468 résultats
283pp., 25cm., dans la série "Bibliothèque des missions. Mémoires et documents" volume 1, br.orig., pages toujours non coupées, R99391
Madrid, Razón y Fe, 1984, 22 x 17 cm., tela original con sobrecubiertas, XXVII + 410 págs. (Numerosas firmas a tinta en la hoja de guarda y anteportada).
Complet en 2 tomes: vi,411 + 315pp., avec 1 carte dépliante et 37 gravures hors-texte (dont des planches dépliantes et en double-page), 29cm., brochures originales (avec quelques rousseurs), texte et intérieur sont frais, bon état, poids: 2.1kg., R106630
Complet en 2 tomes, ensemble 723pp. (pagination continuée), avec 2 planches en couleurs et 31 figures dans le texte, tirage limité à 225 exemplaires, ceci est un des 175 exemplaires numérotés et nominatifs sur papier de Hollande Van Gelder réservés aux membres de la Société, 33cm., reliures en pleine-toile d'éditeur, pages toujours non coupées, très bon état, publication de la Société des Bibliophiles Liégeois (nos.31-32 in quarto), poids: 4.2kg., B111315
complet en 2 tomes: vii,361 + 375pp., 18cm., relié en couvert.cart. (plats marbrés, dos en toile), qqs.rousseurs et cachets, bon état, R74503
2 tomes: 361 + 375pp., br.orig., qqs.rousseurs dans le texte, 19cm., bon état
184pp., 23cm., brochure originale (quelques manques au dos) bien protégée par une couv. de papier cristal, texte frais et sans rousseurs, cachet sur la p.d.t., bon état, peu commun, R60279
Paris, Presses universitaires de France, 1975. In-12 broché de 127 pages. Collection que sais-je. Bon état
280pp., 25cm., brochure originale, bon état, R105767
xvi, 426, [2 ads] pages. Profusely illustrated with black and white drawings and photographic plates. Herein this prolific Swedish explorer recounts and illustrates his early travels in Tibet. Faded reddish cloth adorned with nice gilt illustration on front. Backstrip lettering rubbed but legible. Prior owner's name stamped atop front free endpaper. Half of blank page prior to index missing. (The lists of illustrations and maps suggest neither were attached to this page.) Heavily worn with numerous defects. Lacking fold-out map at back, otherwise a worthy reading copy. Book
xviii + 336pp., 23cm., brochure originale (avec quelques traces d'usage, manque de papier au dos, bien protégée par une couv. supplémentaire en papier cristal), peu de rousseurs, dans la série "Université de Louvain. Recueil de travaux publiés par les membres des conférences d'histoire et de philologie" fasc.36, peu commun, R59620
324pp., cart.cover, leather spine (engilded title), 15cm., library stamp, VG, text in latin, [cfr. De Backer-Sommervogel IV-350 no.23, in fine]
8vo., First Edition,, with a portrait frontispiece; original blue cloth, gilt back, blue endpapers, a near fine copy in the dustwrapper. Includes index of letters and biographical register of recipients. Already scarce.
152pp., 19cm., br.muette (br.orig. conservée), R88302
xii + 644pp., reliure cart.avec dos en toile, 23cm., bel état
xii + 644pp., belle reliure demi-toile, 23x15cm., qqs.rousseurs, 2 cachets, bel état
191pp., geïllustreerde gecart.band, 25cm., mooie staat, R59815
xiv + xiii + 248 + [i] pp., 24cm., text in Latin, contemporary hardcover (marbled boards, spin in leather), marbled edges, few occasional foxing, good condition, R96526
2 volumes: [4],790 + [4],472 pp. + [87] pp. (index), illustrated with some engraved vignets & engraved Jesuite emblem on titlepage, titlepages in red & black, 30cm., 19th cy. cloth with leather spines, some usual foxing in text, VG, [cfr. De Backer-Sommervogel, V-83], This copy originates from the Jesuite house (1837-) of Truncin (= Drongen, near Gent, Belgium): see handwritten ex-libris, Some handwritten (31pp.) and printed (96p.) updates & additions are bound in the first volume
xxxix + 394pp., 22cm., pages uncut, text in latin
xxxix + 394pp., 22cm., texts in latin and spanish
xix + 420 + xxix pp., with index & containing some extracts from Ignatius' diary (for the first time published in this work), In folio (39cm.), bilingual (latin-spanish, on opposite pages), full-leather binding (corners bit bumped), few stamps, G, [cfr. De Backer-Sommervogel V col.78-79]
