1 314 résultats
17740000222Leipzig: Bernhard Christoph Breitkopfs und Sohn 1774. Second edition. Contemporary calf. Very Good. 2nd edition. Folio Contemporary full calf with some ware and loss to ends of spine . Collation: 12 1-184 4p. with 51 copper-engraved plates. Internally this is a clean and bright copy with only minor spotting. <br/><br/>Leupold unlike his contemporary Newton was a designerand builder of instruments. In this work Leupold provides information and illustration of numerous devices that he built that were useful in handling water. This is a posthumous reprinting of his earlier edition in 1724which was the 2nd volume of his larger work Theatrum machinarum. Bernhard Christoph Breitkopfs und Sohn unknown books
WELLER9781608685172New. New book. unknown books
185513210Columbus 1855. Disbound 15pp. Light foxing Good. On the doctrine of perseverance. The pamphlet was also printed as one of the Presbyterian Tract series. FIRST EDITION. Not in Sabin. 336 NUC 0410750 2. unknown books
1609WRCAM46859Amsterdam: Cornille Nicolas 1609. Two volumes bound in one. Described in greater detail below. Folio. Contemporary boards rebacked in calf spine gilt leather label. Very good. From the Library of the Earls of Macclesfield with engraved 1860 bookplate on front pastedown and blind pressure stamp on first two printed leaves of first title. Two highly important Dutch voyages both in their second French editions and bound together as issued in 1609. These two voyages represent the initial Dutch exploration and expansion to the East Indies a significant element in a global commercial enterprise which was to develop throughout the 17th century. The two foundation accounts in the present volume originally issued together by Amsterdam printer Cornille Nicolas include: <br> <br> 1 Lodewijcksz Willem: PREMIER LIVRE DE L'HISTOIRE DE LA NAVIGATION AUX INDES ORIENTALES PAR LES HOLLANDOIS. Amsterdam: Cornille Nicolas 1609. 53 leaves. Titlepage with engraved map forty-five in-text engravings including three maps seventeen in-text woodcut illustrations and one plate on separate leaf following printed text. Moderate soiling on titlepage slight edge wear to first few leaves. <br> <br> Second French edition following the first French edition of 1598. Lodewijcksz gives an account of the first Dutch expedition to the East Indies under Cornelis Houtman from 1595 to 1597. The information collected by Houtman on the spice trade convinced the Dutch they could compete with Portugal's monopoly in the East Indies and his narrative served to initiate the explosion of Dutch trading at the turn of the century. <br> <br> "Like the English Houtman's men suffered so severely from scurvy that they had to put in at the Cape of Good Hope and at Antongil Bay in Madagascar to recuperate. But they then sailed straight across the Indian Ocean to the Straits of Sunda and dropped anchor at Bantam in Java without the loss of a ship. At this port the center of the Javanese pepper trade a long time was spent. Both natives and Portuguese showed considerable hostility and Houtman and some of his men were imprisoned. However the Dutch succeeded in making a commercial treaty and departed with a good cargo. They proceeded eastward to Bali and then returned along the south coast of Java thereby acquiring a more correct impression of the width of the island than had prevailed and laid the ghost of Java's being the northern part of the Southern Continent.the Dutch skipper had enough to show for his venture to inspire the merchants of Amsterdam with a determination to exploit the trade" - Penrose. <br> <br> 2 Neck Jacob Cornelissoon van: LE SECOND LIVRE IOURNAL OU COMPTOIR CONTENANT LE VRAY DISCOURS ET NARRATION HISTORIQUE. Amsterdam: Cornille Nicolas 1609. Two parts. 