16 759 résultats
1793065174Edinburgh / London: Printed by J. Robertson and H.D. Symonds; and volume 2 printed for W. Skirving by J. Robertson 1793. Hardcover. Good. 8vo. TWO WORKS IN ONE VOLUME. Robertson's Edition containing 2 volumes within this one edition: "An Account of the Trial of Thomas Muir Esq. Younger of Huntershill before the High Court of Justiciary at Edinburgh on the 30th and 31s days of August 1793" with an appendix; and "The Trial of the Rev. Thomas Fyshe Palmer Before the Circuit Court of Justiciary Held at Perth on the 12th and 13th September 1793 on an Indictment for Seditious Practices" also with an appendix. Thomas Muir the Younger of Huntershill 1765 - 1799 was a Scottish political reformer and the first political prisoner transported to Australia. Muir was sentenced to 14 years transportation for the the crime of sedition; for campaigning for parliamentary reform and for distributing copies of Thomas Paine's 'The Rights of Man'. His trial became one of the great sensations of the day; he was one of the group known as the 'Scottish Martyrs' who were sentenced in Scotland in 1793-4. Antipodean Books Maps & Prints ABAA; Thomas Fyshe Palmer 1747–1802 was an English Unitarian minister political reformer and convict. When agitation for political reform began in 1792 Dundee became one of its centres in Scotland. A society called the 'Friends of Liberty' was formed in 1793. One evening in June 1793 Palmer attended a meeting when George Mealmaker weaver in Dundee brought a draft of an address to the public which he purposed circulating as a handbill. Palmer revised it modifying it to a complaint against the government for war taxation and a claim for universal suffrage and short parliaments. The address was sent to be printed in Edinburgh in July 1793. The authorities were alarmed and decided to meet an anticipated revolution in time; and in the belief that they were attacking a revolutionary leader Palmer was arrested in Edinburgh on 2 August on a charge of sedition as the author of the document. Wikipedia Hardcover in good condition. 8vo. Marbled blue black red and off-white paper boards show wear with tears and scuffs to the edges and parts of the cover. Most of the red has worn away. Quarter leather binding is also worn with rubbing and scratches and chips in the leather. Leather spine bears gilt bands and raised peach-color label with gilt lettering and decorative border. Ex-libre label at bottom of spine. Pages are yellowed with some foxing throughout. Bookworm tracks and tunnels are present from the front pastedown to page 12 of the first volume and from page 155 through the back of the back paste-down of the second volume. Worm holes are burrowed through some of the words but the content is still mostly understandable except possibly for the last number of pages. Binding solid and pages are complete as no leaves are loose. Frontispiece is missing. There is a crack on the inner front hinge however exposing the binding thread. Though secure pages show the three specific indentations of where the thread binds the leaves to the spine and can be seen plainly within the gutter. Some leaves bear minor creasing and staining though the print remains legible. Volume 1 is 160 pages with appendix. Volume II is 195 pages and also includes an appendix. There is also a small hand-written note in ink approximately 3.5" x 2.75" circa late 1700's believed to possibly be written in French laid in. An intriguing piece of history. Full refund if not satisfied. Printed by J. Robertson and H.D. Symonds; and volume 2 printed for W. Skirving by J. Robertson hardcover
186242108London: R. Phillips Printer 1862. 16pp. Original printed blue wrappers wrappers detaching but present. Disbound Good plus.<br /> <br /> This scarce pamphlet was issued to support the Confederacy. <br /> The Association warns that the rebel states "are now engaged in a war of defence against a most fearful odds of unscrupulous enemies. Their immense coast is blockaded and their entire communication cut off from the rest of mankind. Their harbours have been destroyed their rivers and waters are ion the possession of their enemies. Laws have been passed confiscating their property and forcing the oath of allegiance under the pains and penalty of death."<br /> OCLC 58874839 3- CA State Lib. U. Manchester U. Bristol 1102012019 1- DLC as of June 2026. R. Phillips, Printer unknown
1015940145.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
39641London: N.P. c. 1725. 12mo 23 1pp. disbound. This edition not recorded by ESTC. [London: N.P., c. 1725.] unknown
