612 résultats
65-2808Buenos Aires: Komitet Rossijskoj Kolonii v Argentine 1952. 8vo. 192 pp. Text in Russian. Fair in wraps. Rear cover missing. Cover edge wear. Buenos Aires: Komitet Rossijskoj Kolonii v Argentine, 1952. paperback
2004Q-0689869770Libros Para Ninos 2004-06-01. Board book. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Libros Para Ninos unknown
ria9781394220090_inpHardback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; N/A hardcover
2022x-1801176671Emerald Publishing 2022. Hardcover. New. 390 pages. 9.25x6.25x1.25 inches. Emerald Publishing hardcover
1990x-9971509520World Scientific Pub Co Inc 1990. Hardcover. New. 410 pages. 9.21x6.22x1.10 inches. World Scientific Pub Co Inc hardcover
2007115199Buenos Aires Instituto Bonaerense de Numismática y Antigüedades 2007. Paperback. Very Good. xx; 556p. wrps. "Con satisificación ponemos en vuestras manos este tercer volumen correspondiente a una serie de reproducciones facsimilares de publicaciones de fines del siglo XIX y la primera década del XX. Las mismas ya en su época se transformaron en razas bibliográficas. Buenos Aires, Instituto Bonaerense de Numismática y Antigüedades paperback
196133835Argentina: La Plata. Very Good with no dust jacket. 1961. Paperback. 4to 11" tall; 672 pages; Spotting to cover margins contents bright with slight musty odor. Facsimile 1860 Constitutional title page. . La Plata paperback
0364830700.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0656697679.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1910230041910. Real photo postcards depicting Indigenous peoples of Argentina in the early twentieth century document communities identified in captions as Indios del Chaco alongside additional references to southern regions including Tierra del Fuego. Produced during a period of intensified state expansion and consolidation these images record Indigenous individuals and groups at a time when Argentine policies of land seizure labor exploitation and missionization reshaped Indigenous life. The archive supports research into Indigenous history Latin American nation building and the visual culture of ethnographic photography.<br /> <br /> Archive consists of 12 black and white real photo postcards each with printed Spanish captions identifying subjects by region or group. The images present posed and semi candid compositions of Indigenous men women and children including group portraits of families and community gatherings as well as individual figures. Several photographs emphasize bodily presentation attire and adornment while others depict men holding tools or weapons in open landscapes. The majority of images are associated with the Chaco region an area targeted by military campaigns and settler expansion while one card references Tierra del Fuego extending the geographic range of the archive. The postcards appear to have been issued for circulation as documentary or commercial imagery.<br /> <br /> These photographs were produced in the aftermath of campaigns such as the Conquest of the Desert and subsequent northern military actions when Indigenous populations in Argentina were subjected to displacement forced labor and incorporation into state and missionary systems. Visual documentation of Indigenous communities during this period often coincided with efforts by anthropologists missionaries and state actors to classify and record populations whose autonomy was being curtailed. The images therefore function both as records of community life and as artifacts of a broader system of representation tied to colonial governance and modernization narratives. Mild fading and edge wear to some cards with others remaining sharp; overall very good condition. This archive provides primary visual documentation of Indigenous communities in Argentina during a period of significant political and social transformation. unknown
201004SA23-894-107Inc. Occidental Argentina Exploration and Production. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 2010. Hardcover. Spanish Language Edition. This book is in very good condition; no remainder marks. Dustjacket does have some shelfwear. Inside pages are clean. ; 226 pages . Inc. Occidental Argentina Exploration and Production hardcover
199261537Sevilla s/f 1992. paperback. Bueno. Sevilla s/f. Centro Distribuidor de Revistas diarios y publicaciones. 64 pp. 16x11. Rústica. Cubiertas rozadas. Recopilación y reproducción de los mayores éxitos en tangos y canciones cantados por Imperio Argentina y carlos Gardel. Sevilla s/f paperback
45217326like new. unknown
ria9781291798807_inpHardcover. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; N/A hardcover
19732091202133000753Tokuma Bookstore 1973. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Tokuma Bookstore paperback
0260157279.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1991029351Santa Fe Argentina: Government of the Province of Santa Fe 1991. Hardcover. Fine/Near Fine/Slipcase Very Good . 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. 127pp.; HB blk.emboss w/gilt; fine condition w/cleantight pgs. DJ gray w/red&white; fine. Slipcase white w/red&blk.; some rub w/lt.wear. Profile of Santa Fe Argentina from the Undersecretary of Planning's office. illus. <br/> <br/> Government of the Province of Santa Fe hardcover
1332552285.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
8416233683.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0845100874New. hardcover. New. Satisfaction Guaranteed or your money back. hardcover
