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2017x-0761869093Hamilton Books 2017. Hardcover. New. translation edition. 88 pages. 9.50x6.25x0.50 inches. Hamilton Books hardcover
DADAX0761869093Hamilton Books 2017-05-22. Translation. hardcover. New. 6.35x0.53x9.42. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Hamilton Books hardcover
B9780761869092Hardback. New. This anthology of critical poems in translation is a significant addition to the corpus of studies in contemporary Spanish poetry. This heterogeneous body of poems explores cultural political social and ecological issues in the context of social movements emerging in contemporary Spain. hardcover
29041316like new. unknown
29041316-nnew. unknown
192137911Washington DC: GPO 1921. First Edition. First Printing. good. 522 illus. diagrams many fold-out plates index boards somewhat worn and soiled pencil erasure on front endpaper. GPO hardcover
2003I-181-439Editions SED 2003. Very Good. Former library book. Edition 2003. Ammareal gives back up to 15% of this item's net price to charity organizations. Editions SED unknown
BN103467Editions SED. Activités complémentaires CP: Méthode de lecture <br/><br/>Activités complémentaires CP: Méthode de lecture Editions SED unknown
2002H-143-008GRUPO AULA MEDICAS.L. 2002. Paperback. Very Good. Different cover. Edition 2002. Ammareal gives back up to 15% of this item's net price to charity organizations. GRUPO AULA MEDICA,S.L. paperback
2011DADAX3844320474LAP Lambert Academic Publishing 2011-03-17. paperback. New. 5.91x0.29x8.66. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. LAP Lambert Academic Publishing paperback
3844320474.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
6128907944VDM Verlag Dr. Mueller Aktiengesellschaft & Co. KG pp. 128 . Papeback. New. VDM Verlag Dr. Mueller Aktiengesellschaft & Co. KG unknown
6203262803.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
20171-3330088931LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing 2017. Paperback. New. 212 pages. Russian language. 8.66x5.91x0.48 inches. LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing paperback
1994274168PN. New. 1994. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition . PN paperback
0366698591.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0366698583.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1916FRE313Washington: National Headquarters 1916. Book. Illus. by Photos. Good. Hardcover. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. This book is Ex-Harvard College Library. The Spine is broken and one illustration is detached but present although the margins of this page are in quite rough condition. The contents are quite clean. 296pp. National Headquarters Hardcover
0428930840.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
B00AMM9J2QNew. Brand new and still unused unknown
0243008449.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
2016__3330754559Novas Edições Acadêmicas 2016. Paperback. New. 172 pages. Portuguese language. 8.66x5.91x0.39 inches. Novas Edições Acadêmicas paperback
20957'Reprinted from “The Times†London Wednesday 18 December 1918.' London: Chiswick Press. 1918. An attractive Chiswick Press item on the firm's own paper possibly printed for Beatty himself. No other copy traced either on OCLC WorldCat or on COPAC. 3pp. 12mo. Printer's slug at foot of otherwise-blank reverse of second leaf. On laid paper with 'Chiswick Press' watermark. Aged and worn with pin-hole through top inner corner of both leaves and light staining at foot of first page. Reprinting a speech thanking the US Atlantic Fleet 'again again and again for the great part the Sixth Battle Squadron has played in bringing about the greatest naval victory in history'. The speech is preceded by the following: 'Admiral Sir David Beatty Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Fleet delivered the following address on board the U.S.S. “New York†on 1 December before the detachment of the American Sixth Battle Squadron from the Grand Fleet'. Beatty states that he has 'received messages from several people offering sympathy to the Grand Fleet' that it was 'unable to strike their blow for the freedom of the world': 'I had always certain misgivings and when the Sixth Battle Squadron became part of the Grand Fleet those misgivings were doubly strengthened and I knew they would throw up their hands. Apparently the Sixth Battle Squadron was the straw that broke the camel's back.' Regarding the Americans and the North Sea he says: 'This is a queer place as you found … but I can say that those of you whom I have seen during the last twelve months seem to have improved in many ways if it is possible and I think the North Sea has a health-giving quality which must be put against all the bad points of which it has so many.' There are a few references to his host Admiral Rodman. 'Reprinted from “The Times,†London, Wednesday, 18 December 1918.' London: Chiswick Press. [1918] unknown
13763Edinburgh Scotland; Kororarika Nelson and Auckland New Zealand. The transcripts made by the Admiral towards the end of his life from documents dating from 1845. The newspaper obituaries all dating from 1910. Other matter from 1918. At the outbreak of the Flagstaff War Robertson-Macdonald was serving as Commander of HMS Hazard. On 11 March 1845 he was severely wounded while leading the defence of the town of Kororarika now Russell from 'the attack of an overwhelming body of natives' resulting in the loss of six of his men. The three transcripts that form Item One below relate to this action and were presumably made out by the Admiral himself towards the end of his life in a shaky hand and with a number of errors. They are in a contemporary shaky old man's hand and in the residue of the family papers. Of particular interest is the first of the three transcripts which unlike the other two does not appear to have been published. The original has not been traced and it may be that only the present copy survives. This item together the rest of the collection described below derives from the