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18406835CBO.O., um 1840. Quer-folio. (Blattgrösse 55,5 x 40,5 cm). 12 Blatt meist von Lemercier, Bernard et Cie lithografiert. Gebunden (ohne Text) in Pappband der Zeit.
19195848Various locations in the United States 1919. Very good. 50 leaves illustrated with 198 tipped-in sepia-toned photographs almost all around 5 x 3 inches a handful somewhat smaller all with white ink manuscript captions in English. Oblong quarto. Contemporary black cloth photograph album with "Places and Faces" in gilt on front cover string tied. Moderate wear soiling and minor scuffing to boards. Occasional creasing and minor wear to images. A unique and informative photographic record of an extensive cross-country journey by a young Japanese man from San Francisco to New York in 1918 and 1919. The trip took place between December 1918 and September 1919 beginning in Yokohama. Though the traveler is unnamed he was most likely Fujisawa Tomonosuke the son of the founder of Fujisawa Yakuhin once one of the major pharmaceutical companies in Japan. The company is now called Astellas Pharma Inc. According to a company history Fujisawa Tomonosuke travelled to the United States in 1919 as the company opened a branch in New York. The last page of the present album shows a Buddhist-style memorial with an explanatory caption on the verso which states that Fujisawa Tomokichi Tomonosuke's father built it in 1918 to console thousands of deaths during World War I. The monument still sits in Domyoji Temple near Osaka. Another clue that the album was compiled by Tomonosuke is the practice by the compiler to identify all the subjects in the album by a prefix and their last name except for one who is constantly referred to as "Tom."<br /> <br /> Tomonosuke's journey begins in Yokohama where he boarded the Tenyo Maru which delivered him via Honolulu to San Francisco on December 26 1918. He stayed in San Francisco for about six months and visited numerous locations around the Bay Area including Stanford University the University of California at Berkeley Ocean Beach Seal Rock Golden Gate Park Oakland Lincoln Park and more. In late-May he makes his way to Los Angeles and Pasadena where he visits vast oil fields where one image is captioned "Hundreds of oil wells in Los Angeles" a Southern Pacific Railroad station the zoo Bush Garden and other sites.<br /> <br /> After a few days in southern California Tom sets off across the continent to his presumed ultimate destination of New York briefly visiting Salt Lake City Denver and Chicago before arriving at Niagara Falls by June 3. He includes numerous shots of the falls before arriving in New York City. His stay in New York was extensive and included many sightseeing tours to locations in New York but also New Jersey and Pennsylvania. He includes shots of Bronx Park the Poughkeepsie Bridge the Victory Arch the Statue of Liberty and other sights around Manhattan along withe scenes in Montclair Atlantic Highland and Culver's Lake New Jersey and a few locations in Pennsylvania such as Sawkill Falls on the Delaware River. He also witnessed the commemoration parades for both the American Army's 2nd Division and General Pershing's "Grand Parade Day" in New York City each of which he preserved in a handful of photographs.<br /> <br /> In addition to the variety of the settings the photographs reveal real skill and technique by the photographer. The images are mostly well composed and informative in nature. Despite the fact that the compiler was Japanese all of the captions are written in confident English lending further credence to the notion that the compiler was highly educated and confident as would be the son of the founder of one of Japan's most successful companies. An exceptional annotated vernacular photograph album preserving the adventures of a precocious Japanese business traveller in the United States just after the First World War. unknown
19243357Kentucky Wisconsin Illinois Kansas Minnesota Ohio Wyoming Michigan South Dakota Colorado 1924. Red leather sheep over card ornately stamped in gilt. Album measures 8 x 9.75 inches and is comprised of 108 manuscript pages in a variety of hands with multiple entries per page. Also includes two pasted-in newspaper clippings and a series of loosely inserted ephemera two obituary clippings for the book's owner five calling cards a church bulletin a gown ad an envelope with a death notice of a friend and a car rental flyer from Oklahoma. Tracing the life of Laura Nethers nee Earl from her girlhood and marriage to her old age. Obituaries and census records show that Laura was a resident of Colorado Springs for 56 years following her family's move from the South through the Western US.