8 176 résultats
1889RO80103239HACHETTE et Cie. 2ème édition. 1883 - 1889. In-8. Relié demi-cuir. Etat d'usage, Couv. défraîchie, Dos satisfaisant, Quelques rousseurs. 611 + 632 + 670 pages. Etiquette de code sur la coiffe en-tête et tampons de bibliothèque sur la page de titre. Coupes et coins des plats, frottés. Coins et coupes des plats légèrement frottés.. . . . Classification Dewey : 947-Europe de l'Est, URSS
1833R320066952DEBECOURT. 1833. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. défraîchie, Dos plié, Intérieur acceptable. VI + 270 + 268 pages - 1 etiquette collée en coiffe en pied de chaque volume. Des taches légèrement jaunatres sur le Tome 2 sans cosnéquence sur la lecture.. . . . Classification Dewey : 947-Europe de l'Est, URSS
1844R240106817CHARLES GOSSELIN. 1844. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 684 pages / tampon de bibliothèque sur la page de garde / une gommette sur le dos. . . . Classification Dewey : 947-Europe de l'Est, URSS
Librairie Plon, Plon-Nourrit et Cie, Paris. 1921-1922. In-8 Carré. Broché. Etat d'usage. Plats abîmés. Dos satisfaisant. Intérieur acceptable. 377 pages pour le tome I, 346 pages pour le tome II et 356 pages pour le tome III. Photo-gravures en noir et blanc en frontispices (portraits). Illustrés de nombreuses photo-gravutes en noir et blanc sur planches hors texte. Papiers annotés encollés sur les dos, les consolidant. Etiquettes de code sur les couvertures. Quelques tampons de bibliothèque. Légères traces de colle sur les couvertures. 9e-11e éditions. Tome I, 20 juillet 1914 - 2 juin 1915. Tome II, 3 juin 1915 - 18 août 1916. Tome III, 19 août 1916 - 17 mai 1917. Aquarelles de G. LOUKOMSKY.
1993269586PN. New. 1993. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition . PN paperback
1964891Z49Novosibirsk : Siberian Branch of the USSR Academy of Sciences 1964. Cloth. Very Good Indeed. 10.5" by 6.5". None . A very scarce work on the October Revolution written in Cyrillic. In the publisher's original cloth. Written in Russian Cyrillic. This work provides a historical account of the October Revolution discussing the causes. The October Revolution was a revolution in Russia led by Vladimir Lenin and his 'Bolshevik Party' and eventually led to the Russian Civil War. This work is part of series that aimed to study Siberia during the period of capitalism. Library copy with stamps. In the publisher's original cloth. Externally very smart with slight bumping and rubbing to the extremities a small closed tear to the cloth to the head of the front joint library annotations to the head and tail of the spine and the odd minor mark. Library stamp to the front pastedown with age toning to the endpapers. Internally generally firmly bound with evidence of strain to the front and rear. Pages generally bright and clean with a tidemark to pp. 193 and 177. Library stamp to the title page and verso. Very Good Indeed Siberian Branch of the USSR Academy of Sciences hardcover
IN HEBREW AND YIDDISH. RARE memorial book dedicated to the Jewish community of Molchad, a village located on the Molchad River in the Baranovichy District of the Brest Region, Belarus. 3600 Jews from Molchad and the surrounding area were massacred by the native Polish population with the support of German troops, with many Jews buried alive. Contains a list of pictures, an introduction by editor and two prefaces in English. 240x170mm.460+12 pages. Black leather embossed Hardcover with gilt front cover and spine. Cover slightly curved. Several small paint stains on rear cover and spine. Single small stain on front cover. Cover edges slightly bumped. Cover corners and spine edges bumped. Inner cover age-stained near binding and slightly wrinkled. Pages slightly yellowing. [SUMMARY]: This extremely rare Yizkor Book is in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
240x180 mm. 64+444 pages. Gilt hardcover with dust jacket. Jacket edges slightly wrinkled. Cover corners and edges slightly bumped. Spine edges slightly bumped. Else in good condition.
