4 021 résultats
168297[Paris], Imprimerie Nationale, (1791) in-8, 3 pp., dérelié.
202001943Paris, Cherche midi , 2018 ; in-8, 317 pp., br.
1986198421986. Paris Comité de grève Paris Sorbonne 8 Décembre 1986. Affiche sérigraphiée 44 5 cm x 62 cm. Affiche éditée à l'occasion de l'assassinat de Malik Oussekine par trois policiers dans la nuit du 5 au 6 décembre 1986. Bon état
19844Sans lieu sans éditeur sans date (circa 1985). Affiche sérigraphiée 38 cm x 50 cm noir & blanc signée BIP-BOP. Bon état
19711000744061971. Affiche Ils veulent tuer... -. Ils veulent tuer ! Le 9 février une brigade spéciale d'intervention a voulu tuer Richard Deshayes (20 ans). Richard Deshayes a un oeil foutu peut-être les deux par une grenade offensive tirée à bout portant le nez et la machoire fracassée ensuite par un matraquage ! Claudine X... a le cou déchiqueté par une grenade. Il y a eu 16 blessés graves. Ces brigades d'intervention sont payées pour assassiner ne les laissons pas faire. Il faut dissoudre les brigades spéciales d'intervention - Paris Imprimerie Abexpress 1971 - 1 Affiche photographique 44 cm x 61 cm sur papier. Bon état. Richard Deshayes « on n'est pas contre les vieux on est contre ce qui les fait vieillir dirigeait le Front de la Jeunesse au sein de VLR (Vive la Révolution) lorsqu'il fut très grièvement blessé dans une manifestation par un tir tendu de grenade en plein visage. Longue tradition de bavures policières
19681000744051968. Paris Atelier Populaire mai 1968 - 1 affiche sérigraphiée 49 cm x 65 cm non entoilée. Non signée. 1 légère déchirure sinon bon état 1 légère déchirure sinon bon état
1971154301971. Paris Imprimerie Le Souterrain Supplément à Révolution n°3 s.d. (1971) - Affiche 39 5 cm x 60 cm - Une pliure au milieu sinon bon état - Richard Deshayes perdit un oeil grace à un tir tendu d'un policier armé d'un lance-grenade Raymond Marcellin étant Ministre de l'Intérieur
180921666Argentan MARRE 1809 une Affiche Originale ancienne en noir sur papier velin bleuté ligné, format : 52,6 x 42,6 cm, imprimée en noir, Mairie d'Argentan, le 23 MARS 1809 de l'Imprimerie de MARRE, à Argentan Editeur,
181524898Paris Mellinet-Malassis 1815 Affiche Originale ancienne en noir sur papier velin crème ligné, format : 62,5 x 46 cm, imprimée en noir et ornée en haut au centre d'une vignette "aux armes royales" gravée sur bois en noir, CHAMBRE DU CONSEIL DE LA POLICE, Le 7 juillet 1768, de l'Imprimerie de la Ville et Police 1770 Editeur,
13887" Spécial Police " n° 313 / Fleuve Noir (1962) - Edition originale - In-12 broché de 224 pages - Très belle couverture en couleurs de Michel Gourdon - Excellent état
1960210231960. African American law enforcement photographic archive 1940s-1969 documenting the presence and professional roles of Black police officers during the decades spanning segregation and the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. These images record individual officers peer relationships and public-facing roles within police institutions providing visual evidence of Black participation in law enforcement at a time of limited access to such positions. The archive captures both formal portraiture and informal interaction situating these individuals within evolving social and institutional conditions.<br /> <br /> Archive comprises 11 vintage silver gelatin photographs ranging in size from approximately 2.75" x 5.5" to 5.5" x 7.25". A sequence of six smaller photographs depicts several African American men in uniform including officers wearing double-breasted dress coats with badges a patrolman in standard duty attire and one image showing a man in a Marine uniform standing beside a police officer. One photograph captures two uniformed officers shaking hands suggesting a moment of professional recognition such as academy completion. Another image shows two officers flanking a third individual in civilian attire possibly a legal official based on positioning and dress. A separate photograph includes two older uniformed officers with a handwritten inscription on the verso reading "This is your Brother A.B. and his buddy Ezell Anderson." The archive also includes a 1969 press photograph identifying Herbert A. Craigwell as a high-ranking officer in the Boston Police Department alongside accompanying text referencing increasing representation of Black officers in major city forces. An additional press image identifies Los Angeles patrolman Ronald Allen described in relation to the gradual inclusion of Black officers within urban policing structures. A signed photo of a policeman wearing small round glasses a hat with the number 7 above "Police" reads "Lovingly Kenny" depicting an African American officer likely from the mid 1940s at a municipal department.<br /> <br /> Created during a period marked by both institutional exclusion and gradual integration these photographs provide a record of African American participation in law enforcement prior to and during major Civil Rights reforms. The inclusion of press images and personal photographs reflects both public recognition and private documentation of professional identity. Minor edge wear and light fading visible across several photographs; overall very good condition. This archive offers a focused visual record of Black law enforcement presence in mid-twentieth-century America. unknown
