3 012 résultats
1847R240072192AU COMPTOIR DES IMPRIMEUR UNIS. 1847. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. défraîchie, Dos abîmé, Quelques rousseurs. LV + 399 + 447 pages - couverture muette marron - titre + tomaison écrit au feutre noir sur le dos - quelques pages non coupées - atlas de 18 cartes manquant - quelques rousseurs sans réelle conséquence sur la lecture - coins frottés - dos fendu - 3 photos disponibles - tome 1 partiellement désolidarisé.. . . . Classification Dewey : 962-Egypte et Soudan
8vo., First Edition, on laid paper, with portrait frontispiece in gravure (original tissue guard present), numerous plates and 2 folding coloured maps, frontispiece and title lightly spotted; original green pictorial cloth, upper board blocked in gilt, gilt back, gilt top, expertly rebacked with original backstrip laid down, a remarkably bright, clean copy. An outstanding copy, sympathetically strengthened and with little or no trace of the usual textual browning. THE ORIGINAL EDITION IS VERY SCARCE IN THIS CONDITION.
1929R300319570SRGE. 1929. In-4. Relié demi-cuir. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. LXIII + 192 pages - nombreuses planches et cartes en noir et blanc et en couleurs hors texte. 1er plat broché d'origine découpé et collé sur le plat rigide. Très légers accrocs sur les tranches des plats.. . . . Classification Dewey : 962-Egypte et Soudan
1873RO30055784LIBRAIRIE A. FRANK. 1873. In-4. Relié demi-cuir. Etat passable, Coins frottés, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 158 pages. Nombreux hiéroglyphes en noir et blanc. Manque le dos, plats détachés.. . . . Classification Dewey : 962-Egypte et Soudan
1931vj1010Société des publications modernes Relié 1931 RARE. Deux volumes in-8 (20 x 24,3 cm), reliure demi-peau, dos à 4 nerfs orné de filets dorés et pièces de titre, têtes dorées, couvertures conservées, 573 et 554 pages, illustrations en noir in et hors texte de G. Bruyer ; dos insolés, par ailleurs bel exemplaire. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
8vo., First Edition, with a large folding coloured map; handsomely bound in red full morocco, back with raised bands lettered and ruled in gilt, a most attractive copy ideal as a gift or for presentation. With the trade ticket of Hugh Rees of Regent Street on front paste-down. THIS COPY WAS FORMERLY IN THE LIBRARY OF SIR HUMPHREY BELL AND WAS PRESENTED BY HIM TO HIS ALMA MATER WITH ITS PRESENTATION BOOKPLATE ON FRONT PASTE-DOWN. One of the greatest English public servants of the Sudan, Sir [Bernard] Humphrey Bell (1884-1959) was the second son of the Rev. J.T. Bell, headmaster of Christ's Hospital School (then at Hertford). He was educated at Christ's Hospital (1894-1903) followed by a scholarship to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated BA in 1906. In the following year he joined the Sudan Political Service and in 1912 married Lilian Constance Bagot, daughter of the Rev. G.P. Dew. In 1917 he was called to the bar at Gray's Inn, and from 1918-1923 served in Baghdad, first as President of the Court of First Instance and then as President of the Court of Appeal. In 1923 he returned to Sudan as Judge of the High Court, having first been appointed CBE in that year. He was appointed Chief Justice of the Sudan in 1926, and received the insignia of the second class of the Order of the Nile from the King of Egypt in 1929. From 1930-1936 he served as Legal Secretary to the Government of the Sudan, after which he retired, and was created KBE in the following year. During WWII he served as Assistant Legal Advisor to the Home Office. Sir Humphrey Bell died in Hampshire in 1959. AN OUTSTANDING ASSOCIATION COPY.
192115194Eugen Diederichs Verlag, Jena, 1921-1928. Ca 3600 Seiten, goldgeprägter OHalb-Leineneinband, z.T. Kopf-Farbschnitt. Bd. I - III: Volksmärchen der Kabylen. Bd IV: Märchen aus Dordofan. Bd. V: Dichten und Denken im Sudan. Bd. VI: Spielmannsgeschichten der Sahel. Bd. VII: Dämonen des Sudan. Allerhand religiöse Verdichtungen. Bd. VIII: Erzählungen aus dem Westsudan. Bd. IX: Volkserzählungen und Volksdichtungen aus dem Zentral-Sudan. Bd. X: Die atlantische Götterlehre. BD. XI: Volksdichtungen aus Oberguinea. Bd. XII: Dichtkunst der Kassaiden.4°. Titel und Einbandgestaltung von F.H. Ehmcke. Veröffentlichungen des Forschungsinstituts für Kulturmorphologie. ExLibris a.V. Gute Exemplare. Good copies. Complete.