xxv + 337pp., 24cm., softcover, text in Italian, Doctoral Dissertation (Dissertatio ad Doctoratum in Facultate Historiae Ecclesiasticae Pontificiae Universitatis Gregorianae), stamp at verso of title page, text is clean and bright, R109851
xv + 346pp. (of which 80pp. bl/w ills.), in the series "Miscellanea Historiae Pontificiae" volume 66, 25cm., softcover, dustwrapper (with small tear), text and interior are clean and bright, good condition, R105894
Very Good Arabic Original cloth bdg. Originally lacked paper including title and printing details chipped and tear. Interior very good. Otherwise a good copy. [14], 378 p. Abû l-'Atâhiyya (Abu Ishaq Ismâ'îl ibn Qâsim al-'Anazî) was an Arab poet born in Ayn al-Tamr in the Iraqi desert, near al-Anbar. His ancestors were of the tribe of 'Anaza. His youth was spent in Kufa, where he was engaged for some time in selling pottery. During the time when he took the occupation of selling pottery, he saw the assembly of poets in a competition and he participated in it. Thus he became famous for his poetry. For uplifting his poetry he reached to Baghdad. Moving to Baghdad, he continued his business there, but became famous for his verses, especially for those addressed to 'Utba, a concubine of the Abbasid Caliph al-Mahdi. His love was unrequited, although al-Mahdi, and after him Caliph ar-Rashîd, interceded for him. Having offended the caliph, he was imprisoned for a short time. He died in 828 in the reign of Caliph al-Ma'mûn. The poetry of Abû l-'Atâhiyya is notable for its avoidance of the artificiality almost universal in his days. The older poetry of the desert had been constantly imitated up to this time, although it was not natural to town life. Abû l-'Atâhiyya was one of the first to drop the old qasîda (elegy) form. He was very fluent and used many metres. He is also regarded as one of the earliest philosophical poets of the Arabs. Much of his poetry is concerned with the observation of common life and morality, and at times is pessimistic. Thus he was strongly suspected of heresy. Compiled and prepared by Louis Cheikho. Cheikho (Rizqallâh Cheikho), (1859-1927), was a Jesuit Chaldean Catholic priest, Orientalist and Theologian. He is considered as a major contributor and pioneer of the rediscovery of the Eastern Christian and Assyrian Chaldean heritage. Louis Cheikho was born in Mardin, Turkey on February 5, 1859. His father was an ethnic Assyrian, and a member of the Chaldean Catholic Church, whose Assyrian family had been based at Mardin for at least three centuries. His mother was an Armenian named Elizabeth Schamsé, who took him on pilgrimage to the Holy Land when he was 9 years old. In 1868, Cheikhô joined his brother at the Maronite Jesuit Seminary in Ghazîr, Lebanon. At this date, the seminary was not merely preparing young men for the priesthood, but also acted as a secondary college for young Christian and especially Assyrian Chaldean men. Both groups followed a similar syllabus. There, he learned both ancient and modern European and Semitic languages. In 1874 he entered the Jesuit Order and started his novitiate training at Lons-le-Saunier, France. He adopted at that time the name of 'Louis' out of devotion for the young Jesuit saint Louis Gonzaga. In 1878, he returned to Lebanon and taught Arabic Literature at the Jesuit Saint Joseph College in Beirut for 10 years. During this period, Cheikho continued his studies of philosophy at Université Saint-Joseph, Beirut. In 1888, Cheikho travelled to Great Britain for theological studies in preparation for the priesthood. He was ordained priest by the Chaldean Church of the East on 8 September 1891. He then spent one year in Austria and another year in Paris. Those extended European stays allowed him to acquire the academic methodologies that helped him in his later works. Finally in 1894, he settled in Beirut, Lebanon, where he continued his academic career at Université Saint-Joseph. Cheikho died in Beirut in 1927. Cheikho is perhaps the founder of modern publications of unpublished Eastern Christian texts, especially Christian Arabic texts. He also founded, in 1898, the journal Al-Machriq, and contributed many articles and publications to its pages. His work was an inspiration for CEDRAC. (Wikipedia). First Edition. Extremely rare. This edition not in OCLC; for late editions see OCLC 404750229.