389 résultats
Very Good Bulgarian Original blue cloth bdg. with embossing. Slightly stains on boards and toned on pages. Otherwise a very good copy. 12mo. (16,5 x 12 cm). In Bulgarian. 1230, [2] p. [HOLY BOOK IN BULGARIAN PRINTED IN TSARIGRAD (CONSTANTINOPLE)] Bibliia sirech sveshtenoto pisanie na Vetkhiia i Noviia zavet: Viarno i tochno prevedena ot pûrvoobraznoto. [.] In 1840 5,000 copies of the first complete translation of the New Testament were printed in Smyrna by the British and Foreign Bible Society. A second edition which was printed in Smyrna in 1850 was an almost exact reprint of the 1840 edition. A third edition followed in 1853 with 15,000 copies. The fourth edition was published in 1857 in Bucharest, and for the first time civil characters type was used. In 1859, two more editions were published. In 1866, a new "pocket" edition with text revised by Elias Riggs and Dr. Albert Long was printed in Constantinople. The New Testament was revised and reprinted a total of nine times. In the period from 1840 to 1860 the Eastern (Tarnovo) dialect was adopted as literary Bulgarian language and the Macedonian dialect, in which the New Testament had been translated, was widely rejected. By 1858 Neofit Rilski had finished large portion of the Old Testament. Riggs met with Neofit Rilski and discussed a possible revision of the Bulgarian New Testament to remove the Macedonian dialect elements. Neofit objected the revision, so Riggs took the translation and returned to Constantinople. In January 1859 Riggs invited the Bulgarian teacher Hristodul Kostovich to help him with the revision. In 1862 Long and Riggs visited the noted Bulgarian writer and poet Petko Rachov Slaveykov in Tryavna. Slaveykov agreed to help with the translation and began the work on the revising of Neofit's New Testament at once. Long joined the revision of the New Testament into the Eastern dialect in 1863 and later assisted with the translation of the Old Testament. In June 1871, after more than 12 years of revision and translation, 36,000 copies of the complete Bible translation in Bulgarian were published in Constantinople. The translation came to be known as the "Tsarigrad (Constantinople) Edition". Tsarigrad [or; Tsargrad, Tzargrad, Czargrad] Tsargrad is a Slavic name for the city or land of Constantinople, the capital of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire, and present-day Istanbul in Turkey. A physical copy of this edition is not located in OCLC. For digital register: OCLC 181122059.
Raffigurazione planimentrica della città di Belgrado capitale della Serbia. Nell'angolo in alto a sinistra, in semplice riquadro, viene riportato il titolo e la scala grafica. Nell'angolo in alto a destra si trova una descrizione storica della città, mentre nell'angolo in basso a destra vi sono i rimandi alla pianta in lettere dalla A alla Z. Coloritura all'acquerello coeva. Piega editoriale. Ottima conservazione
85 pages plus six pages of nostalgic ads. Features: Behind the Scenes in Russia - Part I - Robert Wilton and his adventures as a British War Correspondent on the Eastern Front, with photos. (Wilton's book entitled 'Russia's Agony' was first published in 1918); The Man-Eating Tigers of Rengarih; My Bear Hunt in the British Columbia Rockies - Part II, by E. Ashmead-Bartlett; The Water-Wheels of Hama, Syria - with photo; Beyond the Law - part V - The Dalton Gang, the Condon Bank and the First National Bank at Coffeyville, Kansas; Fishing as a Vocation for War Heroes, by Ralph Stock; Photo of a fallen California Redwood - said to have been the largest tree in the world; In Unknown British Guiana - Part I - many nice photos; Tales of the Service - Part V - My Smuggle-Catching Adventures - by G.W. Hindmarch, a retired Customs and Excise officer in the Shetland Islands; Wonders of the Silver Spruce of British Columbia - in high demand for aircraft construction; Exploring the Ice-Wilds of Eastern Karakoram - Part V - by Fanny Bullock Workman and William Hunter Workman - with excellent photos; Our Seaplane Adventure - Captain Abbott Meade and his plane go down in the Indian Ocean; Photo of large pile of licorice root at Aleppo; The Revenge that went Wrong - James Bestow and his problem with a Yaqui Indian in Mexico; The Railway Conquest of the Australian Desert - construction of the thousand-mile transcontinental railway, from Kalgoorlie to Port Augusta - with many excellent photos; The "War Wolf" - Serbia's war hero Colonel Voyin A. Popovich; Whale Flesh as Human Food - informative brief article on the growth of the whale processing industry in Canada, with photo; Doctoring War Horses - the personal experiences of Blue Cross worker Charles W. Forward in France and Italy. Nice ad for the Hudson Navigation Company's New York - Albany - Troy route. Unmarked. Moderate wear. Binding intact. A sound copy of this excellent vintage issue. Book
Very Good Serbian Original early manuscript Ottoman huge bilingual document of the last period of Imperial Ottoman, prepared for a Serbian noble, in Serbian and Ottoman Turkish about farmland in Travnik city of Bosnia and Herzegovina. 55x39 cm. Bilingual in Serbian and Ottoman Turkish. 1 p., with some annotated notes on margins. On special paper with 'ahar' in early Ottoman / Turkish style with one of the rarest Ottoman watermarks. A printed vertical line of the document divides into two parts of the document is for early bilingual ones of especially the Imperial periods of Turks. The document includes the earliest printed form of moon and star. Split on middle, restored. A very good paper. Rare.