2000104107Buenos Aires: Fundación Argentina Solidaria / Fond Art 2000. 1st ed. Paperback. Used; Like New. 4to wrps 114 12p. color plates color photos. "La platería rural o gauchesca con los recados para el caballo los cuchillos facones dagas; el mante con amplia difusión en todos los niveles sociales y culturales; la platería civil-religiosa se aunan para ortogar un sello de identidad argentino". Printed on coated stock. Fundación Argentina Solidaria / Fond Art paperback
1878NL-02415<p><strong>Argentinian propaganda map of Chile's advance into Patagonia.</strong></p><p>This is an anonymous and undated propaganda map prepared by Argentina's Foreign Ministry for dissemination among potential allies on the American continents. It regards the conflict known as the "East Patagonia Tierra del Fuego and Strait of Magellan dispute" or "Patagonia Question" which was a territorial dispute between Chile and Argentina during most of the 19th century for more context see section below.</p><p>The sheet centers on five maps which are distinguished only by the varying size of the swathe of red that is meant to outline Chile's encroachment into Argentine Patagonia. The expansion process began in 1843 with only a few small islands and tiny peninsulas in the western part of the Strait of Magellan but by 1847 Chile was claiming the entire Strait as its own. The expansion continues in three subsequent phases each documented with its own map until 1876 when the territory in dispute consists of virtually all of Patagonia or the southern half of Argentina. Each of the intermediary stages in the quintet of displayed maps is dated and the territories in question are highlighted in red. Under each phase are noted the years in question as well as a brief explanation of the particulars of each phase of the expansionall of it from an Argentine perspective of course.</p><p>The Argentinian Foreign Ministry designed the map as a means of visualizing what Argentina considered the ongoing encroachment by Chile on Argentine territory. The broadsheet highlighted the blatant nature of Chilean territorial claims.</p><p>Because of this background and purpose the sheet was only distributed in limited circles making it a rarity today. The only institutional example of this map in the United States was presented to the US Minister to Argentina Thomas Ogden Osborn by the Argentine Minister of Foreign Affairs to serve precisely the purpose for which it was designed. The United States did indeed get involved and played a key role in the ensuing treaty negotiations 1879-1881.</p><p><strong>Census</strong></p><p>This sheet is rare likely because it was never produced in large quantities to begin with. There is only a single example of this sheet in US institutions. This document is located in the National Archives NAID: 5675669 and is the same sheet that Thomas Ogden Osborn sent to US Secretary of State William M. Evarts in 1880 following his role as US mediator in the negotiations for the 1881 Boundary Treaty that ended the conflict.</p><p>The only other institutional example we have been able to identify is held in the <em>Biblioteca Nacional de España</em> OCLC no. 431564806.</p><p><strong>Context is Everything</strong></p><p><em>The Strait of Magellan dispute and the "Patagonia Question" 18421881</em></p><p>The "Patagonia Question" was a nineteenth-century sovereignty dispute between Chile and Argentina over the southernmost lands of South America i.e. East Patagonia the Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego and the strategically vital Strait of Magellan. Its roots lay in the messy inheritance of Spanish colonial jurisdictions and centuries of imprecise royal decrees that left overlapping claims along the entire Andean-to-Atlantic sweep. Both countries gradually sought to translate old legal claims into an effective national occupation: Chile concentrated on the Pacific channels and the Strait. At the same time Argentina pushed settlement eastward across the pampas and into Chubut.</p><p>Tensions hardened during the mid-1800s. Chile's deliberate occupation of the Strait of Magellan symbolized by the 1843 expedition that founded Fuerte Bulnes and formally took possession of the strait alarmed Buenos Aires and was the source of repeated diplomatic protests. Argentina in turn fostered new settlements established informal alliances with indigenous leaders and ensured a significant naval presence to assert influence on the Atlantic coast. By the 1870s both states were populating adjacent zones and commissioning maps and legal arguments to buttress their claims. This map is one such example from the Argentine side.</p><p>The trigger for a negotiated containment and ultimately a resolution of the conflict came in December 1878 when Chile and Argentina signed the FierroSarratea agreement. This was an interim pact that postponed a final delimitation and established arbitration procedures to avoid a fully fledged armed conflict. Chile quickly ratified the agreement but Argentina's Congress never gave its final approval causing it to collapse as a comprehensive settlement. The outbreak of the War of the Pacific 18791884 in which Chile fought Peru and Bolivia made rapid de-escalation with Argentina diplomatically urgent. Chile wished to avoid a second front. At the same time Argentina was engaged in the "Conquest of the Desert" on its southern frontier pushing it to resolve this old conflict as well.</p><p>The crisis was finally resolved by the <em>Boundary Treaty of 23 July 1881</em>. The treaty adopted a practical formula: north to the 52°S parallel the boundary would follow the highest Andes watershed; south of 52°S the agreement recognized Chilean sovereignty over the Strait of Magellan and assigned islands and Tierra del Fuego between the two states according to specified meridians and channels. Crucially the treaty neutralized the Strait of Magellan and guaranteed free navigation to all nations; a provision that allowed international passage through the strait and prevented any single power from controlling it.