158 résultats
1975261249Paris: Frente Libertario 1975. 4p. wraps 5.25x7.5 inches front wrap unevenly toned pages evenly toned else very good condition. Text in Spanish. Only one copy found in OCLC as of 1/2021. Frente Libertario unknown books
1860WRCAM10735Mexico 1860. 10pp. Quarto. Neatly dbd. Old fold slightly tanned but very good. This treaty finally resolved the questions Spain and Mexico had agreed to discuss under their 1836 treaty of peace which recognized the existence of Mexico. OCLC locates only two copies at the University of California Berkeley and Harvard Law School. Rare. OCLC 21826717. unknown books
2012136415Malaga Spain: Centro de Arte Contemporaneo de Malaga 2012. Hardcover. VG. Beige paper boards pink & illus. dust jacket 119 pp. many color illus. incl. 2 loose & folded posters. Text is in Spanish and English. Issued in conjunction with a 2012-2013 exhibition featuring the work of British abstract sculptor Richard Deacon b. 1949. Two posters depict "I Remember 1" and "I Remember 2." Centro de Arte Contemporaneo de Malaga hardcover books
2002281135Madrid: Fundacion Caja Madrid 2002. paperback. very good. Many text Illus. some in color. 4to pr. wrs. Madrid: Fundacion Caja Madrid 2002. Very good<br/><br/> Fundacion Caja Madrid unknown books
1986012453Madrid Spain: Ministerio de Cultura Direccion Gral. de Bellas Artes y Archivos 1986. Book. Very good condition. Paperback. First Edition. Octavo 8vo. 167 pages of text including a bibliography. Paperback binding with minor shelfwear and minimal sunning. Illustrated by numerous photographs of objects in color and black & white. Text is in Spanish. Ministerio de Cultura, Direccion Gral. de Bellas Artes y Archivos Paperback books
182745152Barcelona: Juan Francisco Piferrer 1827. Nueva Edicion. Two volumes bound in one; small 12mo 15cm.; full contemporary sheep marbled endpapers; xvi150; 2xv1156pp. Boards a bit scuffed with some brief peeling of leather corners bumped else Very Good internally fine. Contemporary owner's brief ink and pencil notes to final leaf of text and rear free endpaper. Includes recipes for dyes stains inks lacquers varnishes stain removers perfumes toothpaste and drinks and liqueurs. Juan Francisco Piferrer unknown books
1978260798Berkeley: Last Gasp 1978. Comic. 32p. stapled wraps 7x10 inches pages evenly toned else very good first edition of the first issue. Comics on the October Revolution Spanish Civil War anarchism etc. Intro by Lenin as delivered at 1978 AFL-CIO Convention at Disneyworld. Last Gasp unknown books
1699107920Madrid May 28 1699. Rare elaborately illuminated nobility diploma signed by King Charles II of Spain appointing Don Martin Damian Mendizabal the title of Marquis of Torre Gines. Quarto bound in full red contemporary velvet covered boards with two metal clasps containing five illuminated leaves two fully illuminated in color with the Royal coat of arms and portrait of King Charles II text in Spanish. Signed by King Charles II "Yo el Rey" and additionally signed by several Royal secretaries. Bound with a printed manuscript of the Oath of Fidelity to the King of Spain with Royal stamps dated 1701 and with two autograph letters laid in the first dated September 17 1701 and signed by Philip V and the second addressed to the Marquis. Exceptionally rare. Referred to as 'the Bewitched' and 'El Hechizado' Charles II of Spain was the last Habsburg ruler of the Spanish Empire. He died childless in 1700 with no immediate Habsburg heir. His will named his successor as 16-year-old Philip of Anjou grandson of Louis XIV and Charles's half-sister Maria Theresa and disputes over the inheritance led to the War of the Spanish Succession. hardcover books
1967213238New York: East Village Other Inc 1967. Newspaper. 28p. folded tabloid underground newspaper articles news review opinion events photos ads lightly-worn and toned on newsprint unfortunate mailing label across Other on front cover. Features: extremely early comic strips by Spain as M. Rodriguez Kim Deitch Trina boutique ad and a back cover poster by Peter Bramley for four Otis Redding and Carla Thomas shows at the Village Theatre. Cover story announcing the upcoming Death of Hippie ceremonies to be held in NY and SF by the Diggers. Another article on Diggers busted for littering identifies Abbie Hoffman here spelled as Abbe as a Digger busted on Pentagon grounds while casing it for the upcoming exorcism of the Pentagon in Wash. DC. East Village Other, Inc unknown books
1967259802New York: The East Village Other 1967. Newspaper. 20p. folded tabloid underground newspaper articles news review opinion events photos ads lightly-worn and toned on newsprint unfortunate mailing label on front cover affects Other. Cover photo collage of LBJ as the Frankenstein Monster. Goodman on the Dialectics of Liberation part one full-page strips by Spain & Crumb Edmonds on revolutionary theatre and the battles with authorities including the Mime Troupe the Ridiculous Theatre Company and The Living Theatre. The East Village Other unknown books
