1 989 résultats
Berolini, apud Georgium Reimerum, 1877. In-Folio relié demi cartonnage, dos de toile marron. 217 pages. Petites rousseurs sinon bon état
xi + 125pp.+ 76 drawings of inscriptions (out of text) + 27 photographed illustrations out of text, hardcover (editor's grey cloth), in the series "Untersuchungen zur Assyriologie und Vorderasiatischen Archäologie" volume 1, 30cm., library stamp & label, good condition, X79377
Michael Lassleben Kallmunz 1959, In-8 broché, 133 pages. Bon état.
Firenze, 1959, 8vo stralcio con copertina posticcia muta, pp. 151/156 con 2 figure e 3 illustrazioni fotografiche. - !! ATTENZIONE !!: Con il termine estratto (o stralcio) intendiamo riferirci ad un fascicolo contenente un articolo, completo in se, sia che esso sia stato stampato a parte utilizzando la stessa composizione sia che provenga direttamente da una rivista. Le pagine sono indicate come "da/a", ad esempio: 229/231 significa che il testo è composto da tre pagine. Quando la rivista di provenienza non viene indicata é perché ci è sconosciuta. - !! ATTENTION !!: : NOT A BOOK : “extract” or “excerpt” means simply a few pages, original nonetheless, printed in a magazine. Pages are indicated as in "from” “to", for example: 229/231 means the text comprises three pages (229, 230 and 231). If the magazine that contained the pages is not mentioned, it is because it is unknown to us.
français In-4 de XVI-164 pp.; broché de l'éditeur. Centre d'épigraphie arabe de l'Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (IVe section). Bibliothèque d'étude, T. LXXXVIII.
Bonnae A. Marcus et E. Weber 1913, In-4 relié pleine percaline bodeaux éditeur. XXIII pages de texte + 50 planches de reproductions d'inscriptions grecques. Bon état.
Light foxing to top of textblock. Light shelfwear to DJ. ; Some 300,000 inscriptions are known to survive from the Roman world. More than a thousand new ones are discovered each year. Such inscriptions can confirm or amplify our knowledge of great events portrayed in literary sources. They also provide a direct link to the lives and occupations of a vast number of ordinary people who have no place in the pages of the historians and whose existence is otherwise unrecorded. In Understanding Roman Inscriptions, Lawrence Keppie introduces the nonspecialist reader to the subject of inscriptions. He gives an account of context and history of inscriptions and explains their significance as a resource for anyone interested in the world of the Romans. For each inscription cited, Keppie provides the original Latin, an English translation and commentary on the inscription's significance in the everyday life of the Romans. Illustrated with eighty-five photographs, Understanding Roman Inscriptions provides a fascinating introduction to the most important source for the history and organization of the Roman Empire. ; American Moment; 160 pages
Former owner's bookplate to front inner cover. Else Minor shelfwear. DJ is tattered and price-clipped with tears and chipping. DJ crudely repaired at spine with cellotape. ; Although the subject of the book is primarily bibliographical, namely, the methods of book making from the date of Homer until the supersession of papyrus by vellum in the fourth century CE, one of its main objects has been to show the bearings of the material and form of books on literary history and criticism, and to consider what new light has been thrown by recent research on the origin and growth of the habit of reading in ancient Greece and Rome. Contents: 1. The use of books in ancient Greece. 2. The papyrus roll. 3. Books and reading at home. 4. Vellum and the codex. ; 8.5 x 0.75 x 5.75 Inches; 136 pages
Light soiling. ; Unchanged Reprint of 1932. Although the subject of the book is primarily bibliographical, namely, the methods of book making from the date of Homer until the supersession of papyrus by vellum in the fourth century CE, one of its main objects has been to show the bearings of the material and form of books on literary history and criticism, and to consider what new light has been thrown by recent research on the origin and growth of the habit of reading in ancient Greece and Rome. Contents: 1. The use of books in ancient Greece. 2.The papyrus roll. 3. Books and reading at home. 4. Vellum and the codex. ; 8.5 x 0.75 x 5.75 Inches; 136 pages