228 leaves. Titlepages with engraved illustrations twenty-two in-text engravings including one map two in-text woodcuts. <br> <br> Second French edition following the first French edition of 1601. Van Neck who represented the Verre Company commanded three ships which were part of the first successful Dutch trading voyage to the region. The other two ships were commanded by Wybrand Van Warwijck and Jacob Van Heemskerk. Van Neck's vessel became separated from the other two after rounding the Cape of Good Hope and the three did not reunite again until his arrival in Java in late December 1598. Unlike his Dutch predecessor Cornelis Houtman who three years earlier had seized the port of Bantam Van Neck dealt diplomatically with the natives. "Rather than rejecting the inflated prices asked by the local ruler he offered to pay over the odds in order to cement a lasting relationship.Van Neck's was the most profitable of the pre-VOC Dutch East India Company voyages. Despite the apparently high price paid for spices he netted a profit of 300 per cent on his overall costs. In 1601 fourteen fleets comprising sixty-five ships sailed for the East Indies but by that time competition between rival Dutch operators as well as with the Portuguese had inflated prices and none were as successful as Van Neck's first enterprise" - Howgego. While focused on activity in the East Indies EUROPEAN AMERICANA notes the text includes references to Brazil and tobacco from the West Indies. The second part of this 1609 French edition an eight-page appendix of words spoken in Java and Malay includes word lists in French printed in roman type Malay in italic type and Javanese in civilité. <br> <br> Two of the most important of the pioneering French voyages to the Far East bound together as probably issued in this edition. Lodewijcksz: EUROPEAN AMERICANA 609/71. TIELE-MULLER 115. JCB 3II:63. HOWGEGO H105 Houtman. Penrose TRAVEL AND DISCOVERY IN THE RENAISSANCE 1952 p.204. Neck: EUROPEAN AMERICANA 609/93. TIELE 786. TIELE-MULLER 129. HOWGEGO N13. Cornille Nicolas hardcover books
1610WRCAM51636Amsterdam: Cornille Nicolas 1610. Three volumes bound in one. Described in greater detail below. Folio. Contemporary vellum over boards rebacked with original spine preserved. Bookplate on front pastedown. Light soiling and repairs to titlepages; minor soiling otherwise. Very good. Three highly important Dutch voyages all in their second French editions and bound together as issued in 1610. These three voyages represent the initial Dutch exploration and expansion to the East Indies a significant element in a global commercial enterprise which was to develop throughout the 17th century. The foundational accounts in the present volume originally issued together by Amsterdam printer Cornille Nicolas include: <br> <br> 1 Lodewijcksz Willem: PREMIER LIVRE DE L'HISTOIRE DE LA NAVIGATION AUX INDES ORIENTALES PAR LES HOLLANDOIS. Amsterdam: Cornille Nicolas 1609. 53 leaves. Titlepage with engraved map forty-five in-text engravings including three maps seventeen in-text woodcut illustrations and one plate on separate leaf following printed text. Moderate soiling on titlepage slight edge wear to first few leaves. <br> <br> Second French edition following the first French edition of 1598. Lodewijcksz gives an account of the first Dutch expedition to the East Indies under Cornelis Houtman from 1595 to 1597. The information collected by Houtman on the spice trade convinced the Dutch they could compete with Portugal's monopoly in the East Indies and his narrative served to initiate the explosion of Dutch trading at the turn of the century. <br> <br> "Like the English Houtman's men suffered so severely from scurvy that they had to put in at the Cape of Good Hope and at Antongil Bay in Madagascar to recuperate. But they then sailed straight across the Indian Ocean to the Straits of Sunda and dropped anchor at Bantam in Java without the loss of a ship. At this port the center of the Javanese pepper trade a long time was spent. Both natives and Portuguese showed considerable hostility and Houtman and some of his men were imprisoned. However the Dutch succeeded in making a commercial treaty and departed with a good cargo. They proceeded eastward to Bali and then returned along the south coast of Java thereby acquiring a more correct impression of the width of the island than had prevailed and laid the ghost of Java's being the northern part of the Southern Continent.the Dutch skipper had enough to show for his venture to inspire the merchants of Amsterdam with a determination to exploit the trade" - Penrose. <br> <br> 2 Neck Jacob Cornelissoon van: LE SECOND LIVRE IOURNAL OU COMPTOIR CONTENANT LE VRAY DISCOURS ET NARRATION HISTORIQUE. Amsterdam: Cornille Nicolas 1609. Two parts. 