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Editons du cap Monte-Carlo. Juin 1960. Bon état. Couv. convenable. Intérieur frais. 95 pages environ illustrées de nombreuses photos et dessins noir et blanc.
About The Book : The ancient Mogul Empire embraced almost as much of India as is controlled by the British today, and extended westward into Europe as far as Moscow and Constantinople. It was founded by a young warrior known as Timour the Tartar, or Tamerlane, as he is more frequently called in historical works. He was a native of Kesh, a small town fifty miles south of Samarkand, the capital of Bokhara, which was known as Tartary in those days. This young man conquered more nations, ruled over a wider territory and a larger number of people submitted to his authority than to any other man who ever lived, before or since. A voyage to India nowadays is a continuous social event. The passengers compose a house party, being guests of the Steamship company for the time. The decks of the steamer are like broad verandas and are covered with comfortable chairs, in which the owners lounge about all day. Some of the more industrious women knit and embroider, and I saw one good mother with a basket full of mending, at which she was busily engaged at least three mornings. Others play cards upon folding tables or write letters with portfolios on their laps, and we had several artists who sketched the sky and sea, but the majority read novels and guide books, and gossiped. As birds of a feather flock together on the sea as well as on land, previous acquaintances and congenial new ones form little circles and cliques and entertain themselves and each other, and, after a day or two, move their chairs around so that they can be together. Americans and English do not mix as readily as you might expect, although there is nothing like coolness between them. It is only a natural restraint. They are accustomed to their ways, and we to ours, and it is natural for us to drift toward our own fellow countrymen. About The Author : William Eleroy Curtis (1850-1911), A prolific writer, Curtis authored over thirty books, including many handbooks of countries of South America. Author of "The Turk and His Lost Provinces'’ "To-day in Syria and Palestine." "Egypt, Burma and British Malaysia." etc.
About The Book : The ancient Mogul Empire embraced almost as much of India as is controlled by the British today, and extended westward into Europe as far as Moscow and Constantinople. It was founded by a young warrior known as Timour the Tartar, or Tamerlane, as he is more frequently called in historical works. He was a native of Kesh, a small town fifty miles south of Samarkand, the capital of Bokhara, which was known as Tartary in those days. This young man conquered more nations, ruled over a wider territory and a larger number of people submitted to his authority than to any other man who ever lived, before or since. A voyage to India nowadays is a continuous social event. The passengers compose a house party, being guests of the Steamship company for the time. The decks of the steamer are like broad verandas and are covered with comfortable chairs, in which the owners lounge about all day. Some of the more industrious women knit and embroider, and I saw one good mother with a basket full of mending, at which she was busily engaged at least three mornings. Others play cards upon folding tables or write letters with portfolios on their laps, and we had several artists who sketched the sky and sea, but the majority read novels and guide books, and gossiped. As birds of a feather flock together on the sea as well as on land, previous acquaintances and congenial new ones form little circles and cliques and entertain themselves and each other, and, after a day or two, move their chairs around so that they can be together. Americans and English do not mix as readily as you might expect, although there is nothing like coolness between them. It is only a natural restraint. They are accustomed to their ways, and we to ours, and it is natural for us to drift toward our own fellow countrymen. About The Author : William Eleroy Curtis (1850-1911), A prolific writer, Curtis authored over thirty books, including many handbooks of countries of South America. Author of "The Turk and His Lost Provinces'’ "To-day in Syria and Palestine." "Egypt, Burma and British Malaysia." etc.
Paperback, 525 pages , 156 x 234 mm, Languages: English. ISBN 9782503548791. William Durand (c. 1230-Nov. 1, 1296), Bishop of Mende, France, was unquestionably the most renowned liturgical scholar of the later Middle Ages. His encyclopedic allegorical exposition of the rites and worship services of the Latin Church, the Rationale divinorum officiorum, or "Rationale for the divine offices," is the best known medieval work in its genre. Divided into eight books of varying length, the Rationale is exhaustive in its treatment of a wide variety of subjects: the church building and liturgical art; the ministers of the church and their functions; liturgical vestments; the Mass and the Divine Office; the Church's calendar and its feast days. Modern scholarship has clearly shown that Durand's Rationale superseded all previous liturgical commentaries within only a few years of its publication (c. 1292-1296). By the end of the fifteenth century, it had become one of the most widely disseminated treatises of its kind in western Europe. Book 4, Durand?s lengthy and detailed commentary on the Mass, has never been translated into English. The present volume makes this important text available for modern students of liturgy, musicology, theology, and art history for whom the original Latin text is not accessible. The present translation also provides extensive annotation and explanation of Durand?s sometimes cryptic etymologies, while bringing to light important source material embedded within his commentary. The source text of this volume appeared in Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Mediaeualis as Guillelmus Durantus - Rationale divinorum officiorum IV (CCCM 140). References to the corresponding pages of the Corpus Christianorum edition are provided in the margins of this translation. Corpus Christianorum in Translation (CCT 14)
Christophe Colomb. 1979. In-4 Carré. Relié, Jaquette. Bon état. Couv. convenable. Dos satisfaisant. Intérieur frais. 336 pages. Illustré de très nombreuses photos en couleur et en noir et blanc. 'Connaissance et vie', Connaissances actuelles de l'homme moderne. De Empédocle à Christian Bernard.