Slight fraying to spine ends. Minor shelfwear. ; Although the subject of the book is primarily bibliographical, namely, the methods of book making from the date of Homer until the supersession of papyrus by vellum in the fourth century CE, one of its main objects has been to show the bearings of the material and form of books on literary history and criticism, and to consider what new light has been thrown by recent research on the origin and growth of the habit of reading in ancient Greece and Rome. Contents: 1. The use of books in ancient Greece. 2. The papyrus roll. 3. Books and reading at home. 4. Vellum and the codex. ; 8.5 x 0.75 x 5.75 Inches; 136 pages
minor shelfwear. Very tiny ink stain to spine. Light Pencilling to 3-4 pages. Very Faint knocking to rear board. Endpapers tanned. Former owner's name on ffep. ; 160 pages
Bound in brown cloth with gilt lettering to spine. Lower corners a bit bumped. ; Special Publications of the Linguistic Society of America; 159 pages
Bookplate of Robert I. Curtis on front inner cover. Spine slightly browned. ; Reprint of the 1926 ed. 76pp. Language Monographs of the Linguistic Society of America, 2. ; Language Monographs Number 2; 76 pages
Last four pages has some water damage causing rippling effect. Water staining on a few other pages. Slight Bowing to front board. ; 60 pages of plates ; Babylonian Inscriptions in the Collection of James B. Nies
Ex-library copy with usual stamps, call numbers and pocket. Top corner is bumped. Minor shelfwear. ; Introduction and indices by Shin Theke Kang. Contains six hundred and twenty-seven economic texts from the Drehem archive dating to the time of the Third Dynasty of Ur. Presents many additional materials for the study of the chronology, onomasticon, geography, religion, culture, and economic and social structure of the Ur III period. ; Babylonian Inscriptions in the Collection of James B. Nies; 0.77 x 11.78 x 8.78 Inches; 192 pages
Spine a bit browned. Minor bump to head of spine. Facsimile plates in a pocket inside back board. ; 65 pages
Spine and front board a bit browned. Scholar's bookplate to inner cover (G. P. Goold). Facsimile plates in a pocket inside back board. ; 65 pages
Boards have yellowed in places. Facsimile plates in a pocket inside back board. ; 49 pages
Scholar's name to ffep (W. S. Barrett). Boards have yellowed in places with mild soiling. Facsimile plates in a pocket inside back board. ; 49 pages
Spine a bit browned. Scholar's bookplate to inner cover (G. P. Goold). Facsimile plates in a pocket inside back board. Top corners lightly bumped. ; 49 pages
Examines the papal epitaphs covering the period betwen Martin V (d. 1431) and Paul III (d. 1549); Suomalaisen Tiedeakatemian Toimituksia : Sarja-Ser. B ; Nide-Tom. 222; 143 pages
Small chip to base of spine. Else minor shelfwear. ; Examines the papal epitaphs covering the period betwen Martin V (d. 1431) and Paul III (d. 1549); Suomalaisen Tiedeakatemian Toimituksia : Sarja-Ser. B ; Nide-Tom. 222; 143 pages
First published 1911. Text is in French and Greek. 2 plates. ; 266 pages
"In-8° grande (cm. 26,7x17,9). pp. da p. 183 a p. 284 + 1 PLANIMETRIA ripiegata fuori testo e con 93 FOTO di iscrizioni b. n. nel testo. Riporta ben 119 ISCRIZIONI. in fine, il commento e gli INDICI: nomina GRAECA e relativo index rerum et verborum, nomina LATINA e relativo index rerum et verborum, e dei SIMBOLI ricorrenti (anchora, arbor, columba, mulier orans, palma, vas). La catacomba, scoperta nel 1720, è posta sul lato sinistro di via Salaria, sotto l'odierna Villa Ada, nel moderno quartiere Parioli. Databile tra il 269 e il 436 d. C. Bross. provvisoria con applicata una riprod. della cop. della rivista, difettosa e da rifare; Buono l'interno, qualche margine interno male incollato, ma lontano dallo stampato. JOSI, ispettore della Pontificia Commissione di Archeologia Sacra, nel 1920 riscoprì l’ipogeo di via Anapo, lungo la Salaria, penetrò per primo nel grande cimitero di San Panfilo che venne trovato ancora
Small bump to foreedge of front cover. Faint bump to base of spine. ; Mnemosyne , Vol Suppl. 233; 378 pages; What was funny about ancient jokes, and why? Why did the Roman state legislate to curb the behaviour of its obscenely rich and powerful elite, if it never really expected such laws to be obeyed? Why did it oppress the poor, and lavish public child support on them? These are important questions, but ancient Greeks and Romans could never have thought of them. They never questioned the right of the rich to be rich. They could not improve their understanding of Homeric gift-giving with the experience of ritualized friendship among the Trobriand islanders. Such questions and such answers can only come from those who live after the ancient past. This volume honours the well-known Dutch epigraphist and ancient historian H. W. Pleket. Ten substantial essays reflect his wide range, from early Greece to the Roman Empire, and his taste for comparative economic and social history.