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DA08C-02495El Comercio. Collectible - Good. Lima: "El Comercio" 1879. 4to hardcover. Green and black marbled boards leather spine with gilt lettering. 125pp. Spanish. Good book. Covers shelfworn and rubbed. Slight dampstaining and small tear to marbled paper of rear cover. Corners bumped. Ink notation to title page and one rear endpage. In polypropylene bag. The congressional records of Peru from 1879 the year Peru entered the War of the Pacific or the Nitrate War 1879-1884. Peru Politics Government Congressional Records Books in Spanish Inquire if you need further information. El Comercio hardcover
18305862Various places in Peru 1830. Good. Seven broadsides and bifolia totaling 14pp. with each sheet measuring approximately 11.5 x 7.5 inches. Previously bound with stabholes and residue at left margin. Moderate worming affecting some text but not sense. Minor tanning and soiling. A group of seven highly ephemeral and seemingly unrecorded military broadsides and bifolia reports from Peru dating to the country's war with Gran Colombia from 1828 to 1829 and just after. The conflict stemmed from a border dispute after independence was gained in 1820 and 1821 with the boundary left relatively undefined. The Armistice of Piura formally agreed in September 1829 recognized Guayaquil and its surrounding area as a part of Gran Colombia and accorded Peru recognition of its modern-day northern provinces. The documents present here include an exhortation by Peruvian President Agustin Gamarra to support the prospective peace a report on the state of the Peruvian treasury in Trujillo during the midst of the conflict a bulletin concerning military developments in April 1829 addressed to the armed forces a patriotic broadside printed in Arequipa and a congratulatory address to the army printed on the day of armistice. The titles of these works none of which are individually recorded in OCLC are as follows:<br /> <br /> 1 Gamarra Agustin. El Presidente Provisoria del Peru a los Pueblos de la Republica. Lima: September 1 1829.<br /> 2 Peru. Estado Que Manifiesta las Cantidades Acopiadas por Esta Administracion Pral. del Tesoro Público del Departamento de la Libertad en el Presente Mes de Junio. Trujillo: June 20 1829.<br /> 3 Bermudez Pedro. Ejercito Peruano. Boletin No. IV. Piura: April 1 1829.<br /> 4 Gamarra Agustin. El Presidente de la Republica a los Pueblos. Lima: September 5 1830.<br /> 5 Peru. Queja Que Interpone ante el Respetable Tribunal de la Opinion Pública el Ciudadano Evaristo Encina Capitan Graduado de Ejercito Cóntra José Policarpos Hernandes. Trujillo: Imprenta de la Municipalidad 1829.<br /> 6 Peru. Gratis. Desahogo Patriotico. Arequipa: Imprenta Libre 1829.<br /> 7 Cerdeña Blas. El Comandante en Jefe al Ejercito. Piura: September 9 1829. unknown
16842107010025Impresso en Lima 1684. First Edition. Hardcover. Good. The Administration of 17th Century Peru: the Abuse of Indians by the Clergy Folio. Bound in contemporary vellum. Good binding and cover. Minor foxing and marginal dampstaining but a still an attractive copy. Palau 267; Sabin 41987. <br> Melchor Linan y Cisneros was the Archbishop of Lima for thirty years and served as viceroy of Peru from 1678-1681. He argued for ecclesiastical liberty against the attempts of his successor Melchor de Navarra Duke of Palata's attempts to curtail clergical abuses. Some of the parish priests and friars were exacting oppressive church taxes against the indigenous population. This book's author Juan Luis Lopez served as the Duke of Palata's secretary and attempts to defend the Duke of Palata's curbs on clergical abuses. "The Archbishop of Lima Melchor de Linan y Cisneros had objected to a decree issued by the Viceroy of Peru Melchor de Navarra y Rocalfull Duke de la Palata for the suppression of certain ecclesiastical abuses. The present publication was issued by order of the Viceroy in answer to the Archbishop's objections." - Maggs SPANISH AMERICA AND THE GUIANAS 1935. Subtitle: "despachada por el govierno superior y reducida a ordenanc̜a en el tom. 1. fol. 311. : sobre que en recibir los corregidores deste reyno informaciones secretas de oficio o a instancia de parte en orden a averiguar como observan los curas y doctrineros las disposiciones canonicas synodales cedulas y ordenancas de su magestad que tratan de las obenciones que deben llevar a los indios a fin solo de dar cuenta con ellas a sus prelados y al govierno superior destos reynos paraque lo remedien no se contraviene en cosa alguna a la immunidad de la iglesia. Impresso en Lima hardcover