1967259228New York: East Village Other Inc 1967. Newspaper. 20p. folded tabloid underground newspaper articles news review opinion events photos ads lightly-worn and toned on newsprint. Editor/writer Glennby appears clothed as the issue's Slum Goddess. Lattimer's "Bunny Pediphile" illustrated with a Spain cartoon as Rodriguez. East Village Other, Inc unknown books
1969231420New York: East Village Other Inc 1969. Newspaper. 32p. folded tabloid underground newspaper articles news review opinion events photos ads lightly-worn and toned on newsprint long closed tear on cover affects The. Cover cartoon of the Bogeyman by Rory Hayes. Inside: full-page horror comic by Spain on the Comic Code Authority; full-page "Wainwright" comic strip split into 4 panel-rows spread over 4 pages; full-page ad by Vaughn Bode for Gothic Blimp Works column by Dean Latimer about the travails of Lennox Raphael's play "Che" and its blowback on Screw and EVO; plus usual cultural natter news and ads of the era. East Village Other, Inc unknown books
1769WRCAM48900Madrid 1769. 11pp. Gathered signatures stitched. Minor toning some loss to the last leaf affecting the stamped signature of the King and a couple of other words. Good. A royal decree discussing the finances of the Jesuit order in the Spanish territories after their expulsion from Spain in 1767 stamp- signed by King Charles III and docketed by his secretary. unknown books
1769WRCAM48901Madrid 1769. 7pp. Gathered signatures stitched. Minor worming. Very good. A royal decree attempting to suppress satirical publications of the Jesuit order mentioning "San Ignacio de Loyola" the founder of the Jesuits more than two centuries earlier. Issued after the suppression of the order this is specifically aimed at illicit works printed and circulated in Barcelona. The document is stamp-signed by King Charles III and secretarially docketed. unknown books
178444155Madrid: En la Imprenta Real de la Gazeta 1784. First edition. Contemporary mottled calf compartments decorated in gilt red morocco spine label titled in gilt sewn in green silk ribbon marbled endpapers. A very good copy head band worn with a small chip and a tiny split at the joint owner's bookplate and booksellers engraved plate on front pastedown contents quite bright and clean. 104 91 135 144 4 74 pp. 4to. Five volumes bound in one. Parts 1 2 3 set in condensed type; parts 4 and 5 in expanded type. Royal decrees from Charles III and instructions decisions and regulations issued by the Consejo en el Extraordinario and its president the Conde de Aranda and others--concerning the expulsion of the Jesuits. "These collections contain the documents relative to the expulsion of the Jesuits from the Spanish dominions and the confiscation of their property including the names of the colleges and houses of the order the application of the confiscated property &c. A complete series consists of five parts which are rarely found together. Our collation is of parts I. to III. only" Sabin 14304. Part 4 p. 75-127 contains the papal brief "Dominus ac Redemptor" by Clement XIV in Latin and Spanish. Earlier versions containing parts or all of the first three sections are not all that uncommon but those containing all five parts remain relatively rare. Other than this copy only two others have appeared in the auction records of ABPC and RBH since 1953 the first at the John B. Stetson sale at Parke Bernet and the second at Bonhams in a modern binding and dampstained. Palau 56516. See Sabin 14304. Medina BHA: IV 4228. En la Imprenta Real de la Gazeta unknown books
39080Single quarto manuscript document signed by Queen Isabella of Spain dated 20 November 1501. With "La Reyna" at the top and signed "Yo la Reyna." The letter is for a credit to Isabella's chamberlain Sancho de Paredes for various supplies services and expenditures. Matted and framed opposite a portrait of Isabella. The entire piece measures 19 inches by 20.5 inches. Rare and desirable signed by Queen Isabella. Isabella I was Queen of Castile. She was married to Ferdinand II of Aragon. Their marriage became the basis for the political unification of Spain under their grandson Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. After a struggle to claim her right to the throne she reorganized the governmental system brought the crime rate to the lowest it had been in years and unburdened the kingdom of the enormous debt her brother had left behind. Her reforms and those she made with her husband had an influence that extended well beyond the borders of their united kingdoms. Isabella and Ferdinand are known for completing the Reconquista and for supporting and financing Christopher Columbus' 1492 voyage that led to the opening of the New World and to the establishment of Spain as the first global power which dominated Europe and much of the world for more than a century. Isabella was granted the title Servant of God by the Catholic Church in 1974. unknown books