1910210211910. Archive of five photographs documenting African American military service from the Spanish-American War through World War II preserving visual evidence of Black participation in the United States armed forces across multiple generations of conflict and segregation. The material documents military systems of training deployment labor organization and wartime service through images of Black quartermasters sailors signal corps trainees and infantrymen revealing the varied roles occupied by African American servicemen within the segregated military structure of the United States. The photographs provide primary-source evidence for the study of Black military history racial integration and segregation within armed forces wartime labor divisions and the evolving visibility of African American soldiers from the late nineteenth century through the twentieth century.<br /> Archive consists of five silver gelatin photographs ranging in size from approximately 3.75 x 5.5 inches to 8 x 9 inches dating from the 1910s through the 1980s including original photographs real photo postcards and later documentary reprints. One World War I photograph depicts an integrated line of Black and white soldiers standing with cups and mess pans during food service documenting interracial proximity within military camp operations despite broader segregation policies. Another World War I image shows a large group of African American quartermasters posed before a tented encampment while wearing uniforms with insignia caps and holding swagger sticks emphasizing military discipline and organizational identity within support units. A World War II real photo postcard portrays a Black sailor in dress uniform with white cap and necktie posed formally before a training ground where additional servicemen appear in the background. Another mid-century reprint reproduces an image of African American World War I soldiers attending signal corps radio instruction while seated at desks wearing large headsets and making technical notations documenting specialized communications training available to Black troops during the war. The final image reprinted in 1983 for the PBS American Masters documentary The Different Drummer: Blacks in the Military reproduces an 1898 photograph of Black soldiers stationed in Havana Cuba during the Spanish-American War. The troops stand in formation wearing campaign hats and holding rifles upright with several soldiers gazing directly toward the camera.<br /> Together the photographs trace the changing but still restricted position of African Americans within the United States military from the era of overseas imperial expansion through the world wars of the twentieth century. Black soldiers served in segregated units for much of this period while simultaneously contributing to military logistics communications naval service and combat operations despite systemic discrimination within the armed forces. The inclusion of later documentary reproductions connected to public television programming further reflects growing efforts during the late twentieth century to recover and interpret African American military history for broader audiences. Some editor's markings on versos. Minor edge wear throughout with one photograph lacking lower left corner. Overall very good condition. Compact but historically substantial visual archive documenting African American military service across multiple major conflicts. unknown
19752110502150904136Not Available 1975. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Not Available paperback
19702110502150905491Not Available 1970. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Not Available paperback
1971na1094Ministère de l'Intérieur, Direction générale de la police nationale Broché 1971 In-8 (13.5x21 cm), dos carré collé, 88 pages ; dos usé et scotché, tache, annotation au crayon et déchirure au premier plat, une pliure au quatrième plat, intérieur frais, état correct. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
134 pages. Features: If War Comes Tomorrow?; We Fly the Piper Special; Speed Plus; New York's Winged Police; Roun-The-World Horsepower; State Supervised Flying; Alfalfa Airport; Supercruising the World; It's Fun on Floats; "Thimble Drome" Special; Plymouth's First International Model Meet; 1947 Nationals; Sky Bait; Make Your Exposures Count; The Air-O Mighty MIdget; Radio Control Stinson 150 - Part 2; Model Aero Club Directory; Many pages of great ads; and more. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Some age-toning to pages. Front cover beginning to loosen, otherwise a sound copy of this nice vintage issue. Magazine
19852082702114904446Metropolitan Police Department Akabane Police Station 1985. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 343 pages Size: 23x16 cm Metropolitan Police Department Akabane Police Station paperback
192478452Various places ca. 1924-1926. purchased half leather marbled-sided scrap album with added paper label on spine: "ESCAPE" numbered "90." . Some light edgewear and use to some of the circulars; very attractive. Folio. Many illustrated from photographs or with original photographs; some with fingerprints. Most items date-stamped "Received by Chief of Police." Some are annotated "captured." hardcover
ra417Sans mention d'éditeur Broché In-4, (27x21.5 cm), broché, non paginé, sans date, illustrations en noir et blanc, environ 100 agrafées feuilles imprimées au recto, la majeur partie de l'album est constituée de page reproduisant sur 1000 lignes de nombreuses typographie et leurs déclinaisons sous différentes casses, à la fin de l'ouvrage nous trouvons différentes vignettes : Peignot, Mayeur, Fournier, Moderne, simplicité, Nigra, japonaise, Art Nouveau, flêche d'eau, mono, ondulées, lianes etc... puis une page de monogrammes. Aucun rapport avec le mouvement lettrisme ; manques sur le dos, plats jaunis, assez bon état. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
2006Q-0738543403Arcadia Publishing 2006-11-01. Paperback. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Arcadia Publishing paperback
1531626408.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
500329690Fleuve Noir Sans date.
23152in-8 cartonnage éditeur avec jaquette illustée - 1967 - 315p - Ed. O.R.T.F. / Solar
177428684Lyon 1774 Petit In-8 sans page de titre, XLIV - 32 - 184 pp - 33-75 - 224 les ff 185 à 191 pp ont été reliés à la fin et les pp 35 à 38 de la première partie ont été recopiés à la plume
Paris, Presses de la Cité, 1947. Collection "Peter Cheney". Un volume cartonné de format petit in 8° de 256 pp., jaquette illustrée en couleurs par Rognan. Une moitié du dos absente à la jaquette aisi que le premier rabat, sinon bon état. Peu commun.