112 résultats
173931428A Cologne, aux dépens de la Compagnie, 1739. PREMIERE EDITION. Petit in-8 relié (17,3 x 9,5 cm), reliure d'époque plein veau, richement orné de motifs ornés sur le dos et les plats à larges encadrements, toutes tranches dorées, IV-884 pages. Pas de page de garde, titre-frontispice gravé par Yrer d'après un dessin de Picart, coin supérieur de la page restauré. Texte imprimé en petit caractères sur deux colonnes. Traduction de Nicolas Le Gros (1675-1751), théologien et polémiste janséniste, réfugié en Hollande à partir de 1726.- Bel exemplaire frais, belle reliure du XVIIIe parfaitement conservée.
164710933Paris, Boullanger [Boulanger], 1647. 12° (15-18,5 cm). 12 Bll., 876 S., 25 Bll., [1], 4 Bll. Ganzleder der Zeit über vier echten Bünden mit vergoldeter Deckelverzierung
156237346Lugduni Lyons: apud Theobaldum Paganum 1562. 16mo 11.5 cm; 4.5". 284 pp. <br><br>16th-century printers seem to have been fond of printing these particular books of the Bible as a unit in small format for personal use. The palm-sized "poetical books" or "wisdom literature" do not survive in the appreciable numbers that the octavo and larger format whole Bibles or Testaments do. => In fact of this edition in North American libraries we trace only this now deaccessioned copy and one other in a Canadian institution.<br>Â Â Â Â Pagan's variant of the famous Estienne printer's device appears on the title-page. Text is printed in roman type with occasional use of italic and Hebrew and a few nice historiated initials here and there. Early limp vellum dust-soiled and gently cocked. Exseminary library with rubber-stamp on bottom edge of closed volume others on front and rear pastedowns bookplate at front shadows of librarian's pencilling erased from title and verso. Light age-toning small chipping to first and last few leaves light inking on verso of front fly-leaf. apud Theobaldum Paganum hardcover books
1714ALDR0672SchwNürnberg, Endter 1714. 4°. Gest. Frontispiz, Titel rot u. schwarz gedruckt, 8 Bl., 509; 520 Seiten, mit vielen gest. Initialen u. Illustrationen von Cornelius Nicola SCHURTZ einige Zierstücke u. Init. in Holzschnitt, neuerer Ganzlederband auf 5 Bünden, mit Rückenschild u. Streicheisenverz., sehr gut erhalten, im Text etwas gebräunt, jedoch fleckenfrei und breitrandig.
166221448Paris, Pierre le Petit, 1662 ; in-12, velin ivoire de l’époque, titre manuscrit au dos; [8], 417 pp.
2012L1 box148 a7<p>The Knox Bible - The Holy Bible Knox Version. Translated from the Latin Vulgate by Msgr Ronald Knox. 2012 Baronius Press Ltd. This edition has been re-typeset using the text of the 1963 edition originally published by Burns & Oats Ltd and Macmillan & Co Ltd. Black leather hardcover gilt edges ribbon markers xii1113 pp OT343 pp NT.</p> Baronius Press Ltd. hardcover
110676Paris, Beltrand, 1929, 1 volume in-folio de 368x265 mm environ, 2ff.blancs, 5ff. (justificatif de tirage, faux-titre, titre), vii-51 pages, 2ff.blancs, en feuillets sous chemise et chemise-étui fermée par des liens. Exemplaire N° 176/200, tirage limité à 200 exemplaires sur les Presses à bras de Jacques Beltrand par Marcel Lacou, Emile Lainé & Marcel Vaganay, illustré de 29 magnifiques gouaches en couleurs de Maurice Denis gravées sur bois par Jacques Beltrand. Chemises et tranches insolées, quelques rousseurs et pages brunies, chemise-étui insolée avec mors en partie fendus, sinon bon état.
4741Paris, Firmin Didot Frères, s.d. Un volume grand in-8 demi maroquin prune à coins, dos à nerfs dos à nerfs orné, titre doré, double filets dorés sur les plats, tranches dorées, édition de luxe, [1f.]frontispice, [1f.]titre, XXXI+546+73pp., frises en encadrement du texte, lettrines, illustrations à pleine page. Bel exemplaire .
