1 123 résultats
1982RO40106070Service Prostestant d'Entraide. 1982. In-4. En feuillets. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos abîmé, Intérieur bon état. 18 pages. Feuillets se détachant.. . . . Classification Dewey : 365-Prisons
Service Prostestant d'Entraide. 1982. In-4 Carré. En feuillets. Etat d'usage. Couv. légèrement passée. Dos abîmé. Intérieur bon état. 18 pages. Feuillets se détachant. Le détenu, le visiteur, la communauté...
2005116380Geste éditions 2005 In-8 oblong relié 22,7 cm sur 19,8. 135 pages. Bon état d’occasion.
1908GITj651Avignon François Seguin 1908. In-8 broché 23pp. Exemplaire en bon état et complet, tiré à part des Mémoires de l'Académie de Vaucluse. Rappel d'une affaire judiciaire qui fit grand bruit en Provence et dans le Comtat Venaissin. Paul de Cadecombe était avocat et Commissaire Général des Gabelles, auteur de nombreux ouvrages de Droit mais, malheureusement mal marié. Il assassina son épouse dans la nuit du 2 au 3 mai 1751. (4996)
2009R100054187Agone. 2009. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. XX+224 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 365-Prisons
1903FD6-512London, Heinemann, 1903. original vloth, 8?, viii, 309 pages, Bibliothekstempel / bibliotheekstempel / cachet de biblioth?que / librarystamp, binding a bit rubbed, scratched, worn, and binding a bit stained
pp. 45, 33, 68, 115 + Illustrations. Original blue wraps. The genealogies of the Weiser family are especially useful. Limited edition. PGSBX2
19664915Le Jas Forcalquier, Robert Morel (Ligugé, Imprimerie Aubin), 1966 ; in-12 carré ; cartonnage pleine percaline blanche illustré sur le premier plat d'un dessin sérigraphié de Beaurepaire, gardes bleu-drapeau (reliure de l'éditeur réalisée à Limoges, Ateliers Mellottée sur les maquettes d'Odette Ducarre) ; 83 pp., (5) pp., 5 dessins d'André Beaurepaire à pleine page, différents de celui de la couverture.
1943001675Washington DC: United States Prison Service 1943. Softcover. Revised edition; 9 x 6; pp. 55; green textured wraps; small vignette to front wrap; several closed cuts to edges; rubbing to spine; very light foxing to first and last pages only else clean; illustrated with photographs; overall very good condition. An uncommon manual for training prison emploees it was prepared to meet changes in the nature of the personnel of the Bureau of Prisons its turnover advanced age and poor physical fitness. The course outlined in the booklet was divided into sections on Semi-military drill defense holds and calisthenics and illustrated - in photographs and descriptions "Punch to head" "One-arm strangle" "Overhand knife attack" and so on. Washington, DC: United States Prison Service paperback books
1841Y50096Paris, Charles Gosselin 1841 xxxix + 273pp., reliure cart. (plats marbrés, dos en cuir rouge avec titre et faux-nerfs dorés), 18cm., Nouvelle édition revue et corrigée, qqs.rousseurs dans le texte, bon exemplaire
xxxix + 273pp., reliure cart. (plats marbrés, dos en cuir rouge avec titre et faux-nerfs dorés), 18cm., Nouvelle édition revue et corrigée, qqs.rousseurs dans le texte, bon exemplaire
193097984la nouvelle revue critique, coll. « Le sphinx », n° 6 1930 In-8 broché 18,5 cm sur 12. 235 pages. Bon état d’occasion.
1946GITj246Louvain 1946. In-8 broché 73pp 1 feuillet non chiffré. Ex-libris. Petit manque de papier en tête et en queue du dos. Exemplaire frais et complet. (4827)
8995Paris, Librairie Historique F. Teissèdre, 1998 16 x 24 cm, 142 pp., broché.
178213259En feuilles très bon Paris 1782 1 plaquette in-8°
236624S.l. [Paris], Édité par le Secours populaire français, s.d. (1962) in-12, 32 pp., broché sous couverture illustrée.
241108Christian, 2011 24 x 16 cm., 182 pp, Broché
206273Paris, Impr. Nationale, s.d. in-8, 24 pp., en feuilles
10058London 1818. 'Ordered by The House of Commons to be Printed 5 June 1818.'. Folio 293 pp. With fold-out engraved 'Ground Plan of the New Prison Clerkenwell Commenced Septr. 1816'. Text clear and complete. Disbound. Paginated in a contemporary hand 1 to 29 5. Good on lightly-aged paper. The minutes of evidence cover 152 pages with testimony on Tothill Fields Clerkenwell and Cold Bath Fields Prisons and on 'POLICE:- Parish Officers: - Licencing System'. Scarce: copies on COPAC at the Victoria and Albert Museum the Guildhall Southampton and Oxford. London, 1818. ['Ordered by The House of Commons, to be Printed, 5 June 1818.'] unknown
1935R300260472Flammarion. 1935. in-8. Relié demi-cuir. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. Paris, Flammarion, 1935, in 8, reliure bradel demi-basane, dos légèrement frotté, quelques illustrations, couverture conservée, 4 planches hors-texte tirées en héliogravure, 125 pp. Couverture muette. . . . Classification Dewey : 365-Prisons
186 pages. A dramatic insight into our penal system and the critical need to seek reform. "It's refreshing to encounter a quiet voice of reason amid the rising clamor for a return to capital punishment and harsher treatment of prisoners." - William French, Globe and Mail. A dramatic insight into our penal system and the critical need to seek reform. Rubber stamp atop front cover and title page else unmarked. Average wear. Solid copy. Book
377p. frontis. Hardcover Very good condition spine ends worn
377p.,frontis. Hardcover Very good condition, spine ends & hinges chipped
48p. Original printed wraps, stained along the top edge. Publisher's advertisement on the rear wrap. 8vo. Contains a listing of the names of those unfortunate 600, and makes a strong case to refute the notion that Confederate prisoners were well treated by the Union Army. Very scarce. Howes D-577b. Always pro-Union, Alan Nevins describes this only as "An early example of Southern-style prison propaganda; basically a diatribe against Union officers and Negro guards." - Civil War Books I-190. John J. Dunkle of the 25th Virginia Infantry, this bitter invective. Included in his story is this commentary on the character of the guard unit: "Our guard consisted of one hundred Ohio Militia, commanded by two lieutenants. They are just as mean and ruthless as Yankees generally were, exhibiting all that villainy and cowardice so peculiar to Yankee soldiers, especially militia, who had never been in the front of battle. They offered many indignant insults to our honor and cause. Most of them were Ohio fops." I don't think that it has been previously commented upon that this publisher is usually identified with books that appealed to German-Americans, especially Mennonites. It would be very interesting to research John Dunkle's background. Was he one of the battling Mennonites? Along with this goes two nice articles about the 600 Confederate Officers 'Imprisoned Under Fire' in reach of Confederate guns, on Morris Island, South Carolina by Federal Major General John G. Foster. The Immortal Six Hundred were to serve as human shields in front of the Union Batteries at the siege of Charleston. A remarkable incident of the Civil War, written and told by a German-American Confederate. SCARCE. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! Front case 2 L