<br/><br/>The inscription to the first page of the album reveals it to be a gift: "1860. A Christmas gift from father. Covington KY." Above this is the ownership stamp of Laura L. Earl. Little did Laura know the album would follow her across 64 years and to a variety of states documenting her relationships and major moments in her life. For researchers it is an opportunity to trace a woman's development from one century to the next across multiple states in the South and West as she grew into a teacher wife and woman's club activist. Growing up in Kentucky Laura's family moved West. Entries show that she and her father lived awhile in Minnesota and she became a teacher in Wisconsin before marrying and settling in Colorado Springs. Entries come from family pastors students neighbors and friends. Many entries show women's bonds across large stretches of space and together they show what a mobile lifestyle women were increasingly living. No longer confined so a small radius or single homestead they were maintaining relationships and making friends across the miles. <br/><br/>Some early entries like that of Celia E. Hay Illinois 1878 are traditional in nature: "Over our hearts and into our lives shadows may sometimes fall But the sunshine is never wholly dead And heaven is shadowless overhead And God is over all." Students politely thank her for her work and hope they made an impact too: "I ever remain your true friend James U. Cobb. To Miss Laura Earl much Respected Teacher Ellensboro Wisconsin Feb 25 1872." People write poetic verses on friendship or her new marriage throughout.<br/><br/>Yet more often entries are personal. In 1879 Laura's father leaves her a humorous message that "It is ten o'clock and your sixty-one year old father expects a long trip to the Injun Reservation two hundred miles north in the morning.So you see I cannot write any tonight." Elva Walker writes from Colorado in 1885 "We will ever remember our camping trip.and going in a cave" and John Dietrich writes of the same trip "Did it rain while we were camping! I hope we will meet again soon." In August 1919 a friend Emma Eggleston writes an original piece about their recent travel titled Pike's Peak by Auto which begins "19 and 19 was a year to remember from the last of July to the last of September" and which documents in 36 verses the landscapes they passed and the friendship they strengthened while driving. Moments like these are a reminder of changing times -- of early attitudes toward indigenous tribes or of women's freedom as suffrage approached. <br/><br/>A charter member of the Colorado Women's Club and a participant in Frances Willard's Women's Christian Temperance Union according to her obituary Laura's friendship album is a rich space for researchers to trace her movements through communities in the West for genealogists to study the families and lives of contributors and for historians to track which entries come from other educated women and activists. The present is one of the best we've seen. unknown books
175160871Stockholm, Lars Salvius, 1751. 8vo. In contemporary half calf with gilt lettering and ornamentation to spine forming 6 compartments. Ex-libris (Romare) pasted on to pasted down front end-paper. Corner bumped and boards with scratches. Internally brownpotted. (10), XIV, 434, (34) pp. + 1 folded map and 6 plates and numerous woodcuts in text.
174560874Stockholm & Upsala, Gottfried Kiesewetter, 1745. 8vo. In contemporary half calf with five raised bands. Wear to extremities. Parts of marbled paper to boards worn off and leather to lower compartment on spine missing. Previous owners names to pasted down front end-paper and leaf with dedication. Internally with light occassional brownspotting, but generally a good copy. (14), 344, (30) pp. + 2 maps and 1 plate.
8vo [22.5 x 14 cm]; 2 volumes in one, iv, 411; [i], 324 pp, 20 plates on 19 sheets including 5 with original hand coloring, each volume with engraved title page and vignette, tables, bibliog, index, list of plates. contemporary cloth, gilt spine title lettering and rules, internal hinge cracked but firm, very slight foxing on few leaves, but a clean unmarked copy, near fine, with a 9-line letter in hand of author & a cut down als address panel with wax seal. A pictu Both the letter and envelope panel are in ink by author and tipped-in to front endpaper. Written in French, Humboldt commends the recipient's lecture and will recommend it to those interested in Italian literature. Sabin 33751. Goodman 622. Welch 161. Field 740. Humboldt was the most influential scientist of his time and traveled widely in Spanish America from 1799-1804. The work describes the geography and ruins he observed in Mexico and Peru and is one of the earliest archaeological works on the Aztec and Inca civilizations, with excellent plates.
