328 résultats
Broch?. 222 pages. Couverture d?fra?chie.
Le Cherche Midi 2003, fort In-8 broché, 463 pages, avec index des noms cités et photos. Très bon état
Odile Jacob, Opus, 1995, 219 pp., poche, légères traces d'usage, état correct.
Broché. 57 pages. 21x27cm.
in-8°, 333 pages, ill. hors-texte, broche, couverture illustree plast. à rabats. Bon etat [LA-7]
Robert Laffont 1965, In-8 broché, couverture à rabats, 334 pages + illustrations. Bon état
Les éditions de l'atelier, 2015, 135 pp., broché, illustrations en couleurs, très bon état.
Broché. 296 pages.
Broch?. 561 pages.
Belin, 2013. In-8 broché de 196 pages, photos. Bandeau conservé. Rares passages soulignés discrètement au crayon de papier sinon Très bon état
Ed. de Noyelles 2011, In-8 broché. 298 pages. Très bon état.
Broch?. 93 pages.
Broch?. 247 pages.
Broché. 400 pages.
New Greek, Modern (post 1453) Paperback. 4to. (28 x 20 cm). In Greek and Turkish. [200] p., color and b/w ills. Erotokritos: Bir Girit destani. Translation and transcription by Hakki Bilgehan. A poem of a Cretan poet of the 17th century. Vitsentzos Kornaros. Turkish translation and transcription in latin letters of the original Greek poem. 500 copies were printed.
Broch?. 185 pages. Dos muet.
Bernard Grasset 1979, In-4 broché, 77 pages, nombreuses photos et planche dépliante. Bon état
Very Good Armenian Original half bound leather bdg. Large demy8vo. (22 x 15,5 cm). In Armenian. 675 p. Prior to Soviet rule, the Dashnaksutiun had governed the First Republic of Armenia. The Socialist Soviet Republic of Armenia was founded in 1920. Diaspora Armenians were divided about this: supporters of the nationalist Dashnaksutiun did not support the Soviet state, while supporters of the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) were more positive about the newly founded Soviet state. From 1828 with the Treaty of Turkmenchay to the October Revolution in 1917, Eastern Armenia had been part of the Russian Empire and partly confined to the borders of the Erivan Governorate. After the October Revolution, Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin's government announced that minorities in the empire could pursue a course of self-determination. Following the collapse of the empire, in May 1918 Armenia, and its neighbors Azerbaijan and Georgia, declared their independence from Russian rule and each established their respective republics. After the near-annihilation of the Armenians during the Armenian Genocide and the subsequent Turkish-Armenian War, the historic Armenian area in the Ottoman Empire was overrun with despair and devastation. A number of Armenians joined the advancing 11th Soviet Red Army. Afterward, Turkey and the newly proclaimed Soviet republics in the Caucasus negotiated the Treaty of Kars, in which Turkey resigned from its claims to Batumi to Georgia in exchange for the Kars territory, corresponding to the modern-day Turkish provinces of Kars, Igdir, and Ardahan. The medieval Armenian capital of Ani, as well as the cultural icon of the Armenian people Mount Ararat, were located in the ceded area. Additionally, Joseph Stalin, then acting Commissar for Nationalities, granted the areas of Nakhchivan and Nagorno-Karabakh (both of which were promised to Armenia by the Bolsheviks in 1920) to Azerbaijan. From 12 March 1922 to 5 December 1936, Armenia was a part of the Transcaucasian SFSR (TSFSR) together with the Georgian SSR and the Azerbaijan SSR. The policies of the first Soviet Armenian government, the Revolutionary Committee (Revkom), headed by young, inexperienced, and militant communists such as Sarkis Kasyan and Avis Nurijanyan, were implemented in a highhanded manner and did not take into consideration the poor conditions of the republic and the general weariness of the people after years of conflict and civil strife. Such was the degree and scale of the requisitioning and terror imposed by the local Cheka that in February 1921 the Armenians, led by former leaders of the republic, rose up in revolt and briefly unseated the communists in Yerevan. The Red Army, which was campaigning in Georgia at the time, returned to suppress the revolt and drove its leaders out of Armenia. Convinced that these heavy-handed tactics were the source of the alienation of the native population to Soviet rule, in 1921 Moscow appointed an experienced administrator, Alexander Miasnikian, to carry out a more moderate policy and one better attuned to Armenian sensibilities. With the introduction of the New Economic Policy (NEP), Armenians began to enjoy a period of relative stability. Life under the Soviet rule proved to be a soothing balm in contrast to the turbulent final years of the Ottoman Empire. The Armenians received medicine, food, as well as other provisions from the central government and extensive literacy reforms were carried [.] Only one copy is located in OCLC: 782028953 (National Library of Israel - Jewish National Library).
59pp.geïll.met tekeningen & 1 foto, geïll.omslag, stempeltje
Fine English Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In Spanish. 46 p. La 'cuestion Armenia': Conflicto, trauma y objectividad. SAM Papers No.: 9/99.
Fine English Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In English. 48 p. The 'Armenian question': Conflict, trauma & objectivity. SAM Papers No. 3: 3/97.
Broch?. 317 pages. Jaquette.
New English Paperback. Roy. 8vo. (23 x 16 cm). In English. Printed as a book of PhD thesis by Tuncel named 'Mayr Hayastan Im Hairenik: Memory and the Politics of Construction of the Armenian Homeland'.