773 résultats
Rubbing and very light foxing to wraps. ; Études Préliminaires Aux Religions Orientales Dans L'Empire Romain 2; 86 pages
Light pencilling. Title written to spine in black marker. ; 70 pages
Minor yellowing to boards. Scholar's name to inner cover (Cedric Boulter). ; 125 pages
Review of book (draft) tipped in (by Richard Hamilton) with post-it note thanking Slater/Dunbabin for lending it. Scholars' bookplate to inner cover (Slater & Dunbabin). Minor staining to half-title. Light wear to corners of wraps and faint yellowing to wraps. ; Quellen Und Forschungen Zur Antiken Welt Band 8; 301 pages
Dust-soiling to top of textblock. Scholars' bookplate to inner cover. Minor foxing. Bound in dark orange buckram with gilt title to spine. ; 273 pages
Études Préliminaires Aux Religions Orientales Dans L'Empire Romain , No 93; 576 pages
Scholars' bookplate to inner cover (Slater & Dunbabin). Foxing to textblock. Some foxing. ; 8.4 X 5.8 X 0.2 inches; 83 pages
Minor shelfwear to all volumes. V1: slight bump to head of spine. 1 corner lightly bumped. V2: lower corners and top edge of front board lightly bumped. V3: faint bump to base of spine. ; Reprint of the 1926 ed. Complete in 3 volumes. Vol. I (1963) 307 pp; Vol. II (1963) 319 pp; Vol. III (1963) 352 pp; 3 Volume Set COMPLETE; Vol. 1/3/2022; 978 pages
In verbindung mit Franz Babinger, Leo Baeck, Heinrich Hackmann, F.E.A.Krause, Karl H. Meyer, Friedrich Pfister, Günther Roeder, Albert Schott, Franz Rolf Schroeder, Erich Seeberg, Otto strauss. Dargestellt von Carl Clemen. with 135 illustrations, mostly photographic, in the text; bound in publ. cloth; cloth sl. marked, minimal wear to extremities, tears to the edges of the opening and closing few pages. *This distinguished collection of essays on world religions and their ancient origins includes studies of Babylonian, Ancient Egyptian, Indian, Ancient Greek, Roman, Celtic, Germanic, Buddhist, Jewish, Islamic and early Christian beliefs.
Scholar's bookplate to inner cover (Robert Brown). Scholar's blindstamp to half-title (Robert Brown). Tiny stain to rear wrap. Light shelfwear. ; Zetemata Monographien Zur Klassischen Altertumswissenschaft Heft 57; 118 pages
Insitution stamp to title page. Ex-lib copy with call number label to spine. Bound in orange boards wtih black spine. No other markings. ; Religionsgeschichtliche Versuche und Vorarbeiten, XI. Band 1. Heft; 73 pages
19401123Paris, PUF, 1940, in-12, broché, XX-130 pages.
Very faint shelfwear else fine. ; Les fêtes publiques constituent sans nul doute un thème privilégié pour l'étude des religions antiques. Jalonnant en abondance les calendriers et profondément enracinées dans la vie sociale ainsi que politique, elles sont censées, à un titre tout spécial, promouvoir entre les hommes et les dieux des relations harmonieuses. Le sentiment d'une présence divine y est généralement très vif et, en Grèce plus particulièrement, on y trouve souvent réunies en un ensemble organique les principales manifestations de la dévotion religieuse : valorisation d'un temps sacré lié au rythme des saisons et de lieux saints traditionnels où l'on se rend en procession, prières, libations et offrandes, sacrifices et banquets collectifs, musiques, hymnes et danses, à quoi s'ajoutent encore, suivant un usage qui n'a fait que s'amplifier, des jeux et des concours. Cette accumulation de gestes pieux, accomplis dans une ambiance euphorique et conviviale de détente, contribue à faire de ces célébrations festives des temps forts de la vie des cités. Explorant ce thème d'une richesse quasi inépuisable, les quatorze études ici rassemblées forment un éventail très diversifié qui va des origines créto-mycéniennes de la religion grecque aux premiers siècles de notre ère, marqué par des conflits entre le culte impérial et le christianisme, en passant par les fêtes ancestrales qu'évoquent les poètes Homère ainsi que Pindare et par le renouveau qu'elles connaissent à la période hellénistique. Divers espaces du monde antique sont également parcourus, à commencer, certes, par la Grèce continentale et par Rome, mais en passant aussi par la Crète et par Chypre, par l'Asie Mineure où ont lieu des fêtes très particulières en l'honneur de Dionysos, par les rassemblements fédéraux qu'organisent les cités étrusques et par les cérémonies festives que l'on découvre dans les provinces romaines du centre de l'Europe. Ces approches pluridisciplinaires font alterner des exposés au sujet très ciblé et des essais de synthèse, tandis qu'un article conclusif vise à projeter sur la notion de fête les lumières de l'histoire des religions et amorce au passage une comparaison entre fêtes grecques et fêtes romaines. Les différentes contributions sont riches de nombreuses références aux travaux modernes.; Homo Religiosus Série II; 9.4 X 6.3 X 0.9 inches; 306 pages