4to [30.5 x 25 cm]; xvi, 438 pp, complete with 26 aquatint or engraved plates, mostly from author's drawings, 3 folding engraved maps, tables, without half title, index. nineteenth century half red morocco, marbled boards and edges, title lettering on spine leather label, edges rubbed, light dampstain on inside margin of dozen leaves, light foxing, very good sound copy with good wide margins. A picture of this book is ava 'The record of his journey, published in 1812 during his second absence in Persia, at once took rank as an important authority on a country then little known to Englishmen, and by its admirable style and accurate observation, its humour and graphic power, still holds a foremost place among early books of travel in Persia' [DNB]. Abbey Travel 357. Atabey 837. Prideaux pp. 241: the author 'was also an artist of some merit, and his illustrations to his Travels are of considerable interest.' The plates are mainly views. There are appendices on the money of Persia, routes through Persia, section on Arab pirates. The author travelled extensively in what is now Iran, including Bushire, Shiraz, Persepolis, Ispahan, Teheran, Tabriz, Arz-roum, Amasia and finally to Constantinople.
- Chez Saillant & Nyon & chez Panckouke, AParis 1774, In-8 (12,5x20,5cm), (4) xlvj, 445pp. et (4) 643pp. et (4) 472pp. et (4) 399pp., 4 volumes reliés. - Edition originale de ce recueil de voyages, parue également au même moment dans le format in-4. Cette édition ne contient ni cartes ni planches, et généralement les planches de l'édition in-4 ont été reliés dans les volumes, ainsi qu'il était prévu par les feuillets de placement des gravures ; un atlas a pu cependant être constitué selon les demandes. Tous les voyages contiennent des tables (longitudes...). Reliures en pleine basane marbrée de granitée d'époque et marbrée de rouge. Dos lisses ornés. Pièces de titre et de tomaison en maroquin rouge. Coiffes de tête des tomes II et III élimées, coiffes de queue des tomes I, II et II en partie élimées. Mors supérieur du tome II fendu en tête et queue. Mors supérieur du tome III fendu en tête. Mors supérieur du tome IV en partie fendu. Epidermures sur les plats. Cependant exemplaire de bon aspect. Hawkesworth a été chargé par le gouvernement britannique de reprendre les mémoires originaux de Cook, Wallis, Byron qui avaient été envoyés à l'amirauté. Le recueil contient le premier voyage de Cook, alors lieutenant sur l'Endeavour. Le premier volume rapporte le voyage de Carteret (Détroit de Magellan, île de la reine Charlotte, Nouvelle-Bretagne) et de Byron (Rio de Janeiro, Détroit de Magellan, Batavia). Le second tome contient le voyage du capitaine Wallis (Côte des Patagons, détroit de Magellan, île de Tahiti, île de Tinian, Séjour à Batavia, au Cap) et le premier voyage du capitaine Cook (Madère, Rio de Janeiro, Terre de feu, Tahiti -description, habitants, temps). Le tome III poursuit la narration du voyage de Cook, avec la description de quelques îles proche de Tahiti, Nouvelle-Zélande et circumnavigation de la Nouvelle-Zélande, description de cette île, du langage, de l'agriculture.... Le tome IV s'occupe toujours du voyage de Cook (Nouvelle-Galle, Nouvelle-Guinée, île de Savu, Batavia, Cap de Bonne-Espérance. Les voyages décrivent tous une traversée par l'ouest et par le détroit de Magellan, le passage dans l'océan pacifique, en Asie et en Océanie, puis le retour en Angleterre. "Quelque méritée que fût la célébrité des trois voyages de Cook, ils ne peuvent pas faire oublier ceux de Byron, de Carteret et de Wallis. On doit à ces navigateurs de savantes observations des détroits de la mer du Sud ; une description exacte de la terre des Patagons ; une dissertation lumineuse sur cette race d'homme extraordinaire [...] enfin la connaisance de l'île de Taïti, que Wallis paraît avoir vu le premier, puisqu'il y aborda en 1767, une année avant l'arrivée de Bougainville dans cette île. [...] Mais ce qui donne surtout le plus grand prix à ces voyages, c'est la circon-navigation de toute la Nouvelle-Hollande..." Boucher de la Richarderie (Bibliothèque universelle des voyages, 1808). Ex libris Moutonnat. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