200126008Cologne: International Auctioneers 2001. First edition. Illustrated paper wrappers. A fine copy. 211 pp. Illus. with color & b/w plates. 4to. Auction from five auction houses with the work of Giacomo Balla Klemens Brosch Gaston Chaissac Le Corbusier George Grosz Gustav Klimt Leger Giorgio Morandi Pissaro Mark Toby Emil Nolde and 55 others. International Auctioneers unknown books
1609WRCAM33906The Hague: Hillebrant Iacobz 1609. 11pp. Large vignette on titlepage. Modern marbled boards. Very good. The original edition of the official Dutch text of the "Twelve Years' Truce" between the United Provinces and Spain. There are thirty- eight articles of which nine deal with foreign trade. The present issue undoubtedly the first contains a few errors which were corrected in later issues. By this treaty the Dutch agreed to stay out of Spanish controlled possessions in the New World. However it conceded the right of the Dutch to trade in the East Indies and on the basis of this and the breathing room the treaty gave them they were able to rout the Spanish in the 1620s. Savelle calls the Twelve Years' Truce "a great international triumph for all the challengers of the Hispano-Portuguese monopoly" on New World colonization since it marked the first explicit recognition of the right of any non- Iberian people to sail to the Americas. Spain tacitly recognized the right of the Dutch to own colonies in the New World a right which the Dutch French and British vigorously pursued in the ensuing decades. An important treaty and quite scarce. OCLC locates three copies. Not in EUROPEAN AMERICANA. DAVENPORT 28. KNUTTEL 1589. SAVELLE THE ORIGINS OF AMERICAN DIPLOMACY pp.31-34. OCLC 8525118 17751928. Hillebrant Iacobz hardcover books
1821WRCAM51825Guatemala 1821. 18pp. Small folio. Stitched. Ink stains and dust soiling on final leaf verso. Light foxing and dampstaining. Very good. A Guatemalan imprint of several decrees passed by the Spanish legislative assembly the Còrtes in 1820. The assembly existed for three years from 1820 to 1822 during the so-called Trienio Liberal when a military coup forced Ferdinand VII to institute a more liberal form of government. He eventually defeated those forces with the aid of the French and re-established an absolute monarchy. The decrees included here order pensions to be granted to those families who suffered for their adherence to the Constitution first promulgated in 1812 and offers amnesty to all those who were forced to emigrate from Spain because of their political views among other actions. The longest decree addresses enrollments in the Spanish navy and the provision of men for Spanish warships. The final leaf bears the printed signature of Gavino GaÃÂnza who at this point was the head of the Spanish provincial and military government in Guatemala but who later in 1821 would sign the Act of Independence of Central America and declare the country's independence from Spain. Rare not in Medina or OCLC. unknown books
1809WRCAM54392Westminster: Printed by R.G. Clarke at the Gazette Office 1809. 7pp. Folio. Dbd. Minor edge wear. Very good. A rare treaty that ended the Anglo-Spanish War and united the two countries against the invading French in the midst of the Napoleonic Wars. The text of the treaty is printed first in English then in Spanish. No copies of this imprint appear in OCLC with only two copies of the London Harrison imprint recorded at the Boston Athenaeum and Harvard. OCLC 83895716 ref. Printed by R.G. Clarke, at the Gazette Office unknown books
1739WRCAM9181London: Printed for Samuel Buckley 1739. 28pp. Quarto. Gathered signatures stitched as issued. Very good. By this convention the two powers agree to avoid war to meet in conference to settle their respective pretensions to the American trade and navigation to discuss the borders of Florida and the Carolinas and other parts in dispute. Much literature of the pamphlet nature pro and con followed in the wake of this convention. Not in EUROPEAN AMERICANA. SABIN 16195. SERVIES 338. DAVENPORT 129. Printed for Samuel Buckley unknown books
1818WRCAM16438London 1818. 128pp. Folio. Modern half morocco and marbled boards. Fine. An important agreement between Britain and Spain regarding the illicit slave trade. Britain herein agrees to pay £400000 as compensation for all losses sustained by Spaniards in the slave trade "on account of vessels captured previously to the exchange of the Ratifications of the present Treaty." Printed in English and Spanish. hardcover books