224 leaves. Titlepages with engraved illustrations twenty-two in-text engravings including one map two in-text woodcuts. Leaves D2 and D3 lacking provided in facsimile. <br> <br> Second French edition following the first French edition of 1601. Van Neck who represented the Verre Company commanded three ships which were part of the first successful Dutch trading voyage to the region. The other two ships were commanded by Wybrand Van Warwijck and Jacob Van Heemskerk. Van Neck's vessel became separated from the other two after rounding the Cape of Good Hope and the three did not reunite again until his arrival in Java in late December 1598. Unlike his Dutch predecessor Cornelis Houtman who three years earlier had seized the port of Bantam Van Neck dealt diplomatically with the natives. "Rather than rejecting the inflated prices asked by the local ruler he offered to pay over the odds in order to cement a lasting relationship.Van Neck's was the most profitable of the pre-VOC Dutch East India Company voyages. Despite the apparently high price paid for spices he netted a profit of 300 per cent on his overall costs. In 1601 fourteen fleets comprising sixty-five ships sailed for the East Indies but by that time competition between rival Dutch operators as well as with the Portuguese had inflated prices and none were as successful as Van Neck's first enterprise" - Howgego. While focused on activity in the East Indies EUROPEAN AMERICANA notes the text includes references to Brazil and tobacco from the West Indies. The second part of this 1609 French edition an eight-page appendix of words spoken in Java and Malay includes word lists in French printed in roman type Malay in italic type and Javanese in civilité. 3 Noort Olivier van: DESCRIPTION DU PENIBLE VOYAGE FAIT ENTOUR DE L'UNIVERS OV GLOBE TERRESTRE. PAR SR. OLIVIER DU NORT D'UTRECHT GENERAL DE QUATRE NAVIRES ASSAVOIR. Amsterdam: Widow of Cornille Nicolas 1610. 2611pp. Engraved titlepage vignette. Twenty-five in-text engravings including three maps. <br> <br> Second French edition following the first French printing of 1602. Van Noort a former innkeeper in Rotterdam sponsored by a group of Dutch merchants accomplished the fourth circumnavigation of the globe after Magellan Drake and Cavendish. He was the first Dutch explorer to do so making the trip from 1598 to 1601. The voyage was particularly arduous. Half the crew mutinied his ships were constantly harassed and most of those that didn't mutiny perished from disease. He returned to Holland "with only one battered ship and eight crew left although some accounts suggest that forty-five crew survived. His voyage contributed little to the geographical knowledge of the time but had some effect in opening the way to the establishment of the Dutch in the East Indies.Van Noort's achievement however captured the imagination of his countrymen and the published accounts sold well the first appearing only eighteen days after his return. A more complete edition appeared later that year followed by two amended editions in 1602" Howgego. <br> <br> Three of the most important pioneering French voyages to the Far East bound together as issued. Lodewijcksz: EUROPEAN AMERICANA 609/71. TIELE-MULLER 115. JCB 3II:63. HOWGEGO H105 Houtman. Penrose TRAVEL AND DISCOVERY IN THE RENAISSANCE 1952 p.204. Neck: EUROPEAN AMERICANA 609/93. TIELE 786. TIELE-MULLER 129. HOWGEGO N13. Noort: EUROPEAN AMERICANA 610/79. SABIN 55438. BORBA DE MORAES p.617. W. Klooster THE DUTCH IN THE AMERICAS 1600- 1800 p.12. TIELE 806. JCB 3II:71. HOWGEGO N37. Cornille Nicolas hardcover books