paperback, geillustreerd, 304 pagina's. ISBN 9789077503423. In de achttiende en negentiende eeuw bestond er een uitgebreide etiquette rond de correspondentie. Auteurs van brieven- en etiquetteboeken adviseerden wat van aanhef tot postscriptum de juiste stijl en inhoud van een brief was en familieleden voorzagen elkaars brieven van soms streng commentaar. Willemijn Ruberg beschrijft in Conventionele correspondentie hoe een vijftal families uit de Nederlandse hogere burgerij en adel met het fenomeen briefwisseling omging ? laverend tussen ?natuurlijkheid? en conventies. Al op jonge leeftijd leerden kinderen uit de elite, op basis van nieuwe pedagogische idealen, wat een fatsoenlijke brief was. Gedurende de adolescentie kregen brieven een speciaal karakter. Jonge mannen en vrouwen schreven elkaar vurige, romantische vriendschapsbrieven, maar gebruikten de briefwisseling ook als zelfonderzoek, om hun karakter te verbeteren. In verlovingsbrieven onderhandelden geliefden zelfs over hun relatie voor ze daadwerkelijk in het huwelijk traden. Negentiende-eeuwse correspondenten klaagden over het plichtmatige karakter van gelegenheidsbrieven zoals felicitaties, nieuwjaarswensen en condoleancebrieven en over het gebrek aan oprechtheid daarin. Toch waren ze belangrijk om de banden tussen families te bestendigen. Ruberg toont in dit boek met vele verrassende, ontnuchterende en schrijnende voorbeelden aan dat de briefwisseling een regelrecht socialisatiemiddel was. Via een ogenschijnlijk intiem medium trachtte de Nederlandse elite de eigen normen over te dragen en in stand te houden.
A cura di Raffaele Simone. Bibliografia . 8vo. pp. 292. . Molto buono (Very Good). . Seconda edizione (2nd Edition). .
BAND II - THIS VOLUME ONLY. 235x165 mm. VI+425 pages [pagination: 372-796] pages. Hardcover with dust jacket. Gilt lettering on cover and spine. Cover corners and spine edges slightly bumped. Stamp on first whitepage. Pages slightly yellowing. Else in good condition.
- Alfred Castaigne, Bruxelles 1898-1907, 15,5x23,5cm, 3 volumes reliés. - Edition originale. Reliure en demi toile grise, dos lisses, pièces de titre de basane rouge, une mouillure sur un mors et le dos du tome III, plats de papier marbré, une éraflure avec maqnue de papier sur le premier plat du troisième volume, gardes et contreplats de papier à la cuve, couvertures conservées. Agréable état intérieur. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
Herausgegeben von Paulhans Peters. Con numerosi disegni e progetti (Fakultatsbibliotheken institutsbibliotheken, Universitatsbibliotheken collegebibliotheken, Forschungsbibliotheken, Stadtbibliotheken, Regionalbibliotheken, Landesbibliotheken, Nationalbibliotheken) . 8vo. pp. 136. . Molto buono (Very Good). . . .
Philadelphia, Parry & Macmillan, 1855. Small 8vo. Orig. hcalf. Richly blindstamped spine. Wear to lower part of spine. Gilt lettering on upper board. 71 pp., textillustrations.
Broch?. 323 pages.
Préface du Docteur Hans Driech , professeur à la Faculté de Leipzig . -140 p. , 200 gr.
A cura di . 8vo. pp. 994. . Ottimo (Fine). . . .