1905049551Egypt: ca. 1905 1905. Soft cover. Very Good. Original business card. 7x11 cm. Written 'Le Khedive'. Abbas Hilmi Pasha was the last Khedive Ottoman viceroy of Egypt and Sudan ruling from 8 January 1892 to 19 December 1914. In 1914 after Turkey joined the Central Powers in World War I the nationalist Khedive was removed by the British then ruling Egypt in favor of his more pro-British uncle Hussein Kamel marking the de jure end of Egypt's four-century era as a province of the Ottoman Empire which had begun in 1517. Extremely rare. See. 'Tamga pençe tugra imza' by Kologlu Orhan. p. 98. <br/> <br/> [ca. 1905] paperback
Very Good English Original red cloth bdg. Roy. 8vo. (23 x 16 cm). In English. [xiv], 277 p., 5 military plans, (3 foldings), and 1 folding map of Sudan Campaign's military plan (57x39,5 cm). Fading on cloth, an ex-library stamp on colophon, light soiling to extremities. Otherwise a good copy. First edition of the first volume of this rare set on the Sudan Campaign, including an eyewitness account of Colvile, an English colonel (later major-general) during the campaign. The presented first volume includes that the forces of the Mahdist movement spreading across Sudan, and threatening General Charles Gordon in Khartoum, while Lord Garnet Wolseley moves slowly south down the Nile. The second and third volumes (including maps only) are missing. By 1882 the Mahdist Army had taken complete control over the area surrounding Khartoum. Then, in 1883, a joint British-Egyptian military expedition under the command of British Colonel William Hicks launched a counterattack against the Mahdists. Hicks was soon killed and the British decided to evacuate Sudan. Fighting continued however and the British-Egyptian forces which defended Khartoum in a long siege were finally overrun on January 28, 1885. Virtually the entire garrison was killed. General Charles Gordon, the commander of the British-Egyptian forces, was beheaded during the attack. In June 1885 Ahmad, the self-proclaimed Mahdi died. As a result the Mahdist movement quickly dissolved as infighting broke out among rival claimants to leadership. Hoping to capitalize on internal strife, the British returned to Sudan in 1896 with Horatio Kitchener as commander of another Anglo-Egyptian army. In the final battle of the war on September 2, 1898, at Karari, 11,000 Mahdists were killed and 16,000 were wounded. (Source: Black Past online). Henry Edward Colville was born at Kirkby Hall, Leicestershire, as the son of Charles Robert Colville and Hon. Katherine Sarah Georgina Russell. Trained at Eton, Colville entered the Grenadier Guards in 1870, followed by his assignment in 1880 as A.D.C. to General Sir Leicester Smyth commanding the forces in South Africa. Colville served in the Intelligence Department of the Suakin Expedition of 1884, distinguishing himself at the Battles of El Teb and Tamai. He was employed on special service in Sudan prior to the Nile Expedition of 1884-85 and after having served in that Expedition, he received the assignment of Chief of the Intelligence Department of the Frontier Force. Following the Battle of Ginnis in the Mahdist War, Colville was promoted to the rank of Colonel and was attached to the Intelligence Department at headquarters. In 1893 he was appointed Commissioner (Acting) for Uganda where he commanded the Unyoro Expedition receiving numerous awards and a promotion to Major General on April 12, 1898. Prior to his retirement in 1901, Colville served as Commander, Infantry Brigade, Gibraltar and Guards Brigade, and 9th Division, South Africa 1899-1900. (Source: Ladysmith & District Historical Society Online).
195418944Khartoum Sudan: Game & Fisheries Department Ministry of Animal Resources Sudan Government. ND c. 1954. 1954. First printing. 8vo. Frontispiece photograph of rhinoceros. 108 pp. 1 page Ad. Illustrated with B & W photographs; bi-fold colored map. Printed on coated paper. Original illustrated cardboard covers with unprinted black cloth spine. With articles by Lt. Col. W. A. H. Forbes G. M. Stanton R. Kirk Lt. Col. P. G. Molloy Capt. J. T. Oulton and Fred Hurcomb. LAID IN is a scarce and important piece of ephemera: an 11 sheet illustrated stapled flyer printed rectos only for the Sudan Safari Tours Company undated c. 1954. Printed in dark blue on onion skin paper this flyer is rich in historical information on big game hunting and photographic safaris of the time in the Sudan. It covers in detail: Advice to Hunting Parties e.g. maximum number of rounds for rifles and shotguns allowed by law etc.; Clothing recommendations for men and women; Charges for Hunting Safaris $100-233 eg.; Charges for Photographic and Sight-seeing Safaris; Entrance Fees for National Parks; Game Reserves and hunting allowable species; Game Licences sic and Game Licences sic Schedules e.g. Cheetah - $30 Bongo - $75 Giraffe - $75 etc.; Species and Number of Animals Allowed on Each Licence; and List of Unsuitable Rifles and List of Suitable Bores. Paper-clipped to the front of the flyer is a printed sheet: "With Compliments of the Embassy of The Republic of the Sudan Washington D. C. and the name "From Amin Abdoun" typed atop. This book came from the library of Grant Fielden who served as a high-ranking intelligence officer for the State Department in various posts in Africa; he was as well a big game hunter. Light cover wear and the date 1954 presumably publication date is written on the Contents page. Very scarce thus. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Khartoum, Sudan: Game & Fisheries Department, Ministry of Animal Resources, Sudan Government. ND (c. 1954). hardcover
1947015999Paris - Drouot Etude Bellier 1947 plaquette in-8 Agrafé, couverture illustrée
187718700Braunschweig, Westermann, 1877. HLdr. d. Zt. XIV, 285, VI, 304 S. Gr.-8°. Mit allen Tafeln/Illustrationen, jedoch ohne die Karte. Gut erhaltenes Exemplar. Ebd. etw. berieb./beschabt. Stellenw. stockfl./angestaubt.
