83 résultats
1860603601860. Establishing Public Administrative Law in the Kingdom of Italy Italy Kingdom of. Repertorio di Amministrazione Pubblica per Gli Stati di S.M. Il Re Vittorio Emanuele II. Turin: Stamperia Arnaldi 1860. vi 1232 cii pp. Octavo 8-1/4" x 5-1/4". Contemporary quarter calf over marbled boards speckled edges. Light rubbing to boards and extremities partial cracks at front and rear of text block. Moderate toning to text light foxing in some places internally clean. $650. Only edition. This code and handbook of public administrative law was issued before the Kingdom of Italy assumed its final form in 1861 which remained consistent until the end of the monarchy in 1945. Part II is a dictionary of terms concerning public law. OCLC locates 1 copy at the National Library of Israel. unknown books
1766E0550A 41 B-2K8 2L2. 10 476 12 pages with five folding engraved plates several signed by R. Bennett folding map by D'Anville. Octavo 8" x 5 1/4" bound in modern sheep spine banded title gilt on black leather label edges in blue. ESTC t153068. Pine-Coffin752.2 var. imprint. Borroni 3182.Cox I 136. D'Ancona 672 First edition as a reissue of the edition "printed for S. Hooper; H. Webley; W. Nicol; and S. Bladon" 1766 with a cancel title page and an additional dedication to David Garrick.<br /><br />John Northall 1723-1759 army officer and travel writer "entered the service as a gentleman cadet in the Royal Regiment of Artillery on 1 July 1741 and was promoted to lieutenant fireworker on 1 April 1742. He served under Thomas Pattison with the Royal Artillery in Flanders in 1742 and was promoted second lieutenant on 1 April 1744. He was at the battle of Fontenoy on 11 May 1745 and became first lieutenant on 3 October 1745 captain-lieutenant on 24 March 1752 and captain on 1 October 1755. In February 1752 he went to Minorca and thence to Livorno. He was recorded in Capua on 1 April 1752. Instead of making the usual tour of Italy he visited the principal cities of Tuscany and after a cursory visit to Rome went to Naples. Then after a more lengthened stay in Rome he went to Loreto Bologna Venice Mantua Parma Modena and returned to Livorno whence he sailed for Genoa. From Genoa he went by sea to Villafranca and on by land to Marseilles. He died in 1759. An account of his Italian tour was published posthumously in July 1766 Travels through Italy; Containing New and Curious Observations on that Country but the work has been criticized as following closely J. G. Keysler's Travels 1740; Eng. trans. 1756." Oxford DNB<br /><br />Condition:<br /><br />Binding lightly rubbed vertical creases on title label; new endpapers title page re-inserted with repairs along inner margin holograph ink signature on title page crossed through and pencil year beneath roman numerals; occasional small tears and spots of minor paper loss mostly in the margins; ink stamp of "Scott County Public Library" on dedication leaf and page twenty-five some smudges and soiling rust stain on B3 few pages misprinted or mis-bound at an angle; nonetheless in overall very good condition. Printed for S Hooper hardcover books
181536735London: Printed for J. Mawman 39 Ludgate-Street 1815. Third Edition Revised and Enlarged. Large folding map colored in part in outline by G.A. Rizzi-Zannoni plans of churches an Index & c. 4 vols. 8vo. Bound in full contemporary vellum leather title labels some missing else fine set. Signature in each volume on the front free endpaper of Charlotte Pindar. Third Edition Revised and Enlarged. Large folding map colored in part in outline by G.A. Rizzi-Zannoni plans of churches an Index & c. 4 vols. 8vo. Eustace was born 1762 died 1815. He was an Irishman Catholic Priest a close friend of Edmund Burke. This trip took place in 1802 when he traveleled with John Cust later Lord Brownlow to whom this book is dedicated Robert Rushbroke of Rushbroke Park and Philip Roche. Printed for J. Mawman, 39, Ludgate-Street unknown books
1867LD9712Rome: Pietro Datri 1867. Paperback. Very Good. Original pictorial wraps; oblong 4to 275x420 mm; with copper-engraved title-page and 54 views of Rome printed on the recto only. Backstrip perished; minor creasing; title-page a bit toned; last leaves dog-eared. Wide margins leave the engravings bright and clean suitable for display. Uncommon -- OCLC locates just 5 copies of the 1867 edition. <br/><br/> Pietro Datri paperback books
197116792Roma: Partito Comunista Italiano / Editoriali Fratelli Spada 1971. First Edition. Lithographed poster offset in three colors; 100cm x 70cm ca 40" x 28"; on heavy paper. Minor toning; light creases at margins; Near Fine - Grade A/A-. A bit of a puzzle: the poster appears to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of the formation of the Associazione Bandiera Rossa an Italian Trotskyist group; but the poster bears the imprint of the PCI the main-line Marxist-Leninist party in Italy -- an ideological implausibility even within the chaotic confines of Italian Marxism. Adding further to the confusion is a quotation from Antonio Gramsci founder of the PCI in upper right. In any case a terrific graphic attributed here to Luciano Prati whose name we encounter on a few late-70s Italian film posters but nowhere else. Duke University appears to be the only North American institution to hold a catalogued copy of this work. Partito Comunista Italiano / Editoriali Fratelli Spada unknown books