19491054991949 N° 11 - Novembre 1949 - Grand in-folio (environ 30x42cm), broché couverture illustrée - Revue mensuelle illustrée - Très belles reproductions photographiques - Première page de la couverture : Montage de la carcasse métallique d'un grand édifice, place de Smolensk à Moscou - Quatrième page de la couverture : L'ensemble de chant et de danse de la RSS de Géorgie à la fête djiguites kolkhoziens en Abkhasie
No marks or inscriptions. A very clean very tight copy with bright unmarked boards, bump to top of spine and no bumping to corners. Dust jacket not price clipped or marked or torn with tiny nick and slight creasing to top of spine. 224pp. A detailed study of the camouflage and markings of the Soviet Air Forces during the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945. Extremely well illustrated. Scarce in the UK.
Contains map. 280x210 mm. 292 pages. Hardcover. Cover and spine slightly stained. Cover corners slightly bumped. Spine edges slightly bumped. Ex-library copy with the usual marks. Pages slightly yellowing. Else in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
RARE single volume featuring five titles from a handsome 19th-century Lemberg printing of the Hilchot of Alfasi, a systematic halachic abridgment of the Babylonian Talmud. This edition includes all vast body of the traditional commentary to the Rif, as well as the additional laws found in the Tosefta and in the Mordechai. The titles in this volume deal with the tractates of Sanhedrin, Shevu'ot, Makkot, Avodah Zarah and Hullin, as well as several Toseftas to other tractates in Tohorot. 230x160mm. 53+16+116+18+18+102+18+144+84 double pages. Patterned cloth Hardcover. Page edges marbled. Cover slightly worn. Cover edges slightly bumped. Faded stamps on some of the title pages. Few humidity stains. Pages yellowing, few pages slightly tattered near edges with minimal damage to text. [SUMMARY]: Save for the aforementioned wear, this old and good-looking edition of the Hilchot is in good condition.
193540598Moskve Der Emes 1935. Hardcover. 1st edition. Original cloth. 4to 284 1 pages. Illustrations throughout. Yiddish. Title translates as "Jews in the USSR. A Symposium." Nazi-era Soviet description the Soviet Jewish experience in the lead-up to the Holocaust and the great purges. Loaded with photos. Beautiful sepia photographic endpapers. SUBJECT S : Jews -- Soviet Union -- Political and social conditions. OCLC: 7431478. Bit of staining to covers but attractive excellent condition inside far better than usually found really an excellent Copy Very Good Condition YIZ-16-12A-ELX. Moskve, Der Emes hardcover
1960556565Jerusalem: The Israel Program for Scientific Translations 1960. Hardcover. Fine/Near Fine. First English-language edition. Quarto. 484pp. Illustrated with charts and graphs. Owner stamp and signature of a noted American psychologist on the front fly. Top corners of boards and about half the text modestly bumped else a fine copy in a close to fine dust jacket with a corresponding gentle bump and tiny abrasion. Published for two American institutions: The National Science Foundation and The Department of Health Education and Welfare. First published in Russian in 1955. This publisher The Israel Program for Scientific Translations was founded by future mayor of Jerusalem Teddy Kollek in 1959. He is quoted in a 1970 article in The New York Times: "There was a keen need in the West for technically sound translations of Soviet scientific works soon after the launching of Sputnik. We had numerous immigrants with exceptional linguistic and scientific ability so we just put demand and supply together.†The venture began modestly—with a small government grant and five editors—but by 1970 had over 100 editors and published about 150 English-language titles a year. A nice copy of a relatively uncommon title. The Israel Program for Scientific Translations hardcover
193780372Moscow: The People's Commissariat of Justice of the U.S.S.R. 1937. Presumed First Edition First printing thus. Hardcover. Fair. 22 cm. 8 580 pages. Cover very worn and soiled. Hindges weak. Edges rubbed and corners bumped. Some moisture staining at bottom all pages separate and text complete. This second purge trial involved 17 lesser figures including Karl Radek Yuri Pyatakov and Grigory Sokolnikov. Alexander Beloborodov was also arrested and intended to be tried along with Radek but did not make the confession required of him and so he was not produced in court. Thirteen of the defendants were eventually executed by shooting. The rest received sentences in labor camps. Radek was spared as he implicated others including Nikolai Bukharin Alexei Rykov and Marshal Mikhail Tukhachevsky setting the stage for the Trial of Military and Trial of the Twenty One. Radek provided the pretext for the purge on a massive scale with his testimony that there