all issues of 1869-1873, complete in 2 vols., facsimile-reprint of the original Pancevo-edition, 46cm., simili-leather (some wear), text and interior VG, [periodical on matters of educational and material interest, originally published weekly, in Serbo-Croatian (Cyrillic script)], OCLC 234319558, G72539
Profusely illustrated with black and white photos and illustrations. Features: "Mad Mike" - Part I - The adventures of a well-known South Seas character, including his romantic connection with the beautiful half-caste Laumona; The Forest Dwellers of Arabuko - Photo-illustrated article on the shy and elusive East African Sanya race; My Wife's Double - told by Sidney Fitzgerald, now chief engineer with a firm in Portuguese East Africa; In Quest of the Unknown - Part I - F.A. Mitchell-Hedges meets the strange islanders of the San Blas Archipelago and the mysterious Chucunaque - illustrated with photos; My Chinese Crystal - This story of events surrounding an ancient crystal, believed to be stolen from a Chinese temple, will keenly interest students of the occult; The Very Keen Man - How an energetic Central African Native Commissioner conceived a Great Scheme - and what happened to it; The Great Pay-Train Hold-Up - For several years the police of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania were at their wit's end to deal with an epidemic of pay-roll robberies; The Big-Game Trapper - R.D.S. describes some thrilling experiences encountered by well-known trappers; Through Savage Europe - Part III - Richard Carline describes his holiday painting tour through Serbia, Bosnia, and Montenegro - with photos; "Down Texas Way" - The wife of a Texas rancher tells the tale of three high-spirited youngsters, a desperate gang of escaped convicts, a night alarm, and a mysterious disappearance; Across the Great Sahara - Part IV - The story of a wonderful exploit - a camel-back journey from south to north through the Sahara - with photos; Donnelly's Luck - An old prospector strikes it rich, only to fall into the hands of rascally claim-jumpers; Twenty-Three Hours of Horror - A young fireman, Clermont Lafayette Staden, falls overboard from the American oil-tank steamer Fred W. Weller in the shark-infested waters of the Pacific; and more. 88 pages plus 16 pages of nostalgic ads. Nibbling to backstrip, otherwise clean and unmarked with light wear. A nice copy of this great vintage issue. Book
Profusely illustrated with wonderful black and white photos and illustrations. Features: Hunting the Opium Smugglers - Author attempts to capture Chinaman who was causing much trouble by smuggling opium into a South Sea Island; Photograph from Hong Kong of a "Punishment Chair" upon which a bound criminal sat upon eleven knives and was then carried through the streets as a lesson to others; With "Lizzie" to the Edge of Beyond - An old Ford car takes four passengers and a heavy load seven hundred miles through Central Africa; The Faithful Burglar - a story involving psychic phenomena from Ray Bell's Tie-Camp at Shabaqua, Ontario - with photo; Through Savage Europe - Part II - Richard Carline continues to describe his painting tour through Serbia, Bosnia, and Montenegro; The Devil Panther - Two British hunters pursue a feared killer panther in India; What Happened to Hubbard? - Sequel to "Where the Gold Went" in which Charles A. Siringo described how Schell and Hubbard stole a quantity of gold from the famous Treadwell Mine in Alaska - describes how Hubbard went on to success in Dawson City; Roaming the Wild South Seas - Part IV (conclusion) - Jack McLaren describes the romance and adventure of the South Sea Islands - article with photos; A Run for Money - Author attempts to smuggle a ranch payroll through a Mexican rebel zone; Photo of Filipino "Tom Thumb", Panglima Diki-Diki; The "Human Bomb" - Update on a 1913 story about Carl Warr who walked into the Los Angeles Police Headquarters with enough dynamite to blow it up; Across the Great Sahara - Part III - A journey by camel across the Sahara from bottom to top - article with many excellent photos; The Sheep-Shearer - A sailor's amusing story about a machine invented by his second engineer; At Grips With a Python - Nighmare experience for a South African farmer; The Ghost of Ardtrea - An odd story from County Tyrone, Ireland describing events in an old rectory; A Week End in Bulgaria - Quaint glimpses of Bulgarian manners and customs by traveller Ralph Michaelis. 88 pages. plus 16 pages of nostalgic ads. Nibbling to backstrip has left the back cover barely holding, otherwise clean and unmarked with light wear. A quality vintage copy. Book