- Chez Pelicier et Nepveu, à Paris 1821, Un Vol. in 8 (12,5x20,5cm), (4) xij, 506pp. (1), relié. - Edition originale, rare, illustrée d'une très grande carte dépliante des régions comprises entre Constantinople et Téhéran, et de 9 lithographies (par Aubry, Vernet...), et d'un portrait au frontispice du prince persan Albas Mirza. Reliure en demi basane brun clair Restauration. Dos lisse orné de filets et fers ; roulette en queue. Tranches marbrées. Frottements sur les plats, mais bel exemplaire au papier d'une parfaite fraîcheur. Amédé jaubert, orientaliste, fut tout d'abord emmené par Napoléon en Egypte où il servait d'interprète, en 1805 lui fut confié une importante mission diplomatique en Iran où il devait négocier avec le Shah afin d'asseoir la position de la France dans cette région. Durant son voyage, il fut emprisonné par le Pacha de Bayazid et jeté dans une citerne durant trois mois. La relation de voyage décrit de nombreuses contrées qui n'avaient jamais été visitées par les européens. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
- Imprimerie royale, Paris 1833 - 1835, Grd. in-8 (15,5x24,5cm), (4) XLI, 558pp. (1) et (4) 481pp. (1) et (4) 510pp. (1) et (4) 480pp., 4 tomes en 4 volumes reliés. - Edition originale. Les 2 premiers volumes furent publiés en 1833, les 2 seconds en 1835. Une grande carte dépliante et de nombreuses tables (Températures, météorologie...) in fine ; 4 vignettes de titre et culs-de-lampe représentant des navires ou scènes en fin de chaque chapitre. Cette édition se trouve complète ainsi (Notice BNF n° : FRBNF30738909), c'est l'éditeur Arthus Bertrand qui réédita le texte en 1835 (et qui se trouvait le dépositaire de l'imprimerie royale pour les voyages) en lui adjoignant 3 atlas qui complétèrent la publication à diverses dates, un atlas hydrographique, un atlas zoologique (in-8, 1839) et un album du voyage d'aquatintes, l'ensemble au format in folio ; ces atlas très chers et particulièrement somptueux ne se trouvent que rarement avec les textes. A la suite des notes du tome IV, Mémoires sur les opérations géographiques par M. Serval (notamment sur les 4 montres marines de Berthoud qui furent emportées sur les navires). Reliures en cartonnage d'époque blond. Dos lisses ornés de filets. Pièces de titre et de tomaison de maroquin brun. Dos légèrement assombris. Traces de frottements. Quelques coins repliés. Rousseurs éparses. Bon exemplaire. Missionné par le gouvernement pour rétablir l'influence française dans le Pacifique et des accords commerciaux, La Favorite partit également dans un but scientifique qu'elle réalisa pleinement. L'expédition vers les terres australes partit de Toulon en décembre 1829 et revint en avril 1832. En suivant les côtes africaines, l'expédition atteignit Pondichéry, la Cochinchine, le Tonkin, les Philippines, l'Australie, la Nouvelle Zélande, la Tasmanie, et revint en traversant le Pacifique, puis longea les côtes du Brésil, pour enfin rejoindre Toulon par L'Atlantique. La relation et les descriptions sont extrèmement riches et détaillées, visant une certaine objectivité ; le narrateur décrit simplement ce qu'il voit, sans considérations scientifiques. La mission fit une escale à L'île de Bourbon, et de nombreuses escales dans toutes les villes côtières, Macao, Canton, Manille, Valparaiso, Rio de Janeiro... [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
- Chez Etienne de Bourdeaux, A Berlin 1769, In 8 (11x18,6cm), XVI, 403pp. et (4) 405-704p (48), 2 volumes reliés. - Edition originale, rare, contrairement à la seconde édition de 1770 qui a été entièrement réécrit par Delisle de Salles. L'illustration comprend 18 planches dépliantes in fine du second volume, 3 cartes, plans, faune et habitants... Les planches sont numérotées de I à XV avec des bis (elles ont été reliées avec un certain désordre). Reliure en plein veau brun marbré d'époque. Dos lisse orné. Pièce de titre et de tomaison en maroquin rouge. P; 329, 330, 2 feuillets repliés en coin bas. Petit manque au mors supérieur en queue du tome I, sinon très bon exemplaire, frais. Planches II et planche XV