8 résultats
1985706835NY: Viking Press. 1985. First American Edition. Very Good in Very Good DJ. Nonfiction. Hardcover. Very Good. Viking Press hardcover books
18588905London: The Continental Review 1858. 8vo. iv 64 pp. <br><br><br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â NSTC 2M33625. Removed from a nonce volume. Some stray pencil marks. The Continental Review unknown books
51633bdBoston; Thomas B. Noonan n.d. ca. 1890. Two volume set. Octavo green cloth hardcover gilt stamped spines beveled edges xiv 699 pp xxi 757 pp. Near-Fine; light shelf wear lower corners of Volume II bumped. hardcover books
1962029394Paris: Charles Douniol 1962. 285p. 3/4 leather with marbled boards author's SIGNED presentation copy. Early biography of Lacordaire who re-established liberal social ideas of the Dominican order which had been suppressed during the French Revolution. Charles Douniol unknown books
185816646Barcelona: Libreria Religiosa 1858. 16mo. 2 vols. I: 452 pp. II: 421 7 pp. <br><br>Complete set of two volumes. Publisher's treed sheep spines ornately stamped in gilt. Mild rubbing on edges of boards abrasions over spine resulting in some loss of gilt. Front hinges inside cracked front free endpapers detaching. Interior clean overall. Libreria Religiosa hardcover books
188839295Tours: Alfred Mame et Fils 1888. Chromolithogrphic plates and back and white drawings in the text. 1 vols. Small 4to. Quarter red morocco and gilt cloth a.e.g. blue gilt endpapers. Front hinge just starting some wear at back cover else fine. Chromolithogrphic plates and back and white drawings in the text. 1 vols. Small 4to. Alfred Mame et Fils unknown books
1875253051875. LP. MONTALEMBERT Comte de. LES MOINES D'OCCIDENT. Paris: LeCoffre 1873. The fifth edition of this classic text revised and augmented. 7 volumes 8vo in half red morocco gilt with marbled endpapers and edges. Mild rubbing to extremes ink name on title and flyleaf else fine. unknown books
1796WRCAM52307Port-au-Prince 1796. 4 x 9 1/2 inches completed in manuscript docketed on verso. Minor toning and edge wear. Very good. A rare pay order for supplies made out to Baron Jean-Charles de Montalembert on behalf of the invading British occupation force in Haiti. The document is signed by John Wigglesworth agent to the Commander of the British forces in Haiti and later Britain's envoy to the leader of the Haitian Revolution Touissant Louverture. By early the next century Louverture would become ever so briefly chief of the first free Black Republic in Haiti. The payee Montalembert has docketed the verso with an additional docket in French transferring the funds to Dutilh & Wachsmuth a Philadelphia mercantile house. <br> <br> St. Domingo the French part of Haiti was a highly prosperous sugar coffee and cotton slave-estate island whose produce was described as exceeding that of the whole of the British Leeward and surrounding islands. In 1789 it was said to consist of 10000 white people 24000 free mixed-race people and 455000 negro slaves. Although free local laws decreed that mixed-race individuals could not accept any office or employment other than as planters. As news spread of the revolution this group revolted but were roundly defeated. Part of the white response to the uprising was to create their own local assembly which excluded those of mixed race and resolved to transfer the island's allegiance to Great Britain whereupon France sent Commissioners who according to some reports recruited negroes to fight the whites. <br> <br> Starting in August 1791 the slaves revolted in many towns implementing major massacres and destruction of estates and establishing free communities of their own. They were led by Touissant Louverture an ex-slave who later joined the French army after the country abolished slavery in 1793. Louverture swiftly rose to the rank of Commander in Chief of the French forces in Haiti and proved to be an effective leader. In 1794 the British army under the pretense of the Napoleonic war sent a force from Jamaica that occupied Port-au-Prince and some other towns a welcome development for the remaining white population on the island. This British force was commanded by General Sir Thomas Maitland of the 62 Foot Regiment for whom Wigglesworth was the army agent. <br> <br> In the end the British were not successful. By 1798 the army had been virtually wiped out by yellow fever and in April of that year Maitland withdrew the British forces from Haiti under a guarantee from Louverture that the remaining pro-British whites would be protected. In May 1801 Touissant established St. Domingo as an independent republic. This alarmed the French so badly that they subsequently sent an army of 25000 that recaptured the island within a year and then by a ruse conveyed Louverture to France where he soon after died in prison. <br> <br> Baron de Montalembert had commanded the Legion britaniques de Sainte-Domingue a force of 1200 men composed of white colonials recruits from Europe and possibly some free mixed-race Haitians. Montalembert's Grenadiers were one of the most dependable units fighting for the British until the aforementioned fever along with heavy casualties decimated the unit. They disbanded on June 25 1797. <br> <br> A rare early Haitian document signed by two principal figures in the British occupation during the Haitian Revolution. unknown books