1748012869Sumpt. Haered. Balthasaris Ab Egmont, & Sociorum, Coloniae Agrippinae ( Köln ) 1748. Goldgeprägter Ganzlederband Solide, Altersschön
170221066Paris Dezallier 1702 -in-4 plein-maroquin 1 volume comportant 2 tomes reliés ensemble , reliure d'époque plein maroquin noir petit in-quarto (binding full calfskin in-4) (26,5 x 20 cm), dos à nerfs (spine with raised bands), décoré or et à froid (gilt and blind stamping decoration), titre frappé "or" (gilt title) avec filet à froid de part et d'autre, un filet à froid de part et d'autre des nerfs et en tête et en pied, léger accident à la coiffe supérieure, mors haut du 1er plat fendu sur 2 cm, plats décorés à froid d'un filet à froid en encadrement, épidermure au 1er plat, coins écornés, toutes tranches lisses jaspées rouges, les pages de garde manquent, Texte en latin à colonnes et manchettes, orné d'une gravure en bas de la page de titre : "Marque de l'Editeur A. Vitré", gravée sur bois en noir + de trés nombreuses lettrines historiées gravées sur bois en noir, traces de mouillures claires en marge des dernières pages, [8]-XX-624-512-114-[1] Pages, M.DCCII (1702) Parisiis, excudebat Antonius Vitré. Apud Antonium Dezallier Editeur,
167041594Coloniæ Agrippinæ Cologne Germany: Sumptibus Balthasaris ab Egmond & Sociorum. 1670. Hardcover. Very Good. 24mo; 81 119 pages; Contemporary full polished tan calf with five raised bands on the spine there is a red morocco label lettered in gilt "BIBLIA SACR" in the second panel. The central panel directly under the label has gilt tooling directly stamped reading: "T. 5." sic for "6". The other panels have elaborate gilt floral tooling the covers are framed with a single rule fin gilt marbled endpapers edges decoratively stained red. With a superb engraved armorial bookplate mounted to the front free endpaper -- a nine-point coronet surmounting a pear-shaped shield which contains a loop of rope surrounded by three stars and a crescent moon at the top. This excellent plate has no name no date and no identification of engraver. The binding is entirely consistent with the period of this 1670 book. The fine bookplate is in the Rococo style often denoted Louis XIV with no straight lines an elegantly curved pear-form to the heraldic shield and even the coronet atop the shield is at a slightly jaunty angle. This plate while unidentified is worth further study. In all a wonderful copy beautifullly preserved of the final volume of a miniature edition of the Sixto-Clementine Vulgate Latin version of the Bible 'Biblia Sacra Vulgatæ Editionis Sixti Quinti Pontificis Maximi iussu recognita atque edita' . This edition resembles but is slightly larger than the miniature edition published at Cologne in 1638-1639. Our volume is the final volume in the 1670 miniature set; these three Biblical texts form an appropriate end to the set as Clement VIII removed 3 and 4 Esdras and the Prayer of Manasses from the Old Testament and placed them as Apocrypha into an appendix following the New Testament -- "ne prorsus interirent" "lest they utterly perish". The first text the "Prayer of Manasses" is brief -- 15 verses of the penitential prayer of king Manasseh of Judah; occupying page 3 and half of page 4 only. "3 Esdras" -- called 1 Esdras in the King James Bible was extensively quoted by early Christian authors and it ws given a place in Origen's Hexapla. While it was not included in early canons of the Western Church it remains part of the Eastern Orthodox canon. "4 Esdras" is considered one of the gems of Jewish apocalyptic literature. It is canonical only in the Orthodox Slavonic Bible and a portion is part of the canon of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. Like 3 Esdras it is widely cited by early church Fathers particularly Ambrose of Milan. Its verses provided sources for several liturgical prayers and may have suggested the text of the Introitus of the traditional Catholic Requiem Mass -- "Eternal rest grant unto them O Lord and let perpetual light shine upon them." These three texts preserved by Clement VIII are followed by an unpaginated index to the Biblical texts "cum indice Bibliorum triplici" -- specifically "Index Testimoniorvm a Christo et Apostolis in novo Testamento"; "Hebraicorvm Chaldæorvm Græcorvmqve Nominum interpretatio"; and "Index Biblicvs.". See Darlow & Moule no. 6239. Indeed the Bible Society copy deposited in Cambridge University is the only complete set I can find recorded of the full six volumes of this 1670 set. The Cambridge/Bible Society set is carefully described by an excellent catalogue entry available online with a Newton search which makes clear that our volume VI is the only one of the set not to have an additional engraved title-page before the text running title: "Pentateuchum Moysi". The other distinction is that this final volume is the only one to omit the Parisian portion of the imprint found in the other volumes "Parisiis : Væneunt apud Fr. Leonard". See OCLC Number: 265388382; Univ. Cambridge & Catholic Univ. of America but note that Catholic Univ. has only volume one. There are copies of volume VI like ours unaccompanied by others of the set of six at: Cleveland Public Library; Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen; Biblioteca Diocesana Tridentina "A. Rosmini" Trento Italy; and the Bibliothèque Mazarine Paris. A rare and fascinating appendix to the fine miniature set of the Sixtus-Clementine Vulgate -- which has elegantly encouraged owners for three and a half centuries to fulfill Clement VIII's wish that these books not "utterly perish." . Sumptibus Balthasaris ab Egmond & Sociorum hardcover
1740139961Parisiis, typis Jacobi Vincent, viâ S. Severini, sub signo Angeli. M.DCC.XL. Cum approbatione & privilegio Regis. 1740 2 volumes. In-32 12 x 6 cm. Reliures de l’époque maroquin grenat, dos lisses ornés de fers dorés, plats encadrés d’un triple filet doré, contreplats encadrés de roulette dorée, pages de gardes dominotées, vignette au titre, 661 pp. en pagination continue, index epistolarum et evangeliorum. Plats et contreplats brunis.
