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Original Wraps. 8vo. 225; 311; 301; 307; 408 pages. 24 cm. First edition. In Hungarian. Edited by Randolph L. Braham. Studies on the Holocaust. Five volumes of assorted essays, edited by Randolph Braham. Volume 1. Bevezeto / Randolph L. Braham - Magyarország keresztény egyházai és a holokauszt / Randolph L. Braham - A holokauszt a magyar sajtóban / Róbert Péter - A holokauszt a magyar (próza) irodalom tükrében / Földes Anna - Uj magyar egyetemi és középiskolai tankönyvek a holokausztról / Karsai László - A holokauszt és a rendszerváltás Magyarországon / Varga László Függelék. Volumes one, two, three, five bound in yellow wraps; volume four bound in black wraps. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Hungary. Jews - Persecutions - Hungary. Jews - Legal status, laws, etc. - Hungary. Jews - Hungary - History. Antisemitism - Hungary History. Judenvernichtung. Antisemitism. Jews. Jews - Legal status, laws, etc. Jews - Persecutions. Light wear to wraps, light soiling to outer edges, otherwise clean and fresh. Very good condition. (BRAHAM-1-49) xx
160 pages. Features: Many gorgeous color fashion ads; A Program for Public-TV; Dalton Schools in New York City - an example of why there is a traffic jam in private schools; How Not to Be a World Power; Photo-illustrated article on Alan Arkin; The Lenin Farm is 'The Best Collective in Hungary'; John P. Roche is the White House Intellectual-in-Residence; The New York Rangers Don't Have No Inferiority Complex No More - Because the 'Cat', Emile Francis, Drives the Team; Fat Teenagers are Headed for Unhappiness; Nice ad for Seneca 100% McIntosh Applesauce; Nice ad for Chartreuse Liqueur; and more. Somewhat above-average external wear. Library stamp and handwritten date upon front cover. A worthy vintage copy. Book
Large A1 sheet (58 x 84 cm), original bold coloured lithograph, lightly creased, blank margins creased with a couple of chips (corners more so), small hole and abrasion to upper right corner of image. Hungarotex is one of the oldest Hungarian companies dealing with foreign trade in textile products, they have been operating under different names and organisational forms since 1946.
Original Cloth. 4to. 1, 590 pages. 28 cm. First Hungarian edition. Edited by Randolph Braham. Housed in illustrated box. Three volume set: 1. Ko¨t. Abau´j-Torna va´rmeyge-Ma´rmaros va´rmegyge - 2. Ko¨t. Maros-Torda va´rmeyge-Zemple´n va´rmegye - 3. Ko¨t. Fu¨ggele´k. The illustrated three-volume Geographical Encyclopedia of the Holocaust in Hungary is a magisterial resource, thorough and exhaustive, chronicling the wartime fate of the Jewish communities in that country where virulent antisemitism is anything but dead, even today. With scores of detailed maps and hundreds of photographs, this reference work is organized alphabetically by county, each prefaced with a map and a contextual history describing its Jewish population up to and into 1944. Entries track the demographic, cultural, and religious changes in even the smallest communities where Jews lived before their marginalization, dispossession, ghettoization, and, finally, deportation to labor and death camps. The encyclope¬dia endows scholars and lay researchers with both panoramic and microscopic views of the virtually last-minute destruction of most of the Jews of Hungary, until then the last sizable surviving Jewish community in occupied Europe. - USHMM. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Hungary - Encyclopedias. Jews - Persecutions - Hungary - Encyclopedias. Antisemitism - Hungary - Encyclopedias. Judenvernichtung. Antisemitism. Jews - Persecutions. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . OCLC lists 17 copies. Brand new in publishers plastic. Very good + condition. (BRAHAM-1-45) xx
Paris, chez Guillaume de Luynes, Librarire, 1685. 8vo.; 24 hojas, 428 pp. y la mitad inferior del mapa de Hungria plegado. Manchas, posiblemente de un medicamento, desde la página 182 hasta 310. Encuadernación de época, en piel, con lomera profusamente ornada.
In-8°; pp. XXXII, 416, con antip. (L. Gimignani del. Io. Nolinus sculp.), e un frontespizio (F. Venturinus) calcografici, 35 incisioni su rame a piena pagina incluse nel testo che raffigurano emblemi. Al front. “pars prima” è stato cancellato, in effetti di quest’opera venne data alle stampe solo questa prima parte. Legatura in piena pergamena rigida più tarda. I personaggi qui rappresentati attraverso gli emblemi e alcuni componimenti in versi sono Innocenzo XI, Francesco Xaverio, Francesco Borgia, Luigi Gonzaga, Stanislaus Kostka, Innocenzo X, Clemente IX, Cristina di Svezia, Alessandro VII, Roberto Bellarmino, Antonio Barberini, G. Paolo Oliva e altri.
Large A1 sheet (57 x 80.5 cm), original bold coloured lithograph, lightly creased, corners torn away (lower left affecting imprint). A rare Hungarian Communist Era tourism poster.
Recueil de 5 ouvrages reliés en un volume in-8, demi chagrin vert de l'époque, dos à nerfs soulignés de filets estampés à froid, titre doré, initiales du possesseur en pied (L.R.).. 1- Edition originale de ce manifeste publié au lendemain de l'insurrection hongroise contre l'Empire autrichien. Teleki fut alors chargé de se rendre à Paris pour obtenir du gouvernement républicain des secours efficaces. Mais, malgré ses appels à l'opinion publique (cette brochure), sa démarche resta vaine. 2- Edition originale. Pouillet fut nommé administrateur en 1831 du conservatoire des Arts et Métiers où il était également titulaire de la chaire de Physique appliquée. 3- Edition originale. 4- Edition originale. 5- Edition originale. Bon exemplaire, très bien relié.
