26 503 résultats
177110865Leyden Johannes le Mair en Abraham Kallewier/ Leiden T. Koet 1771-1777. 74 3 8 62 8 14 1 7 1 8 15 7 30 p. Origineel goud-bestempeld Leer met ribben 8° Een bundel met zeldzame werken van en over de predikant en geliefd hoogleraar Nicolaas Hoogvliet 1729-1777. De laatste 30 pagina's bevatten diverse lijkdichten in een fraai oud handschrift overgenomen uit andere publicaties. Leyden, Johannes le Mair en Abraham Kallewier/ Leiden, T. Koet unknown
1983Q-019316308XOxford University Press 1983-02-24. Hardcover. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Oxford University Press hardcover
15843014<p>Map. Paper size: 422 x 530 mm. Image size: 330 x 465 mm. 16th century map in original hand-coloring. Decorative polychrome cartouche and compass rose. Depicts bodies of water heights and towns/cities. Latin text to verso. Van den Broecke 2nd ed. 1584 L3.; 422 x 530 mm.; All shipments through USPS insured Priority Mail.</p> Abraham Ortelius
196727463HEYNE WILHELM 1967. 1. softcover. Dracula HEYNE, WILHELM paperback
1719014625Paris 1719. Map measures 46x40.cm. Map in very good clean condition. . Very Good. unknown
1590003611Belgico Antwerp: Abraham Ortelius 1590. No Binding. Very Good. Elephant Folio - over 15" - 23" tall. ORTELIUS Abraham. VG 1590 B&W Map of the Black Sea Coast. 50 35.5 the Map 54 44.5 cm map including margins. Latin Text to verso of 1 side p xxvii. No pin holes inscriptions etc very light edge browning. Includes part of Ukraine Russia Georgia Bulgaria Romania and Turkey. Belongs to a series of historical maps known as the Parergon Theatri from 1579 onwards. Tooley's Dictionary of Mapmaker Early World Press 2004 p358-359 Marcel P. R. van den Broecke Ortelius Atlas Maps HES Publishers 2011 p633. <br/> <br/> Abraham Ortelius unknown
16248000Antwerp: Plantin-Moretus 1624. Copper engraving 36 x 46 cms modern hand colour Latin text on verso. Ancient Dacia and Moesia modern Romania and Bulgaria on the Black Sea. Our example was published by Balthasar Moretus at the Plantin Press in the final edition of the Parergon. Ortelius's Theatrum Orbis Terrarum is generally considered the first modern atlas of the world originally published in 1570. Ortelius gathered and selected the best available cartographic knowledge and presented it in a single volume duly credited and finely engraved in a consistent style with explanatory text. The Theatrum was very decorative and hugely popular amongst the wealthy and educated running into over forty editions in Latin and the major European languages. For Ortelius himself however his accompanying atlas of ancient geography the Parergon was a "personal work" Koeman. He seems to have regarded himself first and foremost as an antiquary and rather than copying other people's maps he drew the originals himself; they were subsequently engraved for him by the master engraver Jan Wierix. The results have to be evaluated as the most outstanding engravings depicting the wide-spread interest in classical geography in the 16th century Koeman. Koeman Atlantes Neerlandici Ort 46. Van den Broecke 212.2 Map Plantin-Moretus unknown
16247933Antwerp: Plantin-Moretus 1624. Copper engraving 36.5 x 46.5 cms modern hand colour a couple of unobtrusive printers creases Latin text on verso. Ancient Gaul engraved on the basis of Caesars commentaries on the Gallic Wars his first hand account of the campaign. The text on the verso explores ancient source material relating the the druids. Our example was published by Balthasar Moretus at the Plantin Press in the final edition of the Parergon. Ortelius's Theatrum Orbis Terrarum is generally considered the first modern atlas of the world originally published in 1570. Ortelius gathered and selected the best available cartographic knowledge and presented it in a single volume duly credited and finely engraved in a consistent style with explanatory text. The Theatrum was very decorative and hugely popular amongst the wealthy and educated running into over forty editions in Latin and the major European languages. For Ortelius himself however his accompanying atlas of ancient geography the Parergon was a "personal work" Koeman. He seems to have regarded himself first and foremost as an antiquary and rather than copying other people's maps he drew the originals himself; they were subsequently engraved for him by the master engraver Jan Wierix. The results have to be evaluated as the most outstanding engravings depicting the wide-spread interest in classical geography in the 16th century Koeman. Koeman Atlantes Neerlandici Ort 46. Van den Broecke 194.3 Map Plantin-Moretus unknown