1902ZB986160NY: The Independent 1902. first appearance of this lighter-than-air story spanning pages 1290-1292; iv 60 v-xii pp. original printed paper wrappers spine chipped small closed tears to the edges of the covers else very good; Woodbridge 618. - If you are reading this this item is actually physically in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties taxes or fees required by recipient's country. NY: The Independent unknown
0265852803.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1806NC126181806. Sharp William. Disbound scarce first edition pamphlet. There is some foxing in places the text is well bound together. unknown
1928mon0000133685London : The Cresset Press Ltd 1928T. hardcover. Good. 3.2995 in x 27.1574 in x 21.0660 in. 1928 first edition cressnet press on rainbow coloured boards London : The Cresset Press Ltd hardcover
1846LONDON000199Richard Bentley London. 1846. First edition. Edited by Charles Mackay. Octavo. Two volumes: pp iv 414; iv 465. Original dark green cloth decorated in blind and lettered on the spine in gilt. The author who was a painter engraver and antiquarian had died in 1833 and this is one of three works issued by his executors.Tails of spine slightly scuffed. A near-fine set. Very bright. Richard Bentley, London. hardcover
199650629London: Sotheby's. New. 1996. Paperback. FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Text pristine pages unmarked and tight to spine - 8 pages with 3 illustrations. -- with a bonus offer-- . Sotheby's paperback
1660006060London: Printed for William Grantham at the Black Bear in S. Paul's Church yard near the little north-door 1660. 1660. Collation 18pp. Bound in modern marble boards title label on top cover. Binding in excellent condition without an visable wear. Internally contents holding firm no loose pages some light marking to title pages in very good clean condition. A very good clean copy of a very rare pamphlet. Book measures 16x20cm. Weight 750g.6060.A2. First Edition. 8vo. Printed for William Grantham, at the Black Bear in S. Paul's Church yard near the little north-door, 1660. hardcover
68-1556London UK: W. Bowyer 1730. 12mo. Marbled Boards. 34 pp. Very Good bowed. Letterpress on laid paper. Illustrated.Rebound by artisan bookbinder Sasha Mosalov. London, UK: W. Bowyer, 1730. hardcover
18626333London 1862. Wood engraving 33.5 x 50 cms modern hand-colour English text on verso. Print unknown
1965008279Horse Guards Whitehall: Headquarters London District 1965. First and only edition. This is a remarkably rich and extensive archive of official documents relating to preparation for the State Funeral of Sir Winston Churchill Saturday 30th January 1965. While we have handled numerous planning documents from the days leading up to Churchills elaborate State Funeral we have not previously encountered anything quite so extensive in the way of official planning documents. <br /> <br />All of the documents and mementos reside within an enormous canvas-bound two-ring binder comprising an incredibly detailed document Copy No. 323 of the indexed and tabbed "Special District Order By Major-General E. J. B. Nelson General Officer Commanding London District and Major-General Commanding The Household Brigade. This enormous document measures 13.5 x 8.75 inches is nearly 1.5 inches thick and features 16 separate purple-tabbed sections these sections teeming with details about every aspect of the public ceremonies and terminating in 15 maps. <br /> <br />The separate but related documents laid in are also extensive. These include: Amendments 2-5 to the Special District Order; the official and confidential list of Operation Hope Not Telephone Numbers; a confidential summary document for the Operation Hope Not; a State Funeral Warning Order and accompanying large folding tabular detail of "Troops Taking Part in the Procession". <br /> <br />An ink-stamp at the head of the Operation Hope Not Telephone Numbers document states HEADQUARTERS 19 INF BDE GP. Our presumption is that this indicates that this binder and the documents therein belonged to a senior military officer participating in the State Funeral. <br /> <br />Perhaps most poignant also laid in is an original black crepe sewn and lined arm band for participation in the State Funeral ceremonies ostensibly the one worn during the Funeral by the participating military officer to whom these documents belonged. <br /> <br />Of course the document is primary source history of one of the twentieth centurys most elaborate memorial services for one of its greatest public figures. Beyond historical significance the overall effect of this mammoth trove of documents is to convey by sheer volume of detail the mammoth organizational scope of official public mourning for Winston Churchill. <br /> <br />On Sunday 24 January 1965 Winston Churchill died at the age of 90. By the time of his death he had become a living national memorial" of the time he had lived and the Nation Empire and free world he had served. His