1978104306Amsterdam: C. J. Aarts/Amsterdamse Cahiers 1978. 32p. 6.5x8 inches one of 500 copies glossary very good first edition booklet in orange stapled wraps. In English "Jacob Lowland is rumored by some to be the pen name of an American poet who moved to the Netherlands to enjoy the gay life ." - rear wrap. Young 2395. C. J. Aarts/Amsterdamse Cahiers unknown books
1753431381753. Einleitung zum Consistorial-Process Darinnen. Einleitung zum Consistorial-Process Darinnen. Notable German Treatises on Bills of Exchange and Ecclesiastical Law Ludovici Jacob Friederich 1671-1723. Schlitte 1683-1748 Johann Gerhard Editor. Einleitung zum Wechsel-Process Darinnen von Denienienigen Fallen in Welchen Nach Wechsel-Recht Geklagt Werden Kan Gehandelt. Auch wie der Wechsel-Process von dem Sonst in Anderen Sachen Gebrauchlichen Modo Procedendi Abweiche von Stuck zu Stuck Deutlich Gezeiget. Halle: In Verlegung des Waysenhauses 1753. xxiv 420 28 pp. Bound with Einleitung zum Consistorial-Process Darinnen die Solcher Consistorial-Process von dem Sonst in Anderen Sachen Gebrauchlichen Modo Procedendi Abweiche von Stuck zu Stuck Deutlich Gezeiget. Halle: In Verlegung des Waysenhauses 1762. xx 182 14 pp. Quarto 8" x 6-1/2". Contemporary mottled sheep blind frames to boards raised bands lettering piece and gilt ornaments to spine rouged edges marbled endpapers. Rubbing with wear to extremities joints starting at ends scuff to front board. Title page of first work printed in red and black attractive woodcut head-pieces tail-pieces and decorated initials. Light foxing to most of text occasional light browning. Later owner signature to verso of front free endpaper interior otherwise clean. $500. Tenth editions. With indexes. Professor of Law at the University of Halle and an authority on civil law Ludovici was the first jurist to write a legal treatise in German. A prolific author he published works on a wide variety of legal topics. His work is notable for its clarity well-crafted syntheses and elegant prose style. The first title is a comprehensive treatise on the laws and legal procedure relating to bills of exchange. The second title deals with ecclesiastical law and church discipline. Both have notes by Schlitte a Privy Counselor to the Emperor of Prussia. Stintzing/Landsberg Geschichte der Deutschen Rechtswissenschaft III/1:136. unknown books
1926D7966Amsterdam 1926. Paperback. Very Good. Blue wraps; pp. 24 1. Covers lightly rubbed; front cover lightly wrinkled along bottom edge; spine tips lightly chipped. Contents nice and clean. The first use of the typeface Grotius by S. H. de Roos. <br/><br/>"Deze verzameling brieven bewerkt door A. Lysen conservator der bibliotheek van het Vredespaleis met een inleiding van Jacob ter Meulen directeur der bibliotheek van het Vredespaleis werd in verband met de herdenking der eerste uitgave van Hugo de Groot's De Iure belli ac Pacis in de Grotius-letter gedrukt door de Lettergieterij 'Amsterdam' voorheen N. Tetterode Amsterdam 1926" from the colophon. paperback books
1882029518Leiden: E. J. Brill 1882. xix 408p. one facsimile original stiff wrappers chipped on the edges black binder's tape along the spine. E. J. Brill unknown books
194846079New York: R. R. Bowker Company 1948. 1st printing of this issue. Printed paper covers stapled. General wear soiling & age-toning. Some chipping & creasing to rear cover. Ex-lib with stamp to front cover & other such identifiers. About Very Good. 799 - 858 pp. Photographic image of Chicago's 'Booksellers' Row" to front cover. 8vo. 9" x 6" <br/><br/>An early issue of this stalwart publication of the Antiquarian Book Trade published from 1948 - 1967 when it morphed into AB Bookman's Weekly which itself ceased publication in 1999 a victim of the internet. Each published issue documented the ebb & flow of the trade and as such now provide a valuable window into its past operations an attribute today for all practical purposes impossible in this internet age. <br /> <br />Early issues such as this before the Malkins took over the publication are quite uncommon in the trade. R. R. Bowker Company unknown books