was a "third organization separate from the cadres which had passed through Trotsky's school" as well as "semi-Trotskyites quarter-Trotskyites one-eighth-Trotskyites people who helped us not knowing of the terrorist organization but sympathizing with us people who from liberalism from a Fronde against the Party gave us this help." By the third organization he meant the last remaining former opposition group called Rightists led by Bukharin. At the time many Western observers who attended the trials said that they were fair and that the guilt of the accused had been established. They based this assessment on the confessions of the accused which were given in open court without any apparent evidence that they had been tortured or drugged. The Moscow Trials were a series of show trials held in the Soviet Union at the instigation of Joseph Stalin between 1936 and 1938 against Trotskyists and members of Right Opposition of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. There were three Moscow Trials: the Case of the Trotskyite-Zinovievite Terrorist Center Zinoviev-Kamenev Trial aka "Trial of the Sixteen" 1936 the Case of the Anti-Soviet Trotskyist Center Pyatakov-Radek Trial 1937 and the Case of the Anti-Soviet "Bloc of Rights and Trotskyites" Bukharin-Rykov Trial aka "Trial of the Twenty-One" 1938. The defendants of these were Old Bolshevik party leaders and top officials of the Soviet secret police. Most defendants were charged under Article 58 of the RSFSR Penal Code with conspiring with the Western powers to assassinate Stalin and other Soviet leaders dismember the Soviet Union and restore capitalism. The Moscow Trials led to the execution of many of the defendants. They are generally seen as part of Stalin's Great Purge an attempt to rid the party of current or prior oppositionists especially but not exclusively Trotskyists and any leading Bolshevik cadre from the time of the Russian Revolution or earlier who might even potentially become a figurehead for the growing discontent in the Soviet populace resulting from Stalin's mismanagement of the economy. Stalin's hasty industrialization during the period of the First Five Year Plan and the brutality of the forced agricultural collectivization had led to an acute economic and political crisis in 1928-33 a part of the global problem known as the Great Depression and to enormous suffering on the part of the Soviet workers and peasants. Stalin was acutely conscious of this fact and took steps to prevent it taking the form of an opposition inside the Communist Party of the Soviet Union to his increasingly totalitarian rule. The People's Commissariat of Justice of the U.S.S.R. hardcover
193858833Moscow: The People's Commissariat of Justice of the U.S.S.R. 1938. Presumed First Edition First printing thus. Hardcover. Fair. 22 cm. 7 799 1 pages. Errata slip at last page. Cover shows wear and soiling. Edges rubbed and corners bumped. The third show trial in March 1938 known as The Trial of the Twenty-One tied together all the loose threads from earlier trials. It included 21 defendants alleged to belong to the so-called "Bloc of Rightists and Trotskyites" It was now alleged that Bukharin and others had conspired to assassinate Lenin and Stalin numerous times after 1918 and had murdered Soviet writer Maxim Gorky by poison in 1936. The group also stood accused of espionage. Bukharin and others were claimed to have plotted the overthrow and territorial partition of the Soviet Union in collusion with agents of the German and Japanese governments among other preposterous charges. Even sympathetic observers who had stomached the earlier trials found it hard to swallow the new charges as they became ever more absurd and the purge had now expanded to include virtually every living Old Bolshevik leader except Stalin. Stalin also observed some of the trial in person from a hidden chamber in the courtroom. On the first day of the trial Krestinsky caused a sensation when he repudiated his written confession and pleaded not guilty to all the charges. However he changed his plea the next day after "special measures" which dislocated his left shoulder among other things. The Moscow Trials were a series of show trials held in the Soviet Union at the instigation of Joseph Stalin between 1936 and 1938 against Trotskyists and members of Right Opposition of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. There were three Moscow Trials: the Case of the Trotskyite-Zinovievite Terrorist Center Zinoviev-Kamenev Trial aka "Trial of the Sixteen" 1936 the Case of the Anti-Soviet Trotskyist Center Pyatakov-Radek Trial 1937 and the Case of the Anti-Soviet "Bloc of Rights and Trotskyites" Bukharin-Rykov Trial aka "Trial of the Twenty-One" 1938. The defendants of these were Old Bolshevik party leaders and top officials of the Soviet secret police. Most defendants were