16248029Antwerp: Plantin-Moretus 1624. Copper engraving 39.5 x 49.5 cms modern hand colour Latin text on verso. Van den Broecke stresses the sigificance of this map of Gaul: in contrast to plate Ort 194 Gallia vetus based on Caesars commentaries this map is based on ancient geographical rather than on ancient military sources and is much more detailed. It contains the largest amount of text to be found on any map by Ortelius . testifying the importance he attached to it. It contains all elements of Ortelius as a true Renaissance scholar. Our example was published by Balthasar Moretus at the Plantin Press in the final edition of the Parergon. Ortelius's Theatrum Orbis Terrarum is generally considered the first modern atlas of the world originally published in 1570. Ortelius gathered and selected the best available cartographic knowledge and presented it in a single volume duly credited and finely engraved in a consistent style with explanatory text. The Theatrum was very decorative and hugely popular amongst the wealthy and educated running into over forty editions in Latin and the major European languages. For Ortelius himself however his accompanying atlas of ancient geography the Parergon was a "personal work" Koeman. He seems to have regarded himself first and foremost as an antiquary and rather than copying other people's maps he drew the originals himself; they were subsequently engraved for him by the master engraver Jan Wierix. The results have to be evaluated as the most outstanding engravings depicting the wide-spread interest in classical geography in the 16th century Koeman. Koeman Atlantes Neerlandici Ort 46; Van den Broecke 196.2. Map Plantin-Moretus unknown
15957641Antwerp Plantin-Moretus 1595. Copper engraving 36.5 x 51 cms black and white Latin text on verso. First published in the 1570 edition of the Theatrum Christiaan Sgrothen is cited as the principal source. Ortelius's Theatrum Orbis Terrarum is generally considered the first modern atlas of the world originally published in 1570. Ortelius gathered the best available cartographic knowledge and presented it in a consistent style in a single volume with text. The Theatrum was very decorative and hugely popular amongst the wealthy and educated running into over forty editions in Latin and the major European languages. Van den Broecke 56 Map unknown
16247958Antwerp: Plantin-Moretus 1624. Copper engraving 32.5 x 48 cms modern hand colour Latin text on verso. Latium the hinterland of ancient Rome. Van den Broecke notes a minor change in nomenclature which was made for the 1624 edition 209.3 which is not present here although our example was published by Balthasar Moretus at the Plantin Press in the final edition of the Parergon. Ortelius's Theatrum Orbis Terrarum is generally considered the first modern atlas of the world originally published in 1570. Ortelius gathered and selected the best available cartographic knowledge and presented it in a single volume duly credited and finely engraved in a consistent style with explanatory text. The Theatrum was very decorative and hugely popular amongst the wealthy and educated running into over forty editions in Latin and the major European languages. For Ortelius himself however his accompanying atlas of ancient geography the Parergon was a "personal work" Koeman. He seems to have regarded himself first and foremost as an antiquary and rather than copying other people's maps he drew the originals himself; they were subsequently engraved for him by the master engraver Jan Wierix. The results have to be evaluated as the most outstanding engravings depicting the wide-spread interest in classical geography in the 16th century Koeman. Koeman Atlantes Neerlandici Ort 46. Van den Broecke 209.2 Map Plantin-Moretus unknown
16247957Antwerp: Plantin-Moretus 1624. Copper engraving 36 x 46 cms modern hand colour Latin text on verso. The Dalmatian coast in antiquity. Our example was published by Balthasar Moretus at the Plantin Press in the final edition of the Parergon. Ortelius's Theatrum Orbis Terrarum is generally considered the first modern atlas of the world originally published in 1570. Ortelius gathered and selected the best available cartographic knowledge and presented it in a single volume duly credited and finely engraved in a consistent style with explanatory text. The Theatrum was very decorative and hugely popular amongst the wealthy and educated running into over forty editions in Latin and the major European languages. For Ortelius himself however his accompanying atlas of ancient geography the Parergon was a "personal work" Koeman. He seems to have regarded himself first and foremost as an antiquary and rather than copying other people's maps he drew the originals himself; they were subsequently engraved for him by the master engraver Jan Wierix. The results have to be evaluated as the most outstanding engravings depicting the wide-spread interest in classical geography in the 16th century Koeman. Koeman Atlantes Neerlandici Ort 46. Van den Broecke 203.1 Map Plantin-Moretus unknown
15958231Antwerp Plantin-Moretus 1595. Copper engraving 33 x 46 cms modern hand-colour Latin text on verso. Ortelius map of the western Balkans drew on the cartography of Augustin Hirschvogel. Van den Broecke 145.3 Map unknown