1528870011528. MANLIUS DEL BOSCO Johannes Jacobus et al. LUMINARE MAIUS. Opus eximium quod Luminare Maius dicitur Medicis et Aromatariis perquam necessarium A Greater Lamp for Physicians and Apothecaries. Lyons: Printed by Antonio Blanchard for Louis Martin 1528. Quarto. 1-8 I-LXILXII -LXIV; I-XXVI; I-XXX I ff. This volume contains three separate works: The first Luminare Maius A Greater Lamp for Physicians by J.J Manlius del Bosco contains 11 sections on concocting different forms of medication: pills unguents plasters oils etc. 8 LXIV ff. It was first published in Milan 1494. The second Lumen Apothecariorum A Light for Apothecaries by Quiricus de Augustis of Tortona XXVI ff. intended for the use of pharmacists was first published in Turin in 1492. The third Thesaurus Aromaticum by Paul Suardo. I-XXXI ff. Originally printed in Milan in 1496 it lists medical substances alphabetically. All three Italian treatises from the 1490s are conveniently gathered together and beautifully printed here in one volume. Title-page in red and black with ornamental woodcut border and framed printer's device of two unicorns. Woodcut capital showing Saint Lawrence and foliate woodcut capitals throughout. Internally fine in 19th Century half-morocco showing only a few spots of rubbing. Wellcome I 4017. Rare. unknown books
1973112204Ramat Gan Israel: Bar-Ilan University 1973. Hardbound. Good with only general shelf wear. Green boards with cream and green dj with green lettering; 260 pp. plus 64 pp. with 40 bw photographs. The main text 260 pp. is printed back-to-front in Hebrew with part of the text in Arabic along with English transliterations and pronunciations of a few words. The remainder of the book the 64 pp. in the "front" part is in English. The book is a series of essays and some simply are written in Hebrew and some in English. None are in both languages. A very enlightening book. Bar-Ilan University hardcover books
1824531York County Pennsylvania 1824. Oblong 12mo. 88 pp. Contemporary calf backed wall-paper covered boards; binding rubbed at edges with minor loss of paper and leather otherwise very good. Eichelberger's account book contains a list of expenses as well as income relating to the Eichelberger farm. Entries are organized chronologically and list the item received or service performed as well as the price paid for the item or service. Eichelberger listed prices in both dollars and pounds. Typical expenses include the hiring of farm hands food often dried pork county taxes and the digging of a well. Eichelberger records far more income than expenses. He sold a number of items including wheat apples beef rye and animal fat. Eichelberger provided board to a widow by the name of Miller. Perhaps the most interesting sources of Eichelberger's income are the animals he sold. Between 1806 and 1809 Eichelberger records the sale of 86 horses accounting for the vast majority of his income during those years. He also records the sale of a few steer sheep and hogs but never in quantities as great as the horses. Several pages of the book record Eichelberger's duties as the executor of the will of his father George Allen Eichelberger. These entries list the name of the beneficiary the amount of the estate granted them and the date on which the transaction took place. The final entry in the book which is chronologically out of place and dated 1807 records Eichelberger's activities following the death of his father such as traveling to Carlisle for the reading of the will and appraisal of the estate. Curiously the entries in which the estate is divided among the beneficiaries are dated between 1824 and 1825--seventeen years after the initial reading of the will. This hints at the protracted probate disputes and complications involved in executing a will in the early nineteenth century. Also of note in this book is the inexplicable changes in the way Eichelberger spelled his name. In the earliest entries of the book it is spelled "Echelberger" then appears as "Eichelberger" and finally beginning around 1810 appears as "Higleberger". While the record book mentions no place names other than Carlisle a prosperous farm family by the name of Eichelberger resided in York County Pennsylvania for many years in the eighteenth century. It is very likely that Jacob was a member of this Pennsylvania-German family. unknown books
