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2015100150907LES BELLES LETTRES 2015 592 pages in8. 2015. Broché. 592 pages. Le livre de Kenneth Ch'en retrace l'histoire du bouddhisme en Chine des premiers siècles de notre ère jusqu'aux débuts de la République populaire. Il commence par résumer les traits essentiels du bouddhisme indien et la pensée chinoise sous les Han puis décrit l'implantation et le développement de cette religion en Chine. L'ouvrage est considéré comme une synthèse de référence dans le domaine des religions chinoises
in-4° 233 pages, abondamment illustre in-texte N/B, tabl. geneal., broche, couverture illustree plastifiee. Bel exemplaire. [PL-EN]
190 p., illus. Examination of the Mongol invasion which began in 1241. Hardcover Very good condition good
10991 Relié, cartonnage romantique orné en doré sur bleu par une composition de Rouargue gravée par Liebherre, toutes tranches dorées. Quelques rousseurs. 26 x 17 cm, [4]-475 p. + pl. h.-t. Paris, Belin-Leprieur et Morisot, 1852.
10991 Relié, cartonnage romantique orné en doré sur bleu par une composition de Rouargue gravée par Liebherre, toutes tranches dorées. Quelques rousseurs. 26 x 17 cm, [4]-475 p. + pl. h.-t. Paris, Belin-Leprieur et Morisot, 1852.
9011In 8 broché, couverture illustrée,faux-titre,titre,246 pages,4 pages de catalogue,6 cartes à pleine page ou sur double page.Payot Paris 1942.(une petite tache claire sans gravité,au deuxième plat)
5904, Paris, Payot, 1935., Broche, couverture d' editeur illustre n/b sali, 14x23cm, 230pp.
in-8°, 192 pp., illustrations photos n&b, broche, couverture illustree. Bel exemplaire. [CA28-4]
39706Paris, Librairie Plon, 1937. 14 x 21, 95 pp., broché, état moyen (page de garde déchirée, couverture défraîchie).
1961223148Seoul: Eul-Yoo Pub., 1961. 20 pages of English text + 60 plates, printed 1 side, with photo illustrations plus 25 plans & other line illustrations printed 1 side (several folding) + Korean text, with 54 figures. Originalleinen mit Original-Schutzumschlag. Original cloth with dust jacket 30 cm
1980KOS01700103Japanese Ceramic Society 1980. Soft Cover. Fine. KOS01700103 Japanese Ceramic Society paperback
19932080502106511080Japan Ceramic Society 1993. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Japan Ceramic Society paperback
8663Trans. by Xuanzang 玄奘 in 650 CE. 70 pages six columns per page 30 columns per sheet 17 characters per column. 14 sheets average sheet length: 570 mm. five pages per sheet. Accordion format 305 x 7980 mm. print surface from top border to bottom border: 245–250 mm. Single woodcut borders at top & bottom of text. Orig. sutra binding of semi-stiff paper wrappers. Woodblocks carved by Ge Fang & Ma Qing & others in Sixi present day Huzhou printed between 1110s/40s–1276.<br /> <BR> <BR> This fascicle in its original sutra binding was printed in the 12th or 13th century in northern Zhejiang China as part of an extremely rare edition of the Buddhist canon variously known as the Yuanjue Canon Zifu Canon or Sixi Canon. Examples very rarely appear on the market. This edition of the Buddhist canon was for a long time largely unknown in China until the famous Chinese book collector and scholar Yang Shoujing 1839-1915 brought a set back from Japan in the late 19th century. Now in a Chinese library this is the only near-complete set as far as we know the rest being single sutras.<br /> <BR> <BR> Yuanjue Zifu or Sixi Canon: The three names refer to some or all of the imprints of the Chinese Tripitaka made from a set of blocks that were carved in a place called Sixi present-day Huzhou in what was then Songting township Guian county Hu prefecture part of the Circuit of the eastern and western Zhe of the Southern Song.<br /> <BR> <BR> Sixi one of the names retrospectively used for this edition was the location of Yuanjue Meditation Hall founded in 1119-25 where the printing blocks were housed and perhaps carved. Sometime after 1239 the hall’s name may have changed to Fabao Zifu lit. “Dharma jewel supplying happiness†Meditation Temple whence Zifu Canon.<br /> <BR> <BR> Bibliographic scholarship has dated certain imprints of this canon to either the period of Yuanjue Meditation Hall or that of Fabao Zifu Meditation Temple calling imprints dating from the earlier period Yuanjue Canon or “first Sixi canon†qian Sixi jing and imprints from the later period Zifu Canon or “second Sixi canon†hou Sixi jing. On the basis of a comparison of two catalogues of the canon — one claiming to be of the Yuanjue Canon and one of the Zifu Canon — it was believed that a substantial amount of re-carving had taken place between the Yuanjue and Zifu canons. However the catalogue purportedly of the Zifu Canon has been shown in fact to have been based not on an inventory of a set of the Zifu Canon but on another unrelated catalogue. Thus there is no reason to assume that a substantial amount of re-carving of the blocks took place after the temple changed its name and ipso facto there is no reason to posit the existence of two Sixi canons. Printings ascribed to the Yuanjue and Zifu canons belong to the same edition of the Chinese Tripitaka printed at various times during a period that stretched over a century. Blocks were repaired and replaced during this period but not to the extent that would justify calling them two editions.