Unpaginated. Over one inch thick. Profusely illustrated with colour and black and white photos. "Comrade, statesman, ideologist, unserpassed tactician of guerrilla warfare, ingenious strategist of revolution, farsighted founder of the state, and author of the successful union of diverse Yugoslav peoples and nationalities and territories - This is Tito." - from Preface. Text in English. Several openings and chips to periphery of dust jacket which is now preserved in glossy new archival-grade Brodart cover. Light wear to unmarked book. Contents clean and unmarked. Binding tight. Slipcase not included. A quality copy of this impressive work. Circa 1990? Book
557 pages. Index. Black and white illustrations. "Relates, in a series of eye-witness documents, the horrible suffering of the entire Croatian nation at the hands of Yugoslav Partisans... The authors have traveled the world over to collect these incontestably well-documented accounts from the few survivors of these massacres." - from dust jacket. Above-average wear. Binding intact. A worthy reference copy. Book
Amsterdam, 1640 circa. Incisione in rame all'acquaforte, colore d'epoca, cm 38,2 x 51,4 (alla lastra), testo francese al verso. Tracce di umidità e difetti della carta.
295 pages. "An account (of Croatian atrocities in World War II) based on German, Italian and other sources." - from title page. Horrific black and white archival illustrations. Dedicated to the one million Serbians, Jewish and other innocent victims massacred by the Croatian Ustashi during World War II. Somewhat above-average wear. Usual library markings. Binding intact. Front free endpaper neatly removed. A sound working copy of this sobering work. Book
PARIS, Le moniteur de l'Armée - Années 1878 à 1882 - 5olumes 1/2 Reliure - Dos lisse à filets dorés - N° 384, 5 janvier 1878 au N° 565 du 16 décembre 1882, SOIT 182 Numéros Cartes en texte - 360 & 312 - 343 & 328 - 312 & 348 - 360 & 360 - 360 & 360 pages + Tables Analytiques des Matières contenues pour chaque semestre - Bel ensemble, Bons exemplaires
Cover portrait of M. Venizelos. Abundant black and white photographs. Contents: History of Modern Greece; The Crown and the Protecting Powers; The Balkan Wars and the Alliance with Serbia; Policy of M. Venizelos; King Constantine's Opposition; Politics and Diplomacy in 1915; The Refusal to apply the treaty with Serbia; Pro-German Manoeuvres; Surrender of Fort Rupel; Crisis of June 1916; Entente Negotiations with Constantine's ministers; The National Defence Movement; M. Venizelo's Salonika government; The entente still hesitates; Allied troops attacked; the 'Battle of Athens'. Unmarked. Above-average-wear externally. Textblock sound. It is recommended that this issue be read in conjunction with the following issues: Part 21 - The 1st Austrian Invasion of Serbia; Part 28 - The Intervention of Turkey; Part 36 - The 2nd and 3rd Austrian Invasion of Serbia; Part 88 - The Tragedy of Serbia; Part 144 - The Salonika Expedition, Oct 1915-Nov. 1916. Magazine
Front cover photo of Lieut.-Gen. Sir Douglas Haig, Commanding Second British Army Corps. How Serbia made ready to meet her giant antagonist. Shabatz - the first decisive battle of the war. Photos and illustrations include: Air-raid on the Dusseldorf Zeppelin Shed; Aeroplane with machine gun; Iron Cross Zeppelin crew and a zeppelin stable; Centerfold montage of some of the British officers recognised by Sir John French in his despatches of September 17th and October 8th, 1914; Surrendering Austrian soldiers; Serbia's leading commanders; The Serbian military; a boy Serb in the battle-line; Reservists at Nish, Serbia's temporary capital; and more. Well-worn but binding remains intact. Unmarked. Book
278 pages. Originally published in 1935. "Surveys the political situation in Yugoslavia between the two World Wars, and shows how the Yugoslav state was created for the simple purpose of implementing Serbian domination over the non-Serb nations within Yugoslavia." - from Publisher's Note. Clean, bright and unmarked with negligible wear. Appears unread. Book