18680012009Macao Macau China Havana Cuba: Chinese Coolie Ship Manifest. Fair with no dust jacket. 1868. Non-Book. On offer is a tremendous San Salvadorian ship manifest recording the names and information of 622 Chinese men who were transported from the port of Macau to Havana Cuba to complete their indentured servitude as coolies working for Cuban sugar plantation owners. This manifest is for the January 25 1868 sailing of the Peruvian Galley the America. This sailing was captained by Cpt Ferreiro for the Compania Maritima del Peru. This sailing was under the San Salvadorian flag. The ship arrived in Macau on May 20 1868. 610 coolies departed Macau and 607 arrived in Cuba. This manifest was signed on January 241868 by Henrique W. Pearce a Macao-based emigration agent. It was also signed the day before departure on January 241868 by The Consul General of His Majesty José de Alguilar. The America had previously been used as a coolie ship called Red Rose under the British flag and under the Italian flag as the America. The America completed a total of seven coolie voyages transporting a total of 4703 Chinese passengers. The Chinese coolie trade a system of indentured labor that targeted young poor Chinese men operated from 1847-1874. Throughout this period African slavery was slowly being abolished around the world. The coolie trade was initiated by Britain and was eventually dominated by both Britain and the United States of America. Chinese coolie laborers were sent to work in British American and Spanish colonies and the nature of the trade changed throughout its 27-year operation due to social and political pressures. The coolie trade took place in large part between the shipping port in Macao now a part of China then under Portuguese rule and Havana Cuba then under Spanish control. As Macau was under Portugese rule at the time of the coolie trade they transported coolies on their vessels frequently and many of the manifests were written in Portuguese and/or Spanish. To learn more about the Chinese coolie trade and its importance in world history click here to read our in-depth research blog on the topic. This departure manifest measures 8.5x13.5 inches. It contains 18 pages of writing 9 front and back over 10 physical pages. Folded together. Significant bending with some tears at the crease lines. Some pages are fragile with some pages becoming detached from the total document however the document does remain in tact. Legible. Overall Fair. Citation: Asome J. 2020. Coolie ships of the Chinese diaspora 1846-1874. Proverse Hong Kong. ; Manuscripts; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; Signed by Author . Chinese Coolie Ship Manifest unknown
175943910Lima: En la Imprenta nueva de los Niños huerphanos por P. Gonzales 1759. First edition. Contemporary brown calf embossed boards. A good copy; tissue repairs to backstrip boards edge worn and moderately scuffed bookplate of Félix Francisco Martín y Herrera on front pastedown lacking front endpaper inked notations on front blank reattached and rear endpaper joint cracked title page worn and torn at inner margin with two small stains affecting but not obscuring the text repaired tears on corners of last page of index marginal dampstains mainly to the upper corners and fingersoilings a few wormholes but text is quite good. 2 leaves 84 pp. 5 pp. indice blank. Sm. 4to. Rare first editionxx of coinage ordinances for the mint in Lima modeled on Mexico's published just four years earlier but adapted to the needs of Lima. See Manuel Moreyra: "Apuntes sobre la historia de la moneda colonial en el peru" republished in La moneda colonial en el Perú 1980. Both the later 1788 edition and this first are uncommon: Not at the BN Spain nor in any European Libraries. OCLC locates two copies of the first at NYPL and JCB; there is also one at the BN Chile. Provenance: Felix Francisco Martín y Herrera 1918-2006 Argentinean Lawyer. Palau 203104 1788 edition only. Medina: Lima 1132. López de Azcona: Bibliografía minera hispano americana 1457. Maffei & Figueroa 3596. Moreno 1236. En la Imprenta nueva de los Niños huerphanos, por P. Gonzales hardcover
17726489Lima: Oficina de la calle de San Jacinto 1772. First Edition — Primera edición. Hardcover — Tapa dura. 190x135mm. 7½x5¼". Lima Oficina de la calle de San Jacinto 1772-1773. 2 volúmenes. En 4º menor 190 x 135mm. -I: 54 2 207 i.e. 133 5 pp. 14 hojas de portadillas. -II: 158 306 i.e. 318 4 pp. 5 hojas de portadillas. Encuadernación en pergamino de época. Primera edición de los cuadernos de desamortización de los bienes de la CompañÃa de Jesús en Perú con motivo de su expulsión según las reglas que prescribe la Real Cédula dada en Madrid a 9 de julio de 1769. Los Jesuitas fueron expulsados de Perú asà como de otras posesiones de España en América por orden de Carlos III en 1767. El libro también incluye las Constituciones de diferentes colegios peruanos que estaban bajo la supervisión de los jesuitas. Obra extraordinariamente rara de encontrar completa de sus dos volúmenes especialmente un ejemplar hermoso como el nuestro. Tiene en total 19 portadillas fuera de la paginación. En España sólo he encontrado completos 2 ejemplares institucionales Ministerio de Justicia y Biblioteca Nacional. Oficina de la calle de San Jacinto hardcover
1918List2982Peru and Panama 1918. Approximately 364 photos; album and unmounted photos silver prints cyanotypes and printing-out-paper prints. Photos measure 3 x 4 to 8 x 10 inches with about half measuring 3 x 5 ½ inches. Some with photographer’s hand-stamp or credit in pencil; others with manuscript notations verso or recto; some captions to album pages. Offered in partnership with Daniel / Oliver.<br /> <br /> Rich and extensive photographic archive of Walton T. Burres of Stockton California showing his time in Peru c. 1904 as an amateur explorer and doctor for the Inca Mining and Rubber Company and his later work in Panama c. 1918 with the Rockefeller Foundation’s International Health Division.The collection consists of a large number of loose photos acquired by the gallery in 2021 and a recently discovered photo album showing some of the same subjects and containing a few duplicate images some printed in different sizes or formats as well as hundreds of previously unseen prints. Together this material makes up the largest extant archive of Burres’s photographic work. Though his work was published at the time both in Peruvian and American publications much of it was lost when he dropped it in a river that he was attempting to ford.