1950D6311c. 1950. Fine. Four heavy cardstock leaves about 17x14.5 inches bound with white and gold ribbon. Front board a little dust-soiled otherwise fine. A lavish and lovely re-telling of the Grimms' classic remarkable for the obvious care and time that went into it's production as well as the skill of the artist. Each page is beautifully illustrated in ink and gouache with elaborate floral motifs fairies toads and toadstools spider-webs and of course a prince and princess -- and the handwriting is equally ornate. Unique. <br/><br/> unknown books
190016423Leipzig: Johann Ambrosius Barth 1900. unbound. very good. 34 pags. Slim 8vo stitched modern wrappers. Leipzig 1900. Ex-lib stamp still a very good copy.<br/><br/> The noted German pathologist's essay on the reaction of the body's immune system to inflammation. Inaugural lecture at Leipzig.<br/><br/> Johann Ambrosius Barth unknown books
1947UMARCOM00VJHebrew Union College Press 1947. Very Good. Marcus Jacob R. Communal Sick-Care in the German Ghetto. Cincinnati: Hebrew Union College Press 1947. 335pp. 8vo. Cloth. Book condition: Very good. Light rubbing to extremities. Occasional pencil marking. Hebrew Union College Press hardcover books
1981194206New Y & Cincinnati: KTAV Pub. House & American Jewish Archives 1981. Hardcover. Two volumes 231p. & 1047p. front hinge badly cracked on second volume otherwise sound set good-looking clean first editions in red cloth and unclipped lightly-worn djs. Second volume is a massive and extensive collection of documents presented in chronological order. KTAV Pub. House & American Jewish Archives hardcover books
1946212254New York: American Jewish Committee 1946. 16p. staplebound pamphlet foxing on lower portion of front cover and along spinefold. A brief history of Judaism in the US from the 18th century to the then-new wave of refugees from Nazism. American Jewish Committee unknown books
197611657Cornell University Press 1976. A solid copy of the 1976 1st edition. Tight and Near Fine small tasteful bookplate at the front pastedown in a bright Near Fine dustjacket with very light creasing along the spine crown. Octavo 288 pgs. <br/><br/> Cornell University Press unknown books
179235774Leipzig: in Johann Friedrich Gleditschens Handlung 1792. ZINCKE Georg Heinrich. Thick octavo. Full pigskin with decorative tooling. 1f. title 8 Vorbericht . 1712 4 Vorrede . 1776 2 Errinnerung zu dieser neuen Ausgabe 16 Verzeichnis der Bücher 2492 columns. Title printed in red and black. Untrimmed. <br/><br/>Ownership mark in ink to foot of title; remnants of handstamp to verso. <br/><br/>Binding slightly worn soiled and bumped. Light browning and foxing throughout. 14th edition the last printed.<br/><br/>Johann Hübner 1668-1731 was a German geographer and noted pedagogue. He wrote only the preface to the first edition of Curieuses Natur-Kunst-Gewerck- und Handlungs-Lexicon 1712 but his name became associated with the encyclopedia for future editions compiled primarily by Marperger. The 1746 edition was expanded by Georg Heinrich Zincke 1692-1769 and then continually expanded by the publisher. in Johann Friedrich Gleditschens Handlung unknown books
65562Small oblong notebook bound in full calf with a metal clasp. 10 x 16 cm. approx. 