détachées. La planche XV a été coupée courte en marge basse avec disparition de la bordure. L'abbé Pernetty fut l'aumonier du voyage entrepris par Bougainville pour mener des colons de Saint-Malo aux îles Malouines et surtout pour prendre possession des ïles au nom de la France ; de retour en France, il rédigea la relation quotidienne de son voyage qui fait la part belle à l'histoire naturelle. Les "Observations sur le détroit de Magellan, et sur les Patagons" ont été faites d'après d'autres voyages, notamment celui de Bougainville. On trouvera dans les remarques préliminaires, une curieuse histoire des géants de la Patagonie. Boucher de la Richarderie (Bibliothèque universelle des voyages 1808) tome VI, p. 398 : Aucun voyageur n'a si bien pu les décrire que Pernetty, qui accompagna M. de Bougainville [...] On doit savoir gré à Pernetty de les avoir fait connoître en assez grand détail. Il s'est attaché surtout à l'histoire naturelle des îles malouines : c'est ce qu'il y avait de plus intéressant à observer. Sa relation embrasse beaucoup d'autres objets, tels que des remarques sur l'histore naturelle du Brésil et le smeours de ses habitans, avec des observations sur les loix et les coutumes des peuples de Monte-video dans le Paraguay, mais il s'est plus particulièrement étendu sur le détroit de Magellan, et principalement sur les Patagons." [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
1790r7103London: G G J & J Robinson. G: in good condition. Covers marked and heavily rubbed. Edge-wear. Splitting to outer hinges. Inner hinge cracking. Slight worming defunct to margin of prelims of volume I. Short tears at crease to folding maps in volume V no loss. Heraldic bookplates to paste-downs. 1790. First Edition. Brown hardback leather covers. 310mm x 240mm 12" x 9". lxxxiii 535pp; viii 718pp; viii 759pp; viii 695pp; xiv 230pp x plates. 58 b/w plates 3 fold-out maps. Volume V is entitled 'Select Specimens of Natural History collected in 'Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile in Egypt Arabia Abyssinia and Nubia'. Very heavy set significant extra shipping needed for overseas. . G G J & J Robinson hardcover
1806mgb00London: Thomas Cadell. VG: in very good condition. Neatly rebacked. Some internal scattered foxing age toning and offsetting. 1806. First Edition. Brown hardback leather covers. 280mm x 220mm 11" x 9". xxi 742pp; 889pp; cclii 390pp; ccx198pp; ccxlii 344pp; ccclv; 682pp plates. Numerous engravings some coloured and maps - illustrated with 192 plates from Britannia Depicta. The set all published comprises; Vol I: 1806 Bedfordshire Berkshire Buckinghamshire; Vol II: 1808 Cambridgeshire Cheshire; Vol: III: 1814 Cornwall; Vol IV: 1816 Cumberland; Vol V: 1817 Derbyshire; Vol VI pts I and II: 1822 Devon. Very heavy set significant extra shipping needed for overseas. . Thomas Cadell hardcover
18084088London: Longman Hurst Rees & Orme. VG : in very good condition. Rebacked using original leather covers. Plates foxed with set-off and occasional light foxing elsewhere. 1808. First Edition. Brown hardback leather covers. 270mm x 220mm 11" x 9". xvi 851pp; 831pp; 919pp; 722pp; 992pp; 913pp; 821pp; 776pp; 828pp; 770pp; 952pp; 678pp; 876pp; 881pp; 839pp; 917pp; xxxix 254pp 472pp plates. 201 b/w plates. With heraldic bookplates of Robert Townley Parker 1793-1879 - MP for Preston and his successor Reginald Arthur Tatton 1857-1926. Published 1808-1814. Very heavy set significant extra shipping needed for overseas. . Longman, Hurst, Rees & Orme hardcover
199675231C. O. R. V. I. N. A 1996 In-4 relié sous jaquette illustrée en couleurs ; 132 pages. illustrations et photographies en couleurs et noir in et hors-texte. Bon exemplaire en anglais.
176748774Lyon, Benoit Duplain, 1767. Small8vo. Uncut in 2 contemp. blue boards. Spine ends rubbed. Handwritten titles to spines. (6),327(8),359 pp. and 2 large folded engraved maps (Carte de Kamtschatka - Carte des Isles Kurilski). One map loose. Old name on titlepageserased by ink. Small stamp to titlepages. The last 5 leaves in volume two having a fain brownspot filling the lower margins, otherwise internally clean and wide-margined.