papers of the Admiral's son David Macdonald Robertson-Macdonald. ONE: Autograph transcripts 4pp. folio of three documents relating to the defence of Kororarika. All three on a bifolium of ruled Britannia paper by Waterston & Sons of Edinburgh where the Admiral was resident at the end of his life. In good condition lightly-aged. The first of the three transcripts is a letter 2pp. addressed 'To David Robertson Esq Acting Command of H.M Ship Hazard' and dated from 'Auckland New Zealand 26 March 1845'. The Admiral notes in pencil that '213 signed' the document. The first paragraph reads: 'We the undersigned Inhabitants of Auckland and we the late Residents of Kororarika are desirous of expressing our gratitude to you for your gallant exertions in the late affair at the Bay of Island sic and our lively and sincere sympathy with you under your present sufferings from the many and severe wounds by which your life has been seriously endangered whilst defending the wives and children and the lives and property of British Subjects from the attack of an overwhelming body of well armed and determined Savages in open rebellion against the authority of British Law and the Majesty of the British Flag'. The second paragraph refers to 'the Hazards Officers and Crew who accompanied you in the Malava Pass when you so resolutely and completely repulsed a band of upwards of 400 natives'. In the third paragraph the authors state that they 'trust with confidence to the justice of the Rulers of our distant Mother Country'. In the second transcript - 'From The New Zealand Spectator April 5th. 1845' - 'the Settlers' conclude by stating 'That Mr Hector and other Civilians at the Bay of Islands set an example we hope all other Colonists will follow'. The third transcript is from an undated letter 1p. 'To Acting Commander David Robertson H.M.S. Hazard' from 'The settlers of Nelson who had signed the Memorial' praising 'the promptitude with which on a strange element you threw yourself almost single handed between your defenceless Fellow Countrymen and the hord sic of armed savages that was pouring down on them of the gallantry with which you acquitted yourself in the personal encounter and of the personal courage with which you continued to rally your small force till with a broken sword and many musket balls in yr. body you were carried from the field of battle'. The third transcript was published in the Wellington Independent where the original was said to be 'lying at the Examiner office for signature'. TWO: White card 13 x 8 cm with rounded corners carrying printed notice of the Admiral's death from The Times 18 May 1910. An unusual item presumably printed by The Times itself with the notices of six 'DEATHS' beginning with the Admiral's beneath the newspaper's banner and the date 'LONDON WEDNESDAY MAY 18 1910.' In very good condition lightly-aged. THREE: 88 press cuttings of obituaries of the Admiral 74 of them attached to printed slips of three London cuttings agencies 68 from the Temple Press Cutting Offices four from Woolgar & Roberts and one apiece from T. B. Browne Ltd and the General Press Cutting Association Ltd. the others loose. The cuttings are from the following national and provincial papers: Aberdeen Daily Journal Aberdeen Evening Gazette 2 Aberdeen Free Press 2 Army & Navy Gazette 4 Bath Herald Belfast News Letter Bien Public Dijon Broad Arrow Christian World Church Union Gazette Daily Graphic 2 Daily Mail Daily Mirror Daily News Daily Telegraph 3 Edinburgh Evening Dispatch Edinburgh Evening News Edinburgh Weekly Scotsman Evening Dispatch Evening Express Evening Standard & St James Gazette 5 Glasgow Daily Record Glasgow Herald 3 Glasgow Weekly Herald Glasgow Weekly Mail Globe 2 Gloucester Citizen Hampshire County Times Hampshire Telegraph Inverness Courrier Irish Times Leeds Mercury 2 Morning Advertiser Morning Post 3 Naval & Military Record 2 Newcastle Chronicle Newcastle Journal 4 Northern Whig Patrie Paris Portsmouth Evening News Portsmouth Times Scots Pictorial Scotsman 8 Southern Daily Mail Star Sussex News Times 2 Truth 2 Weekly Echo Weekly Free Press Weekly News Western Evening News Westminster Gazette Yorkshire Herald 2 Yorkshire Post 2. FOUR: Two autograph biographical notes relating on the Admiral by his son David Macdonald Robertson-Macdonald both written on envelopes postmarked 1918; together with an Autograph Card Signed to him from S. R. Macdonald postmarked 25 February 1918; with anonymous manuscript transcriptions of biographical entries on card with letterhead of the Royal United Service Institution Whitehall. FIVE: David Macdonald Robertson-Macdonald's printed funeral service 'Entered into Rest Sunday 13th July 1919.' 2pp. 12mo. Bifolium. Printed in purple. Worn and aged. With manuscript 1p. 4to setting out his service in the First World War in 'the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve for the Anti-Aircraft Corps': 'He came into action with the gun on 8th. Sept 1915 against a Zeppelin dropping bombs in the City and fired 5 shell at her scoring one hit but with little effect - in actrion fm. 10.53 1/2 p.m. to 10.56 p.m. . Whilst on duty he saw a Zeppelin L.32 falling in flames at Billericay on 23rd. Sept: 1916 and another viz L31 falling in flames from a height of 11000ft. at Potter's Bar on 1st. Oct: 1916.' [Edinburgh, Scotland; Kororarika, Nelson and Auckland, New Zealand.] The transcripts, made by the Admiral towards the end of his unknown
3812No place April 1802. Note trimmed with the loss of a few letters c.7" x 6" some staining but text clear as follows: "These are to Certify the Principal officers & Commissioners of His Majestys Navy that Mr Thomas Muir served as Lieutenant onboard His Majesty's Ship Juste under my command from the 15th day of June 1801 to the date hereof during which time he complied with the General Printed Instructions & was not absent Six Weeks at any one time./ Given under my hand onboard the Juste this 10th day of in another hand April 1802." Note added in another hand - information about Nagle. See Image No place, [April 1802]. unknown