188364590Stuttgart, J. G. Cotta, 1883. 8°. Mit 35 tlw. ganzs. Textholzstichen. VII, 177 S.; 1 Bl., 162 S., Grüner OLwd.-Bd.
1822R300328625Chez Merlin, Libraire. 1822. In-12. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 117 + 64 + 32 pages - 7 planches dépliantes en noir et blanc hors texte. 2e plat et dos manquants. 1er plat détaché.. . . . Classification Dewey : 962-Egypte et Soudan
1887R300282016Ernest Leroux. 1887. In-4. Relié demi-cuir. Etat d'usage, Coins frottés, Coiffe en tête abîmée, Quelques rousseurs. 330 pages - nombreux hiéroglyphes en noir et blanc dans et hors texte. Tampon en page de titre. Plats et contreplats jaspés. Dos cuir à pièces de titre marron et verte, titre, tomaison et filets dorés. Rousseurs sur le dos. Coiffes frottées.. . . . Classification Dewey : 962-Egypte et Soudan
2002RO20176756ATLAS. 2002. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 25 volumes de 125 pages chacun - nombreuses illustrations, photos et cartes en couleurs dans et hors texte - plats et contre-plats illustrés en couleurs - 2 photos disponibles.. . . . Classification Dewey : 962-Egypte et Soudan
1836ROD0118180IMPRIMERIE DE H. FOURNIER ET CIE. 1836. In-8. En feuillets. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 14 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 962-Egypte et Soudan
Very Good Turkish Original grey cloth bdg. Roy. 8vo. (25 x 17 cm). In Turkish. [xxviii], [4], [4], 1112 p., 2 full-page color maps. First map is the most famous one showing the Nile and the second one shows the Mediterranean shores and cities of Egypt. Rare first edition of the 10th, and the last volume of the Evliya's travel corpus including his descriptions of Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia in the late 17th century. This legendary travel account was published between 1896-1938 respectively in ten volumes. "Book X lands him in Egypt and takes him up the Nile to the Sudan and Ethiopia. When Evliya reaches Ibrim on the Nile, the southernmost limit of the Ottoman Empire, he remarks on the intense heat of the place; contrasting it with the intense cold he experienced at the northernmost limit, Azov; and with the mild climates at the eastern and western frontiers, Baghdad on the one hand, and Istolnibelgrad on the other. Apparently, Egypt suited him best, and he found Cairo a worthy counterpart to Istanbul; for he settled there to work up his memoirs of forty-one years of travel. He died around 1683, and there is controversy over whether a certain cryptic passage refers to the Ottoman defeat at Vienna.". (Evliya Çelebi's book of travels. 2. Evliya Çelebi in Bitlis). Evliya Çelebi visited Suakin during one of his journeys across Egypt, Sudan, Ethiopia, Somalia, Djibouti and Tanzania. He describes this territory under the title "The characteristics of old throne center Suakin" as "we stayed in this city for 12 days, trading with all kinds of people with camel trains. I sold 40 dromedaries in return for 500 piasters and also disburdened, sold 50 tusks for 500 piasters. Then we started to wander around the city. The Suez Sea is to the north of the island, and it takes 12 hours to reach Mecca from the island. Therefore, the direction of Mecca from this city is to the north. Suakin is a little island stretching three miles from east to west. (Afyoncu, Daily Sabah). Further travels in the 1670s took him to western and southwestern Anatolia and Syria. He completed the Hajj again and appears to have settled in Egypt for several years. He traveled in Upper Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia searching for the sources of the River Nile, before settling down to compile his great travel book. OCLC 630428224 (with four copies).