2013519932013. ISBN-13: 9781584777823. ISBN-10: 1584777826. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii vii-xii new introduction 2 685 70 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME I: ISBN-13: 9781584777823. ISBN-10: 1584777826. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME I ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Vol. I of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed series continues to. unknown
2013519962013. ISBN-13: 9781584777830. ISBN-10: 1584777834. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii vii-xii new introduction various paginations total 586 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME II: ISBN-13: 9781584777830. ISBN-10: 1584777834. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME II ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Volume II of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the. unknown
2013519992013. ISBN-13: 9781584777861. ISBN-10: 1584777869. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xi vii-xi new introduction various paginations 374 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME V: ISBN-13: 9781584777861. ISBN-10: 1584777869. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME V ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Vol. V of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed seri. unknown
2013520052013. ISBN-13: 9781584777922. ISBN-10: 1584777923. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xiv vii-xiv new introduction various paginations 630 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME XI: ISBN-13: 9781584777922. ISBN-10: 1584777923. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME XI ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Vol. XI of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed series. unknown
2013520032013. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii vii-xii new introduction various paginations 642 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME IX: ISBN-13: 9781584777908. ISBN-10: 1584777907. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME IX ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Vol. IX of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed. unknown
2013520012013. ISBN-13: 9781584777885. ISBN-10: 1584777885. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii vii-xii new introduction various paginations 580 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME VII: ISBN-13: 9781584777885. ISBN-10: 1584777885. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME VII ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Vol. VII of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the prin. unknown
2013519972013. ISBN-13: 9781584777847. ISBN-10: 1584777842. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii vii-xii new introduction various paginations 558 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME III: ISBN-13: 9781584777847. ISBN-10: 1584777842. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME III ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Volume III of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the pr. unknown
2013519982013. ISBN-13: 9781584777854. ISBN-10: 158477785. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xi vii-xi new introduction various paginations 402 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME IV: ISBN-13: 9781584777854. ISBN-10: 1584777850. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME IV ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Vol. IV of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed s. unknown
2013520042013. ISBN-13: 9781584777915. ISBN-10: 1584777915. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. x vii-x new introduction various paginations 160 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME X: ISBN-13: 9781584777915. ISBN-10: 1584777915. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME X ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Vol. X of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed series. unknown
2013520022013. ISBN-13: 9781584777892. ISBN-10: 1584777893. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii vii-xii new introduction various paginations 644 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME VIII: ISBN-13: 9781584777892. ISBN-10: 1584777893. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME VIII ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Vol. VIII of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the p. unknown
2013520002013. ISBN-13: 9781584777878. ISBN-10: 1584777877. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii vii-xii new introduction various paginations 434 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME VI: ISBN-13: 9781584777878. ISBN-10: 1584777877. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME VI ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Vol. VI of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed. unknown
2013519992013. ISBN-13: 9781584777861. ISBN-10: 1584777869. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xi vii-xi new introduction various paginations 374 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME V: ISBN-13: 9781584777861. ISBN-10: 1584777869. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME V ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Vol. V of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed seri. unknown books
2013519932013. ISBN-13: 9781584777823. ISBN-10: 1584777826. Great Britain. Vulgate Edition. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge etc. 1678 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms by David J. Seipp Professor of Law Boston University with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii vii-xii new introduction 2 685 70 pp. Reprinted 2007 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. VOLUME I: ISBN-13: 9781584777823. ISBN-10: 1584777826. Hardcover folio 9" x 14". VOLUME I ONLY. New. $250. Reprint of Vol. I of the Vulgate edition with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history content and significance of The Year Books and tables that list all justices and sergeants as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography 1847 these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton Hobart Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" 756. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books like other law reports were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed series continues to. unknown books