmî. [= Kitab al-Barq al-Shami]. Abridged by Al-Bundârî. Published, prepared and introduction by Ramazan Sesen. Muhammad ibn Hamed Isfahan was a Persian historian, scholar, and rhetorician. He left a valuable anthology of Arabic poetry to accompany his many historical works and worked as a man of letters during the Zengid and Ayyubid period. He was born in Isfahan in the year 1125, and studied at the Nizamiyya school in Baghdad. He graduated into the bureaucracy, and held jurisdiction over Basra and Wasit. He then became a deputy of the vizier ibn Hubayra. After the death of ibn Hubayra, he went to Damascus in 1166 CE (562 Islamic Calendar) and entered the service of the qadi of Damascus, Kamal ad-Din. The qadi presented him to the Zengid Nur ad-Din, who appointed him a professor in the school he had established there, which then became known as the Imadiyya school in his honour. Nur ad-Din was later appointed to be his Chancellor. After the death of Nur ad-Din in 1174, Imad ad-Din was removed from all his bureaucratic duties, and was banished from the palace. He went to live in Mosul and later entered the service of Saladin, the Kurdish Sultan of Egypt during that time. When Saladin took control of Damascus, Saladin's vizier, al-Qadi al-Fadil, appointed him chancellor, and he also became al-Fadil's deputy. Saladin had been unsure of his talent because he was only a scribe, Imad ad-Din soon became one of the sultan's favourites. As chancellor he did not have to perform the everyday duties of the chancery scribes, and he had a lot of leisure time in Egypt. From then on he accompanied Saladin on all his campaigns. After a certain raid, he was chosen to kill one of the prisoners, but the prisoner was a child and was instead exchanged for a Muslim prisoner held by the Crusaders. Imad ad-Din was present at the Battle of Marj Uyun, the Battle of Hattin, and the subsequent campaign to expel the Crusaders from the Holy Land. At Acre, he criticized Saladin for giving away the city's treasure instead of spending it on the reconquest. At Beirut, he became ill, but was the only scribe capable of writing the terms of surrender. He had recuperated in time to see the aftermath of the Siege of Jerusalem (1187), where he again criticized Saladin's generosity; he was also disgusted by those in charge of the ransom who took bribes, and the rich Crusader nobles who took their treasures with them rather than ransoming the poor. He was present at Acre again during the Third Crusade when the Christians retook the city of Acre, and was among those who fled after the defeat. After Saladin's death in 1193, he began writing his biographies of the sultan. He wrote the Kitab al-Barq al-Shami, which is lost, but was abridged by al-Bundari. This study contains just 5th volume of manuscript abridged by Al-Bundârî.