Very Good English Original 1/4 leather dark red bound. Spine with five compartments, second and fourth are Ottoman lettered gilt, others gilt with traditional forms. Roy. 8vo. (25 x 17 cm). In Ottoman script. 602, [6] p. First Edition. 5th volume of 10. This set is published between 1896-1938. Hejra: 1315 = Gregorian: 1897. Ozege: 5302 / 5. Rare. Evliya Çelebi seyahatnamesi. Vol. 5.
1930234711930. Sudanese women children and men in village photo archive from the 1930s when Sudan remained under Anglo-Egyptian rule a colonial arrangement lasting from 1899 to 1956. Rural Sudan in this period was governed through "Native Administration" introduced in the 1920s which placed many local communities under chiefs and customary courts while British officials controlled taxation policing and regional policy. This small format photo archive of posed locals was likely taken by a western traveler for anthropological study and documentation. <br /> <br /> Photo archive of 8 silver gelatin photos measuring 2.5" x 3.5" each. Women and girls carry baskets and bundles smile directly at the camera stand beside mud-plastered walls and pose with children held against their shoulders. Two boys sit inside a narrow wooden or metal container while a robed man stands alone in bright sun. The emphasis is intimate rather than official showcasing faces clothing hair head coverings jewelry domestic labor and childhood presence.<br /> <br /> The 1930s were also the years after the Gezira Scheme opened in 1925 when colonial Sudan became increasingly tied to cotton production irrigation and export agriculture. Sudanese communities were subjected to heavy taxation labor controls and agricultural policies designed largely to serve British imperial trade especially cotton production for overseas markets. Colonial administrators reshaped local economies through irrigation schemes transportation projects and systems of indirect rule that strengthened some local authorities while restricting political independence and contributing to deep regional inequalities that continued after Sudanese independence in 1956. Minor fading and edge wear; photos remain crisp and clean. Overall very good condition. These portraits sit apart from that administrative record preserving everyday Sudanese cultural life under colonialism. unknown
6 vols., roy. 8vo., with frontispieces (original tissue guards present) and many hundreds of woodcut illustrations (a number full-page) in the text; original pictorial red cloth, upper boards elaborately blocked and lettered in gilt and black, bevelled boards, gilt edges, primrose endpapers, corners lightly bruised, fade-mark on upper board of third volume else a remarkably well-preserved, bright, clean set in publisher's original pictorial binding. A HANDSOME SET IN PUBLISHER'S ORIGINAL BINDING. SCARCE IN THIS CONDITION.
186343557Alger, imp. Duclaux 1863 in-8, demi-maroquin bleu nuit, dos à nerfs, couvertures cons. 358 pp. 20 planches de croquis lithographiés, 2 plans et 3 cartes dépliants. Bel exemplaire sous étui.
189437591Félix Alcan, sd (ca 1894) 1894 Grand in-4, demi-maroquin à coins à forts grains, do lisse orné, plats percaline verte ornée, tête dorée, couvertures illustrées cons. reliure éditeur, X- 464 pp. 65 gravures et 16 cartes, une hors-texte en couleurs. Illustrations d'après les documents de Lt-Cel Monteil & les photographies du commandant Quiquandon. Très rares rousseurs. Bel exemplaire.
Very Good English Original 1/4 leather bound. Spine with five compartments, second and fourth are Ottoman lettered gilt, others richly gilt with traditional forms. Roy. 8vo. (25 x 17 cm). In Ottoman script. 534, [5] p. First Edition. 3rd volume of 10. This set is published between 1896-1938. Ozege: 5302 / 3. Rare. Evliya Çelebi seyahatnamesi. Vol. 3.
190730255Paris, Société d'Edition et de Publications, Librairie Félix Juven 1907. In-12 relié de 320 pages au format 19 x 12,5 cm. Sobre mais élégante reliure demi toile verte avec plats en papier marbré. Dos ronds avec titre doré et infime trace verticale. Coins avec infimes frottis. Superbe couverture illustrée par Auguste Roubille et 4ème plat conservés. Intérieur frais. Jehan Soudan de Pierrefitte, ami et collaborateur d'Alphonse Allais dont il créa la Société des Amis d'Alphonse Allais à écrit seul ce roman, prétendument posthume d'Allais, signé de leurs deux noms et précédé d'une lettre-préface de l'humoriste, mais datée du 23 décembre 1905, soit près de deux mois après le décès de Alphonse Allais. Il s'agit sans doute d'un projet que les 2 hommes avait en cours, basé sur " Dans la peau d'un autre ", titre d'un véritable conte parmi les plus drôles et les plus absurdes d'Alphonse Allais, publié dans son deuxième recueil " Vive la vie ! " en 1892. Rarissime édition originale en superbe état général.