<br /> <br /> Burres was educated at California’s Cooper Medical College the first school of medicine on the West Coast and was a prominent member of the Stockton community before sojourning to Peru around 1900 to help the Inca Mining and Rubber Company address the deadly diseases endemic to the region such as malaria and yellow fever. To encourage economic infrastructure in remote areas the Peruvian government began granting land concessions to any company that would build roads bridges or river ports. As a result the Inca Mining Company an American outfit based in Tirapata purchased the rights to mine gold along the upper Inambari River in 1896 and soon became the richest gold producer in Peru.<br /> <br /> A large portion of Burres’s Peruvian images document his 1903–1904 excursion from Arequipa 150 miles into “rubber country.†The journeys were well-recounted in U.S. papers and a number of the anecdotes described in print are seen in the present images.<br /> <br /> There are many dynamic views of Burres and his party trekking through the dense jungle and summiting the high mountains as well as shots of flora fauna and native Peruvians. Burres’s travel companions for this trip included the famed adventurer Harriet Chalmers Adams later dubbed “America’s greatest woman explorer†by the New York Times. Adams and her husband Frank both fellow Stocktonians joined up with Burres during their own multi-year expedition through South America. There are a number of portraits of a woman who bears a striking resemblance to Adams though it is possibly another person.<br /> <br /> Other Peruvian material includes numerous views of Cusco Arequipa and the surrounding environs including a beautiful interior of a chapel a Martin Chambi-esque detail shot of a stone wall and portraits of local townspeople some identified as Quechua people. There are a number of lush large-format cyanotypes rich printing-out-paper views and many handsome small-format panoramas. These were printed on Inca Mining Company surplus stationary which speaks to the makeshift nature of photo-development under the circumstances. One particularly striking image shows the top of Misti volcano barely visible above the clouds. This image was reproduced in Burres's account of his travels published in 1909 in Outing magazine.<br /> <br /> The photographs from Burres’s time in Panama document his more serious work as a virologist and health administrator in the area. One interesting photo shows a pair of recently-shot iguanas with a caption noting that “blood of these reptiles was found infected with Haemogregarina.†Another image is that of a new style of privy built from concrete and wire-mesh designed to better keep out rain water. There are also keenly-shot views of main streets and local culture in Los Santos Chiriquà and elsewhere including a number of humanistic group portraits taken at a girl’s school. unknown
154719895AB1547. Salamanca Juan de Junta 1547. 315 : 225 cm. 4 unnumbered leaves including woodcut-title 187 off 192 numbered leaves with many woodcuts in the text; 22 numbered leaves including woodcut-title 1 leaf. Vellum binding in contemporary style. Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés August 1478 - 1557 commonly known as Oviedo was a Spanish soldier historian writer botanist and colonist. Oviedo participated in the Spanish colonization of the West Indies arriving in the first few years after Christopher Columbus became the first European to arrive at the islands in 1492. Oviedo's chronicle Historia general de las Indias forms one of the few primary sources about it and introduced Europeans to the hammock the pineapple and tobacco as well as creating influential representations of the colonized peoples of the region. It is through the Historia that Europeans came to learn about the hammock pineapple tobacco and barbecue among other things used by the Native Americans that he encountered. The first illustration of a pineapple is credited to him. The Historia though written in a diffuse style furnishes a mass of information collected at first hand. With many interesting woodcuts like canoe o waka differents forms of houses different tools plants fuit-trees different forms of cactus pineapple etc. The second part is: CONQUISTA DEL PERU. Verdadera relacíon dela conquista el Peru y provincia del Cuzco llamada la nueva Castilla. Conquistada por Francisco picarro.Embiada a su magestad por Francisco de Xerez .Fue vista y examinada esta obra por mandado delos señores Inquisidores. With a beautiful title-woodcut complet. - Missing Folios XLVII LXVI LXXI CXXI and CLIII. The numbers for Folio LXXVI and CLXXX used twice. The copy was washed and some pages with small restaurations folio LVII lower right corner supplemented with loose of some letters also the last page. A couple of pages browned and a bit stained. Newly bound with new endpapers. - Even with this defects still a desire-able copy of this extremely rare oeuvre. hardcover