164 pp. Spine perished wear and soiling to boards front board lettered by hand with Jacob Marsh's name. The entries from March 15 1821 to June 1 1823 record the dates of Marsh's trips once or twice a month to New York City to deliver bricks to as many as a dozen customers each trip plus the quantities of bricks purchased. Customers included: Henry Moore Dominic Westerfield Wm. Post Samuel Parker Gideon Peck Henry Bullwinkle John Scudder Avery & Anderson Vandenburgh & Freeman etc. etc. Capt. Marsh also delivered bricks produced by Benjamin and Samuel Marsh Aron Miller Thomas Marsh and Caleb Hotstedd. A few pages at the back of the ledger record dos-a-dos supplies for outfitting Capt. Marsh's sloop the Essex payments to crew duane sic- douane slips wharfage and repairs etc. Rahway New Jersey was founded by settlers of nearby Elizabethtown and Woodbridge in the early 18th century. The area around Woodbridge was known for its "easily accessible sedimentary clay that produced fire brick capable of withstanding extremely high temperatures" making them much in demand as building materials. A number of brick factories were located in this area. Rahway on the Rahway River allowed for easy access to the markets of New York City and Brooklyn. These accounts are an example of that early trade. see: Virginia Troeger's "Woodbridge: New Jersey's Oldest Township" Arcadia Pub.: 2002 for further record <br/>The extended members of the Marsh family who settled in Rahway included John Marsh who built a saw mill and grist mill along the river in the early 1700s and died at his home at Trembly Point on the Rahway River in 1744. <br/>Capt. Jacob Marsh who kept these accounts is likely a member of this extended family. Presumably he is Jacob Marsh 1797-1832 son of John 1772-1830 and Mary Hendricks Marsh. Jacob married Mary Ann Coddington 1802-1877 in 1819. There is a small receipt pinned into the front of this ledger dated May 8 1843 recording that Mary Ann Marsh received $6.51 "in full of all demand up to this date for John Trembly." <br/><br/> hardcover books
181515006Paris: Frey PN 490 1815. Folio. Contemporary green vellum boards. 1f. title 1 blank 2-35; 2-16 with plate no. 490A; 1 blank 2-20 with plate no. 490B pp. <br/><br/>Binding worn and warped; joints split. Minor foxing and browning; tears repaired to pp. 17/18 with slight loss of printed area; occasional pencil markings. Scarce. <br/><br/>Martinn was a violinist at the Opera Italien in Paris and violin professor at the Lycee Charlemagne. Frey [PN 490] unknown books
180625769Paris: Pleyel PN 364 1806. Folio. Disbound. Violino primo: 1f. title 1 blank 2-4 i blank 6-14 i blank 16-17 i blank pp.; Violino secondo: 1 title 2-4 i blank 6-13 i blank pp.; Alto viola: 1 title 2-4 i blank 6-8 i blank 10-12 pp.; Basso: 1 title 2-4 i blank 6-8 i blank 10-12 pp. Engraved. Publisher's handstamp signature style to lower right corner of title of Violino primo part.<br/><br/>"Martin" handstamped to outer margin of Violino Primo part; "Ma" handstamped to outer margin of other parts; measure numbers added in pencil in a modern hand throughout.<br/><br/>Slightly browned and with other very minor defects. A very good copy overall. An early edition probably a reprint of the first. Fétis 6 p. 10 publisher listed as "Pleyel". Not in RISM. WorldCat 1 copy only with the Pleyel imprint at the Eastman School of Music. Other copies apparently otherwise identical carry the imprints "l'Auteur" or "aux adresses ordinaires." It would appear that the Pleyel imprint is later. The present copy is dated according to publisher's address see Devriès-Lesure I p. 128; the plate number would suggest 1801 but this date most probably refers to Pleyel's first issue.<br/><br/>Jacob-Joseph-Balthasar Martinn Martin born in Antwerp was a violinist and composer active in Paris. Pleyel [PN 364] unknown books
200945597Berkeley: University of California Press 2009. Hardcover. Very good. 276pp index. Small black marks to top edge of textblock else a very good hardback bound in publisher's illustrated boards and issued without a jacket. <br/><br/> University of California Press hardcover books
1978126494Braunschweig Germany: Waisenhaus-Buchdruckerei 1978. leather leather spine label slipcase. 8vo. leather leather spine label slipcase. 72 pages. Text in German. Limited to 350 numbered volumes 20 bound in leather and numbered with Roman numerals. This copy is thus. Introductory comments afterword. The 25th volume published by the Bibliophiles Association of Braunschweig. Four one-act plays by Jacob Mauvillon first published in Leipzig 1785. Waisenhaus-Buchdruckerei unknown books