</p><p>US involvement in the dispute was modest. Washington did not act as an official guarantor or principal mediator in the 1881 settlement. However diplomatic records and dispatches confirm that the situation was under close observation and US diplomats regularly reported to their superiors on the crisis's development and its regional implications especially for shipping routes. Formal third-party arbitration and boundary adjudications were carried out by various state actors notably Britain or by various bilateral protocols. In short the U.S. was an interested observer rather than a decisive actor in both the dispute and its resolution.</p><p>The conflict illustrates how colonial legal ambiguities competing settlement policies and the strategic value of a single waterway combined to produce a long fraught boundary contest. The 1881 Boundary Treaty negotiated under the shadow of other regional wars and mediated by pragmatism rather than legality integrated competing claims into a workable frontier and ensured the neutrality of the Strait of Magellan for international shipping.</p><p>Condition Description</p><p>Good. Wear and toning along fold lines.</p> Foreign Ministry of Argentina
1912ZB485037Buenos Aires: Robles Herrando y Cia 1912. 12mo 18 pp. rules and regulations of this Masonic philanthropic organization; paper wrappers and title age toned but not fragile. - If you are reading this this item is actually physically in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties taxes or fees required by recipient's country. Buenos Aires: Robles, Herrando y Cia, unknown
1958C1412<p>15 unpaginated daily bulletins each 3 pages. Octavo 8" x 5 3/4" issued in wrappers. First edition.<br /><br />Mar del Plata has a rich history of chess tournaments including their international chess tournament and open tournament. There is also an annual city tournament which had its first edition in 1946 and reached its 62nd edition in 2007. The international tournament started off in 1928 but only in the period from 1941 to 1970 was it a truly international tournament with considerable reputation. After 1970 only seven international tournaments have been played. The 1951 1954 1969 and 2001 editions were zonal tournaments. The 1958 contest was held at the Hotel Provincial in Mar del Plata. and is part of an iconic beachfront complex built in 1946 by the celebrated architect Alejandro Bustillo.</p><p>Eighteen contenders battled for the trophy and placed in descending order: Bent Larsen from Denmark capture first with 12 points ahead of William Lombardy from America with 11. In a three way tie for third was Oscar R. Panno Erich Eliskases and Raul Carlos Sanguineti from Argentina. In Sixth was Hermann Pilnik from Argentina with 9. In seventh with 8 points was Jaime Emma another Argentinian contestant. Eighth was Hector Rossetto a local contender at 7.5. Tied for ninth was Alberto Foguelman and Enrique Reinhartd with scores of 7. Eleventh was Fernando Casas and Rene Letelier each with 6.5. In descending order of finishing were Julio Sumar with 5; Alfredo Olivera with 4.5; Jorge Behrensen with 4 and Jorge Pelikan at 3.5.<br /><br /><strong>Condtion:</strong><br /><br />A number sequence written in had at the top corners of pages some rust stain to two hole punch two bulletins number eleven; however one is actually twelve at hinge else a very good set.</p> Federation Argentina de Ajedrez paperback
1957C1364<p>17 unpaginated daily bulletins each 8 to 10 pages. Octavo 8" x 5 1/2" issued in wrappers. First edition.<br /><br />Mar del Plata has a rich history of chess tournaments including their international chess tournament and open tournament. There is also an annual city tournament which had its first edition in 1946 and reached its 62nd edition in 2007. The international tournament started off in 1928 but only in the period from 1941 to 1970 was it a truly international tournament with considerable reputation. After 1970 only seven international tournaments have been played.1 The 1951 1954 1969 and 2001 editions were zonal tournaments. The 1957 contest was held at the Hotel Provincial in Mar del Plata. and is part of an iconic beachfront complex built in 1946 by the celebrated architect Alejandro Bustillo. Eighteen contenders battled for the trophy and placed in descending order: Paul Keres from Estonia first with a full point over Miguel Nadjorf of the host country with 15. Alexander Kotov from the Soviet Union and Oscar Panno from Argentina tied for third and fourth at 13. William Lombardy from the United States captured clear fifth 11.5. Raul Sanguinetti was a point behind him in sixth. Miguel Cuellar Gacharna of Colombia scored 8.5 for clear seventh. Eighth ninth and tenth was shared with Fernando Casas Hector Rossetto and Erich Gottlieb Eliskases a half point behind. In the sole spot of eleventh was Alfredo Esposito at 7.5 followed closely by Eugene Albert a half point behind. In Thirteenth through sixteenth a four way tie with Bernardo Wexler Jorge Behrensen Carlos Incutto and Walter Ader Hausman each with 5.5. Tied for the last two spots were Jose Thiago Mangini and Fernando Rubio Aguado each a point and half behind.<br /><br /><strong>Condition:</strong><br /><br />Light edge wear two hole punch at hinge some writing on the back page of volume 17 else a very nice set.</p> Federation Argentina de Ajedrez paperback