Front hinge is broken and has been crudely repaired with clear tape. Scholars' bookplate to inner cover (Slater & Dunbabin). Minor edgewear to boards. Some ink and pencil marginalia (by Slater). Rear hinge is strained. 1 corner a bit edgeworn. ; 616 pages
Tiny tear to DJ. ; As the perpetual stranger Dionysos is the embodiment of strangeness. He is nowhere at home, and yet in another sense the world is his home. Detienne evokes the manic activity of Dionysos in myths that connect him with the shedding of blood, the pouring of wine, and the ejaculation of semen. ; Revealing Antiquity 1; 8.3 X 5.5 X 0.7 inches; 90 pages
Scholars' name to ffep (Mark Golden). Initials in pen to titlepage. Browning to covers and pages. Some pages unopened. ; Bibliothèque Historique; 510 pages
Very faint yellowing to upper edges of some pages. Faint edgewear to 1 corner. ; 82 pages
1907ABE-1564813661268BROCHE-266 PAGES-12 CM X 19 CM-PRIERE D'INSERER-EN GRANDE PARTIE NON COUPE-(JDG32)
21416Paris, chez Guillaume Desprez, 1664. In-12°, bas., dos orné à 4 n., plats muets (rel. du temps). Exlibris de la bib. Brölemann, (1) f., 186 p. (1) f. sur une collation linéaire / soit : instruction sur les Deux discours 60p. (3) ff., discours premier -64 p., discours second, 60 p., coins émoussés, épidermure en bord de plat (sans plus).
New Persian Original bdg. HC. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). Text in Persian with a bilingual title in English and Persian on cover. [14], 246 p. Divan-i Ahmad Da^'i^.= Ahvâl va âsâr va tahlîl-i ash'âr-i dîvân-i Fârsî-i Ahmad Dâ'î.
Hard bump to 1 corner. Small corrections in pen to about 8 pages by R. E. Fantham. Light shelfwear to DJ. ; This book explores an aspect of how Romans thought about themselves. Its subject is 'divine qualities': qualities like Concord, Faith, Hope, Clemency, Fortune, Freedom, Piety, and Victory, which received public cult in Rome in the Republican period. Anna Clark draws on a wide range of evidence (literature, drama, coins, architecture, inscriptions and graffiti) to show that these qualities were not simply given cult because they were intrinsically important to 'Romans'. They rather became 'Roman' through claims, counter-claims, appropriations and explorations of them by different individuals. The resources brought into existence by cult (temples, altars, coin images, statues, passwords, votive inscriptions) were visible and accessible to a broad range of people. Divine qualities were relevant to a broader social spectrum than is usually recognized, and this has important consequences for our understanding of Roman society. ; Oxford Classical Monographs; 380 pages
Scholar's bookplate to inner cover (G. P. Goold). Foxing/dustsoiling to top of textblock. DJ has rubbing and chipping with small tears. DJ spine is sunned. ; This book is about Roman religion in the age of Caesar, beginning with the ancestral cults of the Gens Julia at Bovillae and ending with the new cult of Divus Julius all over the Roman Empire. It deals with the old gods, politico-religious ideas, and ruler cult. Caesar is at the centre, as religious reformer rather than modern rationalist. This aspect of him, though remote and unfamiliar, rounds out the portrait of Caesar as the founder of the Empire of which one may get an occasional glimpse in the later writings of Mommsen but which has since been too seldom presented. ; 490 pages
E Ex-library copy with usual stamps, call numbers and pocket. Front hinge cracked but holding. Minor rubbing to boards. ; This book is about Roman religion in the age of Caesar, beginning with the ancestral cults of the Gens Julia at Bovillae and ending with the new cult of Divus Julius all over the Roman Empire. It deals with the old gods, politico-religious ideas, and ruler cult. Caesar is at the centre, as religious reformer rather than modern rationalist. This aspect of him, though remote and unfamiliar, rounds out the portrait of Caesar as the founder of the Empire of which one may get an occasional glimpse in the later writings of Mommsen but which has since been too seldom presented. ; 490 pages
486pp., 22cm., softcover, text in Spanish, in the series "Pensamiento" vol.5, very good condition, ISBN84-86898-78-1, R101311
2000R101311Madrid, Revista Agustiniana 2000 486pp., 22cm., softcover, text in Spanish, in the series "Pensamiento" vol.5, very good condition, ISBN84-86898-78-1, R101311