New English Paperback. Pbo. Large roy. 8vo. (25 x 17 cm). In English and Turkish. 4 volumes set: (655, [1] p.; 460, [2] p.; 637, [3] p.; 461, [3] p.). Balkan studies. 4 volumes set: Vol. I: Geography & geostrategy. Vol. II: History & literature. Vol. III: Living together & culture & education. Vol. IV: Economics & law & health.
Cover portrait of Lieut.-General Sir Archibald James Murray. Intrigue and treachery in the Balkans. Photos/Illustrations: British troops reach Salonika; Rumanian Infantry; Bulgarian artillery; Centerfold contains 4 photos of artillery in Serbia; the Montenegrin Army in the field; Bulgarian air assets; the allies land at Salonika; and more. Please note: this issue does not contain the Dardanelles photogravure. Book
Cover portrait of Major-General Charles Vere Ferrers Townshend - his 'excellent handling' of the British-Indian Division at Ctesiphon was spoken of in terms of high praise by Sir John Nixon. Feature - The Glorious and Terrible Campaign in Mesopotamia. Serbia's Glorios Resistance and the Fall of Nish (conclusion). The Campaign of the Mesopotamian Army. Photos of incidents in the amazing campaign between the Tigris and Euphrates. Portrait of General Sir Bryan Thomas Mahon, D.S.O., commanding the British Force in Serbia. Centerfold photos of King Peter during retreat. Covers secured by tape. Somewhat above-average wear. Book
Cover portrait of Lieut.-General Sir John Steven Cowans - Quartermaster-General to the Forces and Member of the Army Council. Feature: The Great Servian Retreat - A Personal Narrative, complete with full-page map. The Role of Railways in the War. Photos from Serbia. Large centerfold photos inside French trenches. Photos of our Allies' supply columns in the Marne sector. Covers secured by tape. Average wear. Book
New English Original bdg. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In English, Turkish; and Macedonian, Albanian, Serbian. 2 volumes set: (752 p. 730 p.). Proceedings of the Fourth International Congress on Islamic Civilisation in the Balkans, 12-17 October 2010. Skopje, Macedonia.= Balkanlar'da Islâm Medeniyeti Dördüncü Milletlerarasi Kongre Tebligleri, 13-17 Ekim 2010. Üsküp, Makedonya. This is a collection of the papers that were presented during the international congress on "Islamic Civilisation in the Balkans" held in the Macedonian capital Skopje in October 2010. The congress, organized in cooperation with the Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts (MANU), was fourth in IRCICA's congress series that focus on the history and cultures of the Balkan region. The Skopje congress was accorded high patronage and opened by H.E. Gjorge Ivanov, President of the Republic Macedonia. President Ivanov also participated in the congress in his capacity as an academician and presented a paper. This State support and scholarly contribution extended to the congress underscored the importance attached to its objectives. The first volume contains the papers that were presented in English or Turkish (39 papers) and the second volume, those presented in Macedonian, Albanian or Serbian (44 papers). Located at crossroads between Europe and Western Asia, the Balkan peoples have been in contact with the Muslim world since at least the 8th century. Various phenomena, including the long experience in trade between the two regions, helped fasten the expansion process, and enhance the notable cultural role, of Islam in the Balkans. The relationship between the Muslim world and the Balkans has not only been one of encounters and exchanges but also one of coexistence. Research papers contributed to the congress addressed a wide range of topics highlighting the multicultural relations specific to the Balkan region. IRCICA's engagement in studies on the region in connection with the history of Islamic civilisation draws from the above aspects of the theme and also takes into account that two Balkan countries are members of the OIC and IRCICA: Albania is a full Member State and Bosnia and Herzegovina is an Observer State. Previously, three congresses were held on the same theme, in Sofia (2000), Tirana (2003) and Bucharest (2006) respectively. A fifth congress was held in May 2015. This program devoted to the history of Islamic civilization in the Balkans has succeeded in drawing interest and participation from around the world in addition to the Balkan countries themselves and generated a fascinating range of studies, as the contents of this publication reflect.