Lyon, Benoit Duplain, 1767. Small8vo. Uncut in 2 contemp. blue boards. Spine ends rubbed. Handwritten titles to spines. (6),327 (8),359 pp. and 2 large folded engraved maps (Carte de Kamtschatka - Carte des Isles Kurilski). One map loose. Old name on titlepageserased by ink. Small stamp to titlepages. The last 5 leaves in volume two having a fain brownspot filling the lower margins, otherwise internally clean and wide-margined.
65344Paris, Crapelet, 1849, in 8° relié plein maroquin rouge, dos à nerfs richement orné, plats avec un encadrement de 5 filets dorés, toutes tranches dorées, large dentelle dorée sur les contre plats (reliure de TRAUTZ-BAUZONNET).
1772DEZ-8711Paris, Saillant & Nyon, 1772. 3 volumes in-8, plein veau époque, dos à nerfs ornés de fleurons et de filets dorés, titre doré, toutes tranches marbrées. Faux-titre, titre, 2 ff non chiffrés, XLIII, 336 pp; faux-titre, titre, 453 pp, 3 pp non chiffrées; XVI, 362 pp, 3 pp non chiffrée. Seconde édition augmentée bien complète des 21 carte dépliantes (la carte n°16 est en deux parties) et des 3 planches dépliantes. Fentes au mors supérieur du tome I en pied et en tête, coiffes du tome I abîmées, 4 coins émoussés, quelques rousseurs, la carte du détroit de Magellan a été rajoutée ultérieurement, on peut le voir car elle n'est pas numérotée comme les autres planches, elle porte le numéro 121 au lieu du numéro 4. Mais elle en tout point identique à l'originale.
12mo. IV, 106 pp. English advertisement/preface, dialogues in Kannada script. Contemporary half green cloth with patterned glazed boards. First edition. The inscription reads, "Presented to the library of the Wesleyan Theological Institution, Richmond [/] J Gault(?) [/] Bangalore Jan 1848". This is most likely the same "J. G." who contributes the preface, in which he explains that the dialogues were written by a Munshi, who had been asked to teach Rev. W. Arthur (author of "A Mission to Mysore", London, 1847) the language of the local working people. The Munshi's efforts were then enlarged and distributed in manuscript form among several missionaries working in the area. They were found to be of such use that a small edition of the present book was printed. - Boards slightly dust-soiled, very minor wear to extremities, old paper library labels to spine, otherwise very good. Two bookplates (one pasted over the other) on the front paste-down endpaper, of the Wesleyan Theological Institution and Richmond College, Surrey. Presentation inscription to recto of front free endpaper, this torn with a small area of loss. - Scarce. COPAC locates two holdings, at SOAS and Oxford. OCLC adds another at the National and University Library of Strasbourg.
Copper engraving. 350:245 mm. Matted. This image shows the city of Canton from the Pearl River. The ships, the city wall and water gate, and the buildings along the wall can be seen clearly.
393132 parties en un volume in-12 (165 x 93 mm), veau moucheté de lépoque, dos à cinq nerfs orné de compartiments cloisonnés et fleuronnés, palette en tête et en pied, pièce de titre de maroquin bordeaux, filet sur les coupes, tranches mouchetées de rouge, (8), 239, (1), 277, (5) pages. Paris, Lambert, 1757.
184389247Wild | Paris s. d. [1843] | 28 x 20.3 cm | Relié
VEINTICINCO AÑOS EN MARRUECOS. Descripción de las costumbres de los Indígenas y Hebreos de este Imperio. Mecanoscrito inédito con numeración a mano de las hojas. 166 hojas en 8º. Encuadernación muda del autor. Ejemplar único. El mecanoscrito relata hechos y costumbres de Marruecos desde principios del siglo hasta 1920, más o menos, durante los protectorados francés y español, cuando parece haber sido escrito. Dedica muchas páginas a las costumbres y tradiciones de la comunidad judía de Marruecos. En el Boletín oficial de la zona de influencia de Marruecos de 10 de julio de 1914 aparece un Repartidor con el mismo nombre del autor del mecanoscrito.
181488701J.B. Imbert Ferra | Paris 1814 | 8.7 x 14 cm | 5 volumes reliés