1660WRCAM35380London: Printed by John Bill and Christopher Barker 1660. Broadside 13 1/2 x 10 3/4 inches. Affixed at corners to a slightly larger sheet. Near fine. Archivally matted protected with mylar sheet. An early diplomatic proclamation by the recently restored British monarch King Charles II and part of his efforts to encourage British colonial and commercial expansion. Though not formally at war hostilities existed between Britain and Spain especially concerning the harassment of commerce at sea and colonies in the Caribbean. Five years earlier the English under Cromwell had seized Jamaica from Spain and in 1656 Spain lent their support to Charles II's restoration to the throne. In this document Charles II proclaims that "all prisoners ships goods merchandize sic or whatsoever else taken upon one another either by any of our subjects or the subjects of our said dear brother since said time of our arrival in England be and shall be upon due proof thereof redelivered and restored." At the same time Charles II was negotiating with the Portuguese against Spanish interests in the New World especially with regard to Jamaica which the British ultimately retained. WING C3287. Printed by John Bill and Christopher Barker unknown books
1762WRCAM35234London: Printed by Mark Baskett 1762. 271pp. Quarto. Dbd. Chip in fore-edge of titlepage a few fox marks. Very good. An interesting and important collection of documents regarding British-Spanish relations toward the close of the French and Indian War. Most of the letters and papers are by Prime Minister William Pitt; Secretary of State for the Southern Department Sir Charles Wyndham the Earl of Egremont; and George Hervey the Earl of Bristol who was the British envoy at Madrid. Though not engaged in open warfare with Spain relations between Great Britain and Spain were tense and deteriorating in the late 1750s and early 1760s especially over issues of fishing rights in Newfoundland territory in the West Indies and Spanish support for the French. Though Pitt resigned as Prime Minister in late 1761 Great Britain declared war on Spain in early 1762. This collection prints documents explaining and justifying the Pitt administration's actions in the years leading up to the declaration of war. Several of the letters contain minute details of meetings and conferences between the Earl of Bristol and Spanish envoys and the Earl of Egremont's reply described by the DNB as a "masterly state paper" to the Spanish Ambassador Fuentes is included as well. There is much of American interest throughout including the British side of the story with regard to Newfoundland fisheries and the West Indies. Spain would ultimately lose Florida in the peace that settled the Seven Years' War. Not in Sabin. TPL 6496. O'DEA 168. Printed by Mark Baskett unknown books
1762WRCAM41505London: Printed by E. Owen and T. Harrison in Warwick Lane 1762. 4279pp. French and English titlepages with parallel text on facing pages. Contemporary half calf and marbled boards spine gilt leather label. Boards and extremities rubbed. Bookplate of Alberto Parreño on front pastedown. Some slight offsetting on titlepages else quite clean internally. Very good. An interesting and important collection of documents regarding British-Spanish relations toward the close of the French and Indian War in it's rare French and English edition. Most of the letters and papers are by Prime Minister William Pitt; Secretary of State for the Southern Department Sir Charles Wyndham the Earl of Egremont; and George Hervey the Earl of Bristol who was the British envoy at Madrid. Though not engaged in open warfare with Spain relations between Great Britain and Spain were tense and deteriorating in the late 1750s and early 1760s especially over issues of fishing rights in Newfoundland territory in the West Indies and Spanish support for the French. Though Pitt resigned as Prime Minister in late 1761 Great Britain declared war on Spain in early 1762. This collection prints documents explaining and justifying the Pitt administration's actions in the years leading up to the declaration of war. Several of the letters contain minute details of meetings and conferences between the Earl of Bristol and Spanish envoys and the Earl of Egremont's reply described by the DNB as a "masterly state paper" to the Spanish Ambassador Fuentes is included as well. There is much of American interest throughout including the British side of the story with regard to Newfoundland fisheries and the West Indies. Spain would ultimately lose Florida in the peace that settled the Seven Years' War. SABIN 58483. Printed by E. Owen and T. Harrison, in Warwick Lane hardcover books