193052435E.N.I.T. Ente Nazionale Italiano per il Turismo. No date. Ca. 1930. Color lithographic poster 40 x 25 inches older linen backing. Some soft creases from rolling a few short tears a couple of which just enter the image pinhole to upper left and right corner; library stamp and pencilled identification of subject on verso linen not affecting image good clean condition. Striking view of the Two Towers of Bologna. "No 22285 Barabino & Graeve - Genova" printed at left lower edge. "Printed in Italy" printed at right lower edge. . E.N.I.T. (Ente Nazionale Italiano per il Turismo). unknown books
181140247Imola: tipografia comunale per Gianbenedetto Filippini 1811. First edition. A few tiny tears at folds else a fine untrimmed copy. Broadside. 49 x 38 cm. Announcing a series of celebrations of the baptism of Napoléon II 1811-1832 known from birth as the King of Rome son of Napoleon and his second wife Marie Louise of Austria. Issued in Imola the original seat of the provisional government of the Cispandane Republic later merged with the Transpadane Republic forming the Cisalpine Republic in turn merged into the new Italian Republic and then 1805 following Bonaparte's assumption of the title of Emperor of the French transformed into the Kingdom of Italy Regno d'Italia as it is here. After declaring that the people of Imola are second to none in their loyalty to Napoleon the proclamation notes a series of activities: poems to be read canon shots and the pealing of bells at dawn cash prizes to those being married and those who gave birth on the King of Rome's birthday food for the poor and for those imprisoned and at night the town is to be illuminated and there will be presentations at the theater a symphony concert and a ball. One copy at Biblioteca comunale Imola. No other copies shown at any North American or other European Libraries. tipografia comunale per Gianbenedetto Filippini unknown books
16941669641694. ITALY. MISSON François-Maximilien. Nouveau Voyage D'Italie Avec un Memoire contenant des avis utiles à ceux qui voudront faire le mesme voyage. Three volumes. 26 248 21; 352 28; 18 413 i.e. 417 21 pp. Illustrated with a total of 65 engraved plates of which 39 are folding plus one folding letterpress plate. Titles printed in red and black with woodcut printer's device a few small woodcut illustrations in-text woodcut tail-pieces. Engraved armorial device at head of dedication to Charles Butler in volume I. Errata leaf at end. Ruled in red throughout. 12mo. 155 x 95 mm. uniformly bound in near-contemporary French dark blue morocco sides with triple fillet border vase and flower tools at corners central gold-blocked arms of Lorenzo Marziani Prince of Furnari in Sicily Guigard II 344 spine in six compartments richly gilt second and third compartments lettered in gold gilt edges. The Hague: Henri van Bulderen 1694-1698. Second Enlarged Edition of the description of a voyage to Italy made by the author in 1687-88 which served for fifty years as an essential European guide book to the Grand Tour. This copy was handsomely bound for a Sicilian noble. Volume III is not called for in the 1694-98 publication; it has been taken from the third edition and uniformly bound with our set. François-Maximilien Misson ca. 1650-1722 a Protestant from Lyon was forced to seek refuge with his family in England upon the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. His father became a minister within the Huguenot community of London and Misson found employment as tutor to Charles Butler later Earl of Arran. It was with his pupil that Misson undertook the Grand Tour of which he gave an account in this book. The two traveled to Italy via Rotterdam Cologne Munich and Innsbruck crossing the Brenner Pass then to Verona and Venice visiting points of interest in and near Naples making a long visit to Rome and returning via Bologna Milan Genoa Turin Geneva Strasbourg and Brussels. His work in the form of a series of letters describes every locale visited and is "resoundingly modern" in tone containing an orderly account of "first-hand factual observations augmented by the critical perspective of a protestant travelling through a Catholic country" Oxford DNB. First published in 1691 translated into English in 1695 the work was hugely popular and was frequently reprinted with additions and enlargements. The fine engraved plates show detailed and accurate views of the principal sites from the major Italian and other European cities monuments objects animals and plants of local interest and regional costumes. This special copy is enlarged with the third volume of the following edition containing a "Memoire" for prospective tourists with sections on France Flanders and Vesuvius an alphabetical index of cities; a guide to the principal fairs and markets in various European cities; and lists of most important luxury goods found in various Italian cities with a blank folding plate for the reader's own additions. Small tear to lower blank corner of frontispiece tears to three plates in vol. I occasional minor small stains slight wear at joints and extremities of spines. Still a very fine set in a wonderful near-contemporary French morocco binding. PROVENANCE: Lorenzo Marziani supra-libros; Pastoret 19th-century armorial bookplate; Dr. Desnos 20th-century bookplate; Giannalisa Feltrinelli bookplate and blind-stamps sale Part VII Christie's Paris 11 December 2001 lot 2014. Rossetti 7093 describing 38 plates in vol. I but stating that "the number of plates may vary from copy to copy" and 7094. Borroni Bibliografia dell archeologia classica Florence 1962 3125/1. unknown books