837 résultats
SAINT-BRIEUC, Imp. Prud'homme - 1914 - Tiré à part des Mémoires de l'Association Bretonne, Congrès de Saint Servan, 1913 - 11 pages - Très propre
Una indagine dell'ispettore Thomas Lynley.
Hardcover grand in-8°, 647 pages, cartonnage illustré. Très bel exemplaire. [FL-14]
Good in worn and soiled red cloth. Front inner hinge loosening. (Companion poets). With an introduction by Henry Morley. 14046. eng
4to, 29.7cm. Pp. 100, frontisp., 38 photos on 8 pls., 1 fold. map, 1 fold. pl. of column. sections, 1 fold. sheet of map and sections, 46 figs., bibl. Orig. wrs. Very good.
Madrid, Establecimiento Tipográfico de Don Francisco de Paula Mellado, 1845. 8vo.; 328 pp., 1 h. Encuadernación de época en media piel.
Bella carta geografica tratta dall'atlante del Borghi. mm 320x240 su foglio di mm 470x360. Ottimo esemplare, raffigurante la Scozia del sud. In ottimo stato (fine copy).
in-16, broché, couverture illustree. Tres bel exemplaire. [MB-3]
306pp., 25cm., dans la série "Académie royale de Belgique. Mémoires de la classe des lettres. Collection in-8o. 2e série" tome 64 fascicule 4, br., bel état
Barcelona, Editorial Lumen, 1972. 4to.; 91 pp. Ilustraciones entre el texto. Enc. original en cartoné.
Broché. 318 pages. Format de poche.
Málaga, Universidad, 2007. 4to.; 472 pp. Ilustraciones. Cubiertas originales.
Complet en 2 tomes, 861pp. (pagination continuée) + 2 microfilms, avec qqs. ills. en n/bl, 24cm., br.orig., Thèse de Doctorat, cachet au verso de la p.d.t., texte frais, bon état, poids: 1.4kg., G110192
grand in-8°, couverture illustrée. Excellent état. [FL-14]
in-8°, broche, couverture illustree. Exemplaire provenant d'une bibliotheque (couverture recouverte d'adhésif transparent, étiquettes). [BAT-4]
Quidam Editeur, 2017, 183 pp., broché, bon état.
Paris, Société d'Édition et de Publications, s.a (1920). 4to.; 92 pp. sin numerar con 9 ilustraciones entre el texto, cinco de ellas a toda plana. Cubiertas mudas en cartulina.
in-12, 182 pp., broché, couverture rempliée.- Exemplaire numéroté sur vélin supérieur. Quelques pages jaunies sinon bel exemplaire. [NV-6] RARE, SEULE TRADUCTION ET EDITION FRANÇAISE, non réédité.
CROZON (29) , Ed. Armeline - 2000 - In-8 - Broché - Couverture illustrée en couleurs - Carte, tableaux - 344 pages - Très bon exemplaire
fort volume n-8°, 678 pages, broche, couverture illustree.- Très bel exemplaire. [FL-15]
8vo., First and Sole Edition, on laid paper, with a frontispiece and 7 plates (one folding); pictorial cloth gilt, gilt back, uncut, a remarkably bright, clean, near fine copy. Much sought after account of the military history of Kilcumein and Fort Augustus throughout the Jacobite period. Originally delivered as an address by the retiring President of Inverness Scientific and Literary Society. Very scarce, especially in this condition.
slipcased; Wood engraving; 8vo; 237 pages
Three volumes. 8vo. Uncut. Foxed. Bound in the original boards, which have become quite worn and broken. This true First Edition would make a good candidate for classy rebinding. "Kenilworth was born out of Constable's suggestion to write a novel set during the time of Queen Elizabeth; however, Scott rejected the suggestion that it be entitled "The Armada" because he had other ideas than centring the novel on the epic events of the invasion. He based the novel around the legend of the murder of Amy Robsart, a story told in Meikle's old ballad, which had been one of Scott's favourite poems. However, Scott did accept Constable's suggestion of naming the novel Kenilworth instead of "Cumnor Hall". The publisher applauded this decision with the exclamation: "By God, I am all but the author of the Waverley Novels!" When Kenilworth appeared in 1821 it was an immediate success with both readers and critics. The Edinburgh Review praised Scott for bringing to life the character of Queen Elizabeth, and for the way in which he contrasted the evil plotting of Varney against the grandeur of Kenilworth Castle." It was a grand best-seller on both sides of the Atlantic. FIRST EDITION / FIRST ISSUE. W151.
"Celtic Prayers: Prayers and blessings from the Hebridean Islands in Scotland" A selection from the Carmina Gadelica translated into Estonian by Valda Raud and Jaan Tammsalu It was a compendium of prayers, hymns, charms, incantations, blessings, literary-folkloric poems and songs, proverbs, lexical items, historical anecdotes, natural history observations, and miscellaneous lore gathered in the Gaelic-speaking regions of Scotland...the material was recorded, translated, and reworked by Alexander Carmichael.Despite its flaws, Carmina Gadelica remains an indispensable source for the popular culture, customs, beliefs, and way of life of Scottish Gaels in the 19th.C. Book
Londres, Thomas Nelson & Sons Ltd., 1951. 4to. menor; 170 pp., 2 hs., con un mapa del Imperio Romano. Encuadernación original en cartoné.