1st edition. Original calf. 4to. X, 197, XXXI pages. 22 x 30 cm. In English, Hebrew, and Hungarian. Edited by Randolph L. Braham with the collaboration of Ervin Farkas. Brahams own copy, specially bound (in black leather and gilt title) and dedicated to Randolph L. Braham from the World Federation of Hungarian Jews (with dedication plate on endpage) . Profusely illustrated album of black and white photographs of Hungarian synagogues. "This album includes 467 photographs and drawings. The compilers succeeded in obtaining illustrations of most of the destroyed or converted synagogues. We hope this work will serve as an everlasting memorial to a significant element of Hungarian-Jewish culture and as a tribute to the thousands of martyrs who left from these very synagogues on their last fateful journey to destruction. (From the preface) . Subjects: Synagogues - Hungary. Edificios Religiosos (Arquitetura) Synagogues. Hungary. Light shelf wear to leather, overall very fresh and clean. Very good + condition. (BRAHAM-1-43)
Two volumes bound together in a beautiful mid-18th-century binding. The first work is an extremely important exegesis of the Apocalypse; the second is an explication of everything related to the sacraments. [8] leaves; 481, [11] pp; [4] leaves; XII, 466, [2] pp publisher's catalogue. Beautifully printed on fine paper. Attractive woodcut ornaments throughout. P. [482] of the first work features a stunning full-page woodcut depicting the second coming. Thick folio. Bound in full speckled calf, spine elegantly gilt in six compartments, parchment spine label. Some superficial wear to binding, more wear to head and tail of spine, but structurally solid and very attractive. INTERNALLY BRIGHT AND FINE, PAPER VERY WHITE, WITH NO DEFECTS.
(1945) . Original Illustrated Paper Wrappers, Small 8vo, 216 pages. Eredeti borítóval. Includes 9 powerful original linocut illustrations, and cover design, by Shagra Weil. Also includes a bit of music.Title translates as "The Yellow Book. Data on the War Losses of Hungarian Jewry. 1941-1945." One of the earliest book about the Hungarian Holocaust. Published by Hechaluc (Hehalutz), the Zionist resistant movement, whose legendary headquarters was located at the Üvegház (Glasshouse) in Budapest, a former glass-store. During the Holocaust about 3000 people found shelter there and it was the center for producing fake identification documents to save Hungarian Jews from persecution. Shraga Weil (Ferenc Ferdinánd; 1918-2009) was a Hungarian born Israeli painter. He studied at the Academy of Art in Prague and École des Beaux Arts in Paris. During WWII he was active in the Zionist underground movement in Budapest, working in the workshop for forging documents. After the war he sailed for Palestine on an illegal immigrant ship and became a member of Kibbutz Ha'ogen where he lived until his death. In 1959 Weil was awarded the Dizengoff Prize for painting. He created the doors of the main entrance to the Knesset building and the President's residence in Jerusalem. Weil painted the wooden panels in the Israeli Hall at the Kennedy Center. Sándor Groszmann (Alexander Grossmann, Ben Erec; 1909-2003) was a journalist and publisher, one of the main activists of the Hungarian Zionist movement and co-founder of "Hashomer Hatzair" in Hungary. He was one of the leaders at the "Glasshouse". "When the argument arose about whether to absorb more Jews into the 'Glass House' as they might endanger the lives of those already living there, he said: 'For the sake of one hundred thousand Jews it is worth to endanger our own lives'". (Gur, D.; 2007). After the liberation he was the secretary of JDC (American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee) in Budapest and member of the board of the Hungarian Zionist Association and of the "Eretz-Israel" office. In 1949 he left Hungary and after living in Austria and Israel he settled down in Switzerland where he started to publish books and the periodical "Jöv?" (Future). [Bibl.: Gur, D.: Brothers for Resistance and Rescue. The Underground Zionist Youth Movement in Hungary during Word War II. Jerusalem-New York, 2007; Cohen, A.: The Halutz Resistance in Hungary, 1942-1944. New York, 1986.]. Paper aged, Very Good Condition. (holo2-125-27) xx
in 4, pp. 38; 49. Bella legatura in pergamena. Rarissima edizione originale di questa descrizione storica di Sirmio, (oggi Mitrowitz), sulla Sava, piccola citta' dell' Ungheria, sotto il dominio dell'Impero austriaco. Spessso venne confusa con Sirmione (Bocca). Esiste anche una traduzione italiana dell'anno successivo. In questa edizione l'autore si firma come Giuseppe Cinesia di Fermo, pseudonimo che scompare nella seguente traduzione italiana. Esemplare estremamente fresco. . Dizionario di erudizione storico - ecclesiatica. XLVIII, p. 2645; Vinciana, 990; Lozzi, 5183; Bibl. Picena, p. 112; Melzi, Anonime e Pseudonime, I, 207.
In-4°; pp. (8) 472, legatura coeva in piena pergamena con titolo manoscritto al dorso. Storico francese, estensore di cronache e traduttore, Casimir Freschot fu autore prolifico, visse a Roma e a Bologna, scrisse anche opere in italiano. Qui la storia di Ungheria inizia dal 370 e si dipana attraverso i re e le guerre fino alla presa di Buda nel 1686.