16247932Antwerp: Plantin-Moretus 1624. Copper engraving 36 x 48 cms modern hand colour Latin text on verso. Ancient Thrace extending from Macedonia to Byzantium following the cartography of Gastaldi supplemented by information from classical sources including Herodotus Strabo and Pliny. Our example was published by Balthasar Moretus at the Plantin Press in the final edition of the Parergon. Ortelius's Theatrum Orbis Terrarum is generally considered the first modern atlas of the world originally published in 1570. Ortelius gathered and selected the best available cartographic knowledge and presented it in a single volume duly credited and finely engraved in a consistent style with explanatory text. The Theatrum was very decorative and hugely popular amongst the wealthy and educated running into over forty editions in Latin and the major European languages. For Ortelius himself however his accompanying atlas of ancient geography the Parergon was a "personal work" Koeman. He seems to have regarded himself first and foremost as an antiquary and rather than copying other people's maps he drew the originals himself; they were subsequently engraved for him by the master engraver Jan Wierix. The results have to be evaluated as the most outstanding engravings depicting the wide-spread interest in classical geography in the 16th century Koeman. Koeman Atlantes Neerlandici Ort 46. Van den Broecke 214.2 Map Plantin-Moretus unknown
2021DBS-9781788824859MEDPLUS 2021. 1st. Hardcover. New. MEDPLUS hardcover
2021DBS-9781788824859MEDPLUS 2021. 1st. Hardcover. New. MEDPLUS hardcover
__3111063712De Gruyter 1900. Hardcover. New. 3rd edition. 1592 pages. German language. 9.05x6.10x0.16 inches. De Gruyter hardcover
1793007662Philadelphia: Benjamin Johnson 1793. Paperback. Good. 36 p.: illustration; 17 cm. Stitched. Wrapper included in page count. Woodcut illustration of "The Anatomy of Man's Body as governed by the Twelve Constellations." "David Jenkins" written in the margin of one page. Not in Early American Imprints or Morrison's Preliminary Check List of American Almanacs. One copy in WorldCat. This appears to be the earliest of the many almanacs for which Abraham Shoemaker provided calculations. Very scarce. In Good Condition: restitched at some point; loss at edges of front wrapper; old dampstaining heaviest on back wrapper and preceding leaf; loss at lower edge of back wrapper without loss of text; minor ink marks in a few margins; corners creased. Benjamin Johnson paperback
19931London: Frederick Farrah. 1865. First edition first printing. First edition first printing. Publisher's original printed paper wrappers. 48pp. A very good copy the binding firm with some toning to the spine. The contents with a few occasional dots of foxing and the odd minor mark to the margins are otherwise clean throughout and remain free from any previous owners' inscriptions or stamps. A scarce British publication celebrating the wit and wisdom of President Abraham Lincoln published shortly after his assassination on 14th April 1865. Beginning with a brief overview of his life the work comprises a wide ranging collection of humorous anecdotes and stories attributable to Lincoln including several relating to the Civil War and emancipation. Quite a number appear specific and plausible others less so: "'How old is that tree Abe' said a friend of the now President when the latter was engaged in the occupation of rail-splitting. 'Well I am not sure; but I am just about to axe him'". Seldom seen in commerce with no copies appearing in auction/catalogue records since 1966. Further details and images for any of the items listed are available on request. Lucius Books welcomes direct contact with our customers. London: Frederick Farrah. 1865 unknown
1997Q-0471193100Wiley-Interscience 1997-11-10. Hardcover. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Wiley-Interscience hardcover
20112-0444546170Elsevier Science 2011. Paperback. New. 624 pages. 9.25x6.00x1.41 inches. Elsevier Science paperback
1986JU-20Boulder CO.: Westview Press 1986. Comprehensive 9000-item bibliography of English-language materials on the Holocaust. Its scope is much wider than all previous similar publications. It includes an author index introductory essays scholarly studies contemporary newspaper reports eyewitness testimonies memoirs documentaries and annotations important books. The Edelheits' bibliography is a product of ten years of intensive research and is considered the standard work in the field. 842 pgs. Includes the authors' Supplement Volume I ISBN 0813308968 Published in 1990 which contains 6500 new entries including new sections on significant Holocaust-related novels and short stories; reviews of Holocaust literature drama poetry and the arts; and material on the Bitburg controversy. 684 pgs. Supplement Volume II ISBN 0813314127 Published in 1993 which contains 3870 new entries including a new section on Soviet antisemitism and an expanded section on neo-nazism and neo-fascism. 564 pgs. Both supplement volumes include contemporary reports eyewitness testimonies and scholarly interpretations in the form of books pamphlets and periodicals many of which have never before been cited in any reference work. Publisher's stamp on the front endpaper of all three volumes. Scarce. First Edition. Hard Cover. Fine. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Westview Press Hardcover
199031352Scolar Press 1990. First edition. Hardbound in fine condition in fine dust jacket. xi 364 pages. Scolar Press unknown
SLIVCN-9781536164053NOVA SCIENCE PUBLISHERS INC (9/2019)
SLIVCN-9781634631686NOVA SCIENCE PUBLISHERS INC (12/2014)