death completed his transformation into a national icon. <br /> <br />The day after Churchill died on 25 January the Queen sent a message to Parliament announcing: "Confident in the support of Parliament for the due acknowledgement of our debt of gratitude and in thanksgiving for the life and example of a national hero" and concluded "I have directed that Sir Winston's body shall lie in State in Westminster Hall and that thereafter the funeral service shall be held in the Cathedral Church of St. Paul. This was in accord with longstanding plans; twelve years before in 1953 at the direction of Queen Elizabeth II planning for Churchills eventual state funeral had begun. The elaborate plans came to be called Operation Hope Not. <br /> <br />Churchill's full state funeral at the Cathedral of St. Paul in London was attended by the Queen herself other members of the royal family the Prime Minister Harold Wilson and representatives of 112 countries. Churchill was interred in St. Martins churchyard Bladon Oxfordshire. It was the first time in a century that a British monarch attended a commoners funeral. <br /> <br />The outpouring of national and international sorrow and regard - from friends and foes sympathizers and opponents alike - was both remarkable and effusive. Before the service in St. Pauls Cathedral Churchills coffin had passed through the countryside on a train. The Oxford don Dr. A. L. Rowse recorded The Western sky filled with the lurid glow of winter sunset; the sun setting on the British Empire. <br/><br/> Headquarters, London District unknown
187643211876. Wood-engraving. 270mm by 400mm sheet. Related and unrelated text on the reverse. CONDITION : One small faint printer's crease. unknown
1021085065.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
71-9853London: The Illustrated London News 1919. Reproductive print of drawing. 2 pp. 40.5 x 27.5 cm sheet. Very Good. London: The Illustrated London News, 1919. unknown
79741No place no date. The envelope is sealed at the flap and opened by letter-opener at both short ends. Ink stains in the same ink as the writing. unknown
30349248like new. unknown
30349248-nnew. unknown
0243442955.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1741006431London: Printed for John and Paul Knapton at the Crown in Ludgate-Street 1741 Title continues: in the Exchequer Ecclesiastical and other Courts; for Demands Recoverable by the Acts made in the 7th and 8th Years of the Reign of King William III for the more easy Recovery of Tythes Church-Rates &c. In Defense of the Clergy of the Diocese of York. 4 xxix 30-151pp printed on laid paper bound in marbled paper. Covers in Poor Condition lacking back cover and spine front cover taped on Interior in Good Condition in a protective mylar sleeve. Inscription inside cover "1867 April 3rd . The late Rev. Wm Paroh's M. T. the Parsonage Old Brompton Near Chesterfield. Printed for John and Paul Knapton, at the Crown in Ludgate-Street paperback
1931132466London : Published By The Central Board Of The Licensed Victuallers' Central Protection Society Of London Limited 1931. First Edition. Hardback. Near fine copy in the original gilt-blocked cloth. Slightest suggestion only of dust-dulling to the spine bands and panel edges. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight bright clean and strong. ; 306 pages; Physical desc. : 306 p ; 22 cm. Subject: Bars Drinking establishments --Licenses --Great Britain --Law and legislation --Liquor laws --Intoxicating liquors --Temperance. London : Published By The Central Board Of The Licensed Victuallers' Central Protection Society Of London, Limited hardcover
72516CBAlexandria VA American Society of Overseas Research 2021. Ppbd. Annual of ASOR Volume 73. Alexandria VA, American Society of Overseas Research 2021. unknown
18-8683London England: Tate Gallery 1956. . Exhibition catalogue. 4to. 51 pp. Soft white and green printed wraps with black lettering. Good with marginal chipping along bottom of spine and wraps and marginal creasing and offsetting from age. Mostly black and white plates with color illustrated frontis. Includes a foreword by Philip James and an essay by Douglas Cooper. Includes artist biographical chronology and select bibliography. Includes annotated list of 89 exhibited works. Catalogue created to accompany the exhibition “An Exhibition of Paintings by G. Braque†held from September 28 through November 11 1956 at the Tate Gallery in London England arranged by the Arts Council of Great Britain in association with the Edinburgh Festival Society. Second Pressing. Half-title page includes signature of previous owner inscribed along top right corner of page: “Peter Selz 1956.†Scarce. From the Collection of the Art Historian Peter Selz. London, England: Tate Gallery, 1956. paperback