1 vol. in-8 br., coll. Psychiatrie Ouverte, PUF, Paris, 1983, 232 pp. Exceptionnel exemplaire enrichi d'une dédicace de Henri Wiener au grand mathématicien et philosophe français René Thom. Honoré par la Médaille Fields en 1958, le mathématicien français René Thom (1923 - 2002) est le célèbre fondateur de la théorie des catastrophes. Bon exemplaire Français
ISBN : 2736902068. ZODIAQUE.. 1994. In-8 Carré. Broché. Bon état. Couv. convenable. Dos satisfaisant. Intérieur frais. 43 pages. Nombreuses photos en noir et blanc et en couleurs dans le texte et hors texte.
Dustjacket has minor shelfwear and rubbing. ; Reconstructs adults' opinions of what a child was and ought to be trained to become and arrives at a convincing portrayal of the classical concept of childhood and its transformation in the early Christian period. ; 0.75 x 9 x 6 Inches; 256 pages
Former owner's signature on first end-page. Shelfwear. ; Summarises political events during the reigns of Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius and Nero and the civil wars of the 'year of four emperors'. It considers too the extent to which social factors influenced the imperial household. ; Classical World; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 94 pages
Traduzione di Giovanni Ferrara . 8vo. pp. 228. . Molto buono (Very Good). . . .
ISBN : 2213005583. FAYARD.. 1978.. In-8 Carré. Broché. Bon état. Couv. convenable. Dos satisfaisant. Intérieur acceptable. 222 pages. 1ère de couverture illustrée en noir et blanc. Choix de textes, introduction et présentation, annotation par Robert Mandrou.
Troisième édition refondue et augmentée, 1 vol. in-8 br., H. Dunod et E. Pinat, Paris, 1909, VIII-73 pp. Bon état (couv. lég. frottée) Français
Imprimerie Butty S. A., Estavayer. 1953. In-8 Carré. Broché. Bon état. Couv. convenable. Dos satisfaisant. Intérieur frais. Plaquette de 30 pages. Etiquette de code sur le 1er plat. Tampons et annotations de bibliothèque sur le 1er plat et en page de garde. Thèse prés. à la Faculté des Sciences de l'Univ. de Fribourg.
A Paris, chez Didot jeune, 1777. 2 volumes in-12 (17 x 10 cm) reliure plein veau tacheté du temps, dos à nerfs à caissons dorés et pièces de titre bordeaux, ; vol.1 : 3 f. n.p., 265 p., 303 p. ; vol. 2 : 3 f. n.p., 482 p., 2 f. n.p. Reliures défraîchies : manques sur les coiffes usures sur les coins. Nouvelle édition à laquelle on a joint un extrait d'un ouvrage du même auteur, sur les mouvements vitaux & involontaires des animaux. WHYTT (Robert), physiologiste anglais, né à Edimbourg en 1714, mort en 1766. Il fit ses études aux universités de Saint-André, d'Edimbourg de Londres, de Paris et de Leyde, se fit recevoir à Edimbourg licencié en médecine, et exerça la pratique de son art avec un succès qui lui valut en 1746 la chaire de médecine à l'université. Il fut, en outre, nommé en 1752 membre de la Société royale de Londres ; en 1761, premier médecin du roi en Ecosse, et en 1764, président du collège royal des médecins d'Edimbourg. Expérimentateur habile et critique ingénieux dans ses écrits physiologiques, il s'est montré excellent observateur dans ses ouvrages de médecine pratique.
23 pages, including an in-text illustration of Sangai. Plus a fold-out sketch diagram. Original condition with blue wrappers, titles to front, and containing all the ads. This is a complete issue, seldom found in such good and original condition. Twenty-three years after his triumphant and disastrous conquest of the Matterhorn, Whymper turned his attention to the soaring Andes peaks of Ecuador. This expedition was designed primarily to collect data for the study of mountain sickness and of the physical effects of altitude. The summits of Chimborazo (20,948 feet) and six other mountains between 15,000 and 20,000 feet were reached for the first time. A night was spent on the top of Cotopaxi (19,613 feet), and the features of that great volcano were studied. In his valuable report, Whymper includes a data table of temperatures and heights of mountain summits of Chimborazo, Corazon, Cotopaxi, Sincholagua, Antisana, Pichincha, Cayambe, Sara-urcu, Cotocachi, and Carihuairazo. From the wider points of view of the geographer, the geologist, and traveller, Whymper brought home much valuable material. This illuminating account pre-dates the author's book, "Travels Amongst the Great Andes of the Equator" published in 1891. Accompanied by a sketch diagram, illustrating the northern part of Mr. Whypmer's travels.