charged under Article 58 of the RSFSR Penal Code with conspiring with the Western powers to assassinate Stalin and other Soviet leaders dismember the Soviet Union and restore capitalism. The Moscow Trials led to the execution of many of the defendants. They are generally seen as part of Stalin's Great Purge an attempt to rid the party of current or prior oppositionists especially but not exclusively Trotskyists and any leading Bolshevik cadre from the time of the Russian Revolution or earlier who might even potentially become a figurehead for the growing discontent in the Soviet populace resulting from Stalin's mismanagement of the economy. Stalin's hasty industrialization during the period of the First Five Year Plan and the brutality of the forced agricultural collectivization had led to an acute economic and political crisis in 1928-33 a part of the global problem known as the Great Depression and to enormous suffering on the part of the Soviet workers and peasants. Stalin was acutely conscious of this fact and took steps to prevent it taking the form of an opposition inside the Communist Party of the Soviet Union to his increasingly totalitarian rule. The People's Commissariat of Justice of the U.S.S.R. hardcover
19642080302106804243New Japan Publishing Company 1964. Soft Cover. Fine. Size: B6 Number of copies: 4 New Japan Publishing Company paperback
1938004807Moscow Russia: Peoples Commissariat of Justice of the U.S.S.R. 1938. 800pp with errata sheet. Original verbatim english language transcript of the purge trial of Bukharin and several others. Board covers have some wear. First Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good/No Jacket Issued. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Peoples Commissariat of Justice of the U.S.S.R. hardcover
18722Issued by Tass Agency Chronicle House 72-78 Fleet Street E.C.4. London. No. 8669 28 June 1947. 5pp. folio. Duplicate typescript on three leaves. In fair condition on aged paper. The first article produced on the eve of Indian independence begins: 'Moscow radio broadcast an account of a lecture given by Corresponding Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences Zhukove on "The Situation in India" at the Polytechnical Museum in Moscow.' It proceeds with a summary of Zhukov's lecture the view he expounds including the following: 'Britain's new policy derives from the economic changes which took place in India during the years of the Second World War. India's big bourgeoisie made profits from the war and have become richer and at the same time more compliant towards Britain. The bourgeoisie's fear of the popular masses is greater than their fear of Britain.' The second articles is pure propaganda beginning: 'A vast territory of over 1158000 sq. miles lies in the North-East of the Soviety Union. In Tsarist days it was known as "the Siberia of Siberia." It is now the Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic - a part of the Russian Federation - which is just celebrating the 25th anniversary of its foundation says a TASS message.' From the papers of Jimmy Shields of the International Department of the Communist Party of Great Britain. No other copy traced. Issued by Tass Agency, Chronicle House, 72-78 Fleet Street, E.C.4., London. No. 8669, 28 June 1947. unknown
RARE copy of the periodical published by former Jewish residents of the Polish/Lithuanian/Belorussian city of Grodno (Hrodna). Contains articles written by ex-residents from all over the world, and includes a wealth of information about the city and its pre-holocaust Jewish community. Written almost entirely in Yiddish, with 4 pages in Spanish. Includes several b&w photographs. 320x235mm. 140 pages. Softcover. Cover yellowing, worn and slightly stained. Cover edges slightly tattered. Cover corners creased and slightly torn. Spine creased. Spine edges torn and peeling. Binding slightly loose. Pages yellowing. [SUMMARY]: Save for the aforementioned external damage, this testament to the lost world of Jewish Grodno is in good condition.
Paper wrappers; 8vo. 38 pages. OCLC lists 12 copies worldwide. Cover chipped, bottom corner bumped, good condition. (ComHist-10-16)
Paper wrappers; 8vo. 38 pages. OCLC lists twelve copies worldwide. Some cover soil. Very good condition. (W-62)
PP. 100 C.A., FOGLI A4, BOZZA NON EDITA REDATTA DAL 1992 AL 1995, 11 FASCICOLI (1/4 TESTO ITALIANO E FRANCESE; 5/11 TESTO FRANCESE), 409 SERIE CLASSIFICATE E RIPRODOTTE A COLORI.
Paris. 4to. 8 pages. In Russian. Includes: official release of the materials of Russian social-democratic party conference, including resolution about representation of the party in Duma (Russian parliamentary assembly) . None in OCLC. Ex-library stamp (Bund Archives in Russian) on cover page, brittle browned newsprint medium, uncut, minor tear and wear, otherwise in very good condition (RUS-7-364) . Xxxx