19,5x13 cm; 215, (5) pp. Brossura editoriale con sopraccoperta illustrata (qualche macchiolina, strappetto e piccoli difetti alla sopraccoperta). Leggera brunitura al margine esterno delle pagine. Prima, rara, edizione dello scritto più celebre della grande scrittrice, giornalista e traduttrice e viaggiatrice, Irene Brin (pseudonimo di Maria Vittoria Rossi) nata a Bordighera (Imperia) nel 1914. Collaboratrice di numerosi giornali già in giovanissima età fu apprezzata da gran parte del mondo intellettuale italiano dove strinse un'ottima amicizia con Longanesi e Montanelli. Nel 1937 Maria Vittoria Rossi divenne Irene Brin: lo pseudonimo le fu attribuito da Leo Longanesi, che invitò la giornalista a collaborare al rotocalco settimanale Omnibus. Olga a Belgrado è riconosciuta da tutti come l'opera migliore della Brin. Questa prima edizione del dicembre del 1943 è rarissima in quanto, come raccontò in seguito la stessa Brin “fu sequestrato quasi dovunque perché il titolo e il contenuto sembravano troppo favorevoli ai partigiani jugoslavi”. Venne poi ripubblicato da Elliot nel febbraio dell'anno seguente. L'opera è una specie di diario di guerra che descrive la Jugoslavia dei primi anni quaranta con una sensibilità e una precisione considerata ancora oggi assai rara. L'autrice nel maggio del 1941 aveva raggiunto il marito Gasparo del Corso in Jugoslavia dove prestava servizio come ufficiale. L'autrice doveva fermarsi qui pochi mesi ma invece vi si trattenne per tre anni. É visitando Belgrado e Lubiana, attraversando villaggi e località turistiche abbandonate e distrutte che l'autrice riesce a dare una descrizione vivida e profonda dell'atrocità della guerra e della forza dell'idea di libertà. Opera assai rara.
8vo., Second Impression, on laid paper, with frontispiece (original tissue guard present), 15 plates, 5 illustrations in the text and large folding map; red cloth, upper board and backstrip lettered in gilt, uncut, a near fine copy. With 8pp publisher's catalogue bound in at end. Published in the same year as the fist edition. VERY SCARCE, ESPECIALLY IN THIS CONDITION.
8vo., First Edition, neat contemporary inscription on front free endpaper, some light offsetting from fold-ins to free endpapers, title lightly browned; grey cloth, upper board and backstrip lettered in black, fore-edge very lightly spotted, else a near fine copy in unclipped dustwrapper. With striking dustwrapper artwork by Eugene Hastain. VERY SCARCE IN THIS CONDITION.
Manifesto ufficiale della Fiera di caccia e pesca in Iugoslavia a Novi Sad il 12 - 20 settembre 1964. Leggero segno del tempo
Carta geografica raffigurante gli antichi territori della Pannonia, Dacia. l'Illirico e la Mesia. Leggere macchie nel margine che non compromettono il buono stato di conservazione generale. Incisione originale in coloritura coeva inserita nel III volume, in prima edizione, dell’opera "Nuovo Atlante Geografico Universale delineato sulle ultime osservazioni", edita a Roma nel 1792. Successivamente vennero pubblicati il secondo volume nel 1797 ed in fine il terzo nel 1801. L’opera fu commissionata al Cassini dalla Calcografia Camerale di Roma.