<br /> <BR> <BR> The Timing of Carving and Printing: The sources are ambiguous as to when carving of the blocks began. Li Fuhua and He Mei state that the carving began in 1126 whereas Wang Chonglong says it began before 1110 and thus not at the Yuanjue Hall which had not yet been founded and agrees with others that it likely had finished in 1132. It has also been proposed however that carving only began in 1132. Finally 1140 has been proposed as another completion date. Therefore we can say with confidence that the initial set of blocks was carved sometime between the 1110s and 1140s.<br /> <BR> <BR> Once the blocks were carved they were used for printing for a long time. Some printings can be dated because they contain colophons. <br /> <BR> <BR> Liu Yuantang has documented three instances of blocks being mended buban: in 1238 1248 and 1250. The blocks were burned by the invading Mongols in 1276 which is thus the terminus ante quem for prints from the Yuanjue Canon.<br /> <BR> <BR> Our Copy and the Yuanjue / Zifu Canon: Benshi jing is marked with the ordinal character shen 甚 in five editions of the Chinese Tripitaka. Of these five only the Yuanjue Canon also known as the Zifu or Sixi Canon is a possible candidate. More precisely our copy appears to be from a late printing of the Zifu Canon dating from sometime in the latter portion of the period 1110s/1140s-1276. The vast majority of extant sutras from this edition of the canon are late printings. They have the following characteristics:<br /> <BR> <BR> 1. Sheets folded into five pages with six columns per page 30 per sheet and 17 characters per column.<br /> <BR> <BR> 2. Glosses appended to the end of the volume.<br /> <BR> <BR> 3. Single woodcut borders at top and bottom of text. For earlier printings of this edition one source specifies that the borders go around on all four sides but for the later printings the same source simply says “single-lined margin frame†danxian biankuang 單線邊框. This would appear to suggest borders also at the beginning and the end of each sheet.<br /> <BR> <BR> 4. No empty column before the beginning of the text on the first page.<br /> <BR> <BR> 5. Small-script numerals marking the number of the sheet are printed at the beginning of every sheet as opposed to in the crease between pages for example except for the first sheet.<br /> <BR> <BR> 6. Printed area of roughly 570 mm. long and 250 mm. wide.<br /> <BR> <BR> The sutra has a total of seven fascicles juan of which we have fascicle six. The upper cover and the first line of the first page both have the character shen in manuscript on the cover which is here used as an ordinal drawn from Qianzi wen åƒå—æ–‡ The Thousand Character Essay to arrange the sutras of the Chinese Tripitaka.<br /> <BR> <BR> Layout and Appearance of Our Copy: Unsurprisingly for a very large printing project that took many years not all the sutras of the Yuanjue Canon have the same appearance. Yet the dimensions of our copy agree with other known copies: five pages per woodblock six columns per page 17 characters per column. Other non-official Song editions of the Buddhist canon Chongning and Pilu have six pages per block but the same number of columns per page and characters per column.<br /> <BR> <BR> The measurements of our copy accord with copies of other sutras from the same edition of the canon held by the Gansu Provincial Library in Lanzhou the National Palace Museum in Taipei and the Gotoh Museum outside of Tokyo. The layout of our copy accords with that of a different sutra from the same canon that has been reprinted in facsimile in unknown
19872092902141205235shaanxi people 1987. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 shaanxi people paperback
20092091202133212869Hubei Education Publishing House 2009. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Hubei Education Publishing House paperback
1988910421988 Editions Presses de la Renaissance, 1988 - Fort In-8, Broché - 537 p. Un feuillet de photographies et reproductions de documents en noir et blanc en pages centrales.
2011500331750XO Editions 2011 407 pages 2011. 407 pages. Ce roman est le troisième et dernier tome de la trilogie 'Et l'Égypte s'éveilla' de Christian Jacq. Il narre l'ascension de Narmer qui devient le premier pharaon de l'histoire unifiant le Sud et le Nord de l'Égypte pour donner naissance à la civilisation égyptienne alors que le pays était plongé dans le chaos et menacé par les Libyens. Le récit mêle histoire mythologie magie et une forte histoire d'amour
43876Krakow 2001.In-8,couv.souple noire avec dessin.259 p.Photos.Traduit en français. BE.
198111257Compagnie française de librairie 1981 671 pages IN4. 1981. Reliure Editeur avec jaquette. 671 pages. Claude Larre est un sinologue et jésuite français qui a étudié la langue et la culture chinoise en Chine entre 1947 et 1952. Il est le fondateur de l'Institut Ricci de Paris et co-fondateur de l'École Européenne d'Acupuncture ainsi que l'un des artisans du grand dictionnaire Ricci (chinois-français). Son livre "Les Chinois. Esprit et comportement des Chinois comme ils se révèlent par leurs livres et dans leur vie" explore la culture chinoise des origines à la fin de la dynastie Ming (1644) avec une partie importante consacrée à une chronique historique
1986B64011Kortrijk, Groeninghe 1986 242pp.rijkelijk geill.met buitentekstills., 24cm., mooie staat
242pp.rijkelijk geill.met buitentekstills., 24cm., mooie staat
2001B64021Bruxelles, Collet 2001 255pp., br.orig., 24cm., bel état
255pp., br.orig., 24cm., bel état
1989B64008Bruxelles, Hatier 1989 302pp.avec ills.hors-texte, br.orig., 24cm., bel état
302pp.avec ills.hors-texte, br.orig., 24cm., bel état