642 résultats
281pp., br.orig. (couv.abimée), 15cm., texte et intérieur en bel état
vi + 343pp., br.orig. (dos peu restauré), 15cm., bel état, [contient e.a. MAILLY Ed., La Société Royale de Londres (pp.225-338)]
295pp., br.orig. (dos peu restauré), 15cm., non coupé, bon état
vi + 342pp., br.orig. (dos peu réparé), 15cm., bon état, [contient e.a. MAILLY Ed., Les universités de la Grande-Bretagne et de l'Irlande (pp.238-336)]
vii + 464pp., br.orig. (dos restauré), 15cm., partiellement non coupé, bon état
vi + 379pp., br.orig., 15cm., pour la plupart non coupé, bel état
vii + 304pp., br.orig., 15cm., pour la plupart non coupé, bel état
249pp., br.orig., 15cm., bel état
336pp., br.orig. (dos peu restauré), 15cm., pour la plupart non coupé, bel état
vi + 263pp., br.orig., 15cm., bel état
367pp., br.orig., 15cm., bel état
vi + 351pp., br.orig., 15cm., peu de rousseurs, bel état
360pp., br.orig. (taché et dos restauré), 15cm., intérieur et texte en bel état
vi + 327pp., br.orig. (dos peu restauré), 15cm., bel état, [contient e.a. MAILLY Ed., La Société atsronomique de Londres (pp.226-322)]
vi + 363pp., br.orig., 15cm., bel état, [contient e.a.: MAILLY Ed., L'Espagne scientifique (pp.245-351)]
vi + 400pp., br.orig., 15cm., bel état
338pp., br.orig., 15cm., bel état, [contient e.a.: MAILLY Ed., L'institution royale de la Grande-Bretagne (pp.229-288), La Société royale d'Edimbourg et l'Académie royale d'Irlande (pp.289-312) & Le British Museum (pp.313-325)]
vi + 251pp., br.orig., 15cm., bel état
vi + 377pp., br.orig. (dos peu restauré), 15cm., bel état
53pp.ill. de tabelles + 1 grand tableau dépliant, non coupé, in-4, [publié dans et extrait de "Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique", T.41 seconde partie, 1876], bel état, (év.à relier)
tome 1 (des 3): 185pp. + 31 planches hors-texte, 29cm., dans la série "Académie royale de Belgique, classe des beaux-arts, collection in-4o, deuxième série" tome 2 fasc.3, bon état, B89673
Bella veduta animata incisa su rame, pieg. all'origine, cm. 16x22 alla battuta + marg. bianchi. Le inc. sono tratte da "Lo stato presente di tutti i paesi e popoli del mondo naturale ..."
347pp.+ 5 planches, 22cm., reliure cart. (plats marbrés, dos en toile avec titre doré), 2 cachets, qqs. rousseurs, bon état, rare, Q79137
In 8, pp. 34 con 1 tav. f. t. piu' volte ripieg. Br. ed.Intonso. Estratto dal Bulletin de la Socie'te' d'Anthropologie de Bruxelles. Tome XVI - 1897-1898. Interessante esempio di carta fonetica del Belgio.
pp. xii, 285. Age stained. ** Presented by the Author to Rev. Erastus Scranton. 12mo. Original full cloth binding, embossed in blind. Gilt lettered spine. Very slight loss at extremities. Hardbound. First Edition. Rev. Erastus Scranton was born in 1777 at East Guilford, CT. Educated at Yale College, he became Pastor of The Congregational Church of Burlington, CT from Jan. 1830 to May 1840. After retiring from the pulpit he operated his farm on Scranton Mountain, now Savarese Lane, and was Town Treasurer for a number of years. His hearing became quite impaired, the Congregation voted that he should sit beside the minister so that he could hear the service. He lived in the Barton House, (Later the Farmington Savings Bank) in the Center. He died Oct. 5, 1861. On the author see: From the NY Times: May 27, 1864 : "Some years ago there appeared in the Springfield Republican a series of letters from Europe, signed by "Dunn Browne," which were widely copied and much admired for their sprightly vivacity. They ware from the pen of Mr. SAMUEL FISKE, a graduate of Amherst College, in the class of 1848, and the author of a well-known college text-book, a translation of ESCHENBERG's Manual of Greek and Roman Antiquities. Mr. FISKE was a clergyman, settled at Madison, Conn., when the war broke out; but he left the pulpit for the field, and dropped the "reverend" for a Lieutenant's title. After fighting bravely in the several battles, he was taken prisoner by the rebels, and detained for some time in Richmond. During the battle of the Wilderness, Captain -- for he was promoted from a Lieutenancy - Fiske was mortally wounded. He was conveyed to Fredericksburg, where, in a private house, he received the attention of personal friends, and of his wife and other members of his family. His death has taken from the Union ranks a brave, intelligent officer; from literary circles, a lively, versatile writer, and from the newspaper world, an admirable "war correspondent." TRAVEL/8