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9788508160525-11-79612��tica. New. ��tica unknown
1935173467東京. Tokyo.: 昭和九・十年度練習艦隊司令部. Shōwa Kyū-Jūnendo Renshū Kantai Shireibu. Showa 10 1935. Colour map two large folding panoramas including a very striking one showing Sydney black and white photographic illustrations with captioned tissue guards in Japanese three full-page colour plates show: a Malay House an Australian rural scene featuring sheep and an Australian couple walking in Sydney's Hyde Park by Minakai. Three tipped-in portrait photographs of the Japanese Royal Princes profusely illustrated throughout with monochrome photographic plates showing the crew and ports of call with accompanying tissue guards titled in Japanese. 210 10pp all edges gilt. <br> <br>Handsome special brown suede binding with yap edges Japanese characters stamped in gilt on upper cover. Suede torn with minor loss at head of spine and upper corner lower hinge opening at lower edge. A particularly good copy in a superior binding suggesting it was issued to a high ranking officer on the occasion of this special Royal cruise. 22 x 30cm. This photographic album was issued to commemorate the Japanese Naval Training Squadron's tour which took place in 1934 and 1935. Two war ships the Yagumo and the Asama cruised around Japan before departing for Korea and China. There they visited Incheon Dalian Qingdao and Shanghai before returning to Japan. They also visited Hsin-King Shinkyo the newly established capital of Manchukuo to met the Manchukuo Emperor where a panorama photograph of the whole group of officers was taken. The ships then set off on their main cruise to Australia and New Zealand visiting Taiwan Hong Kong Manila Bangkok Singapore and Jakarta enroute to Fremantle. A colourful art illustration of a Malay house is a memento of their visit to the area. Hong Kong and Singapore sections have a whole page panorama photograph of the harbour each and two additional pages of photographs of the city. The crew visited a British naval ship in Hong Kong. In Singapore they enjoyed cosmopolitan atmosphere of the city where peoples from different racial backgrounds live together. <br> <br>During their tour of Australia the ships visited Adelaide Melbourne and Sydney and made a courtesy call to Canberra. Their cruise then continued to New Zealand after visiting Wellington and Auckland the ships continued to Fiji and Apia Western Samoa before reaching Honolulu. Finally they headed westward to the Marshal Islands Chuk Saipan and the Bonin Islands before returning to Yokosuka Japan. <br> <br>Australian ports of call were Fremantle Perth Adelaide Melbourne and Sydney where the crew participated in local activities and also held open ship exhibitions where the crew demonstrated Sumo wrestling and Kendo to the local public. In Sydney the ships participated in the silver jubilee celebration of King George V with a light display. A magnificent large panorama of Circular Quay and the newly opened Harbour Bridge through to a view across to the Eastern suburbs is fascinating. The region of Circular Quay is particularly striking for its emptiness! There are many other pages showing photographs of their visit to Sydney and the Blue Mountains. The Commandant with the royal Princes also made a courtesy visit to Canberra and a page of photographs marks this occasion. <br> <br>In New Zealand the Yagumo and the Asama visited Wellington and Auckland. Here the crew had an excursion to Rotorua. The cruise continued on to Hawaii where the Princes were welcomed enthusiastically by the Japanese migrants. On the return trip to Japan the ships called into Micronesia including Chuuk and Saipan. <br> <br>This cruise was of particular importance as three members of the Japanese Royal Family were among the crew. Prince Asa'akira of the Kuninomiya Household was in charge of the artillery on the Yagumo and two young Princes were among the newly graduated naval officers. Their presence probably explains why this album is more substantial than others previously issued - with more panoramic views and photographic illustrations; detailed captions are included on the tissue guards. Also the crew had access to royal members and other dignitaries during the cruise. <br> <br>This interesting album offers an extensive and detailed photographic record of all the places visited during the tour. Some pages are delicately illustrated with local motifs in monochrome. The album also includes photographs of the crew detailing names and positions as well as including information about lives on board. Photographs of local receptions and dignitaries at each port visited are featured. All indications are that the ships were warmly welcomed by the host countries and cities as well as the local Japanese residents. This edition was not circulated widely and is bound with suede leather cover special finish from other copies. It was probably offered to somebody important a memento of the Japanese Naval Training's Squadron's tour with three royal household members. . 昭和九・十年度練習艦隊司令部. [Shōwa K hardcover
1519212753練習艦磐手. Renshūkan Iwate. Taisho 15 1926. Large folding map with outline colour in rear pocket one full page colour map five full page colour plates 78 plates with black and white or monotone photographic images many with five images to a page attractively arranged images captioned in Japanese 15pp 78 plates all edges gilt. Endpapers browned some very occasional light spotting silk covered boards worn with a little loss to silk at corners and head and tail of spine. 25.6 x 33.8 cm. The tradition of the annual training cruise for newly graduated Japanese naval officers started in 1903. The Anglo-Japanese Alliance which was signed only the year before the tradition of these cruises began made Japan a strong naval ally of Britain. The alliance with Britain meant these ships were warmly and enthusiastically welcomed in their British Empire ports of call. This photographic album one in the series issued to commemorate these annual voyages commemorates the cruise which took place between November 1925 and April 1926. The Washington Naval Treaty signed in 1922 restricted the naval power of major powers including Japan which may be why instead of two or three ships a single warship the Iwate completed this cruise. <br> <br>Following the short cruise to visit Japanese cities and China and Korea which each training voyage did the Iwate set off on the larger part of the cruise in November 1925. Leaving Japan the Iwate first sailed to Shanghai and then to Hong Kong Manila and Singapore. In Singapore pictures show the crew visiting the city including the botanical gardens. A beautiful full-page colour plate of Singapore in rain is featured. Leaving Singapore the cruise continued onto Batavia before reaching Fremantle just as the new year began. While in Australia the crew visited Perth Adelaide Melbourne Hobart and Sydney. <br> <br>In each port the crew took part in excursions visiting botanical gardens zoos and beaches. They also held open days on board where local dignitaries and the public were invited to enjoy Japanese hospitality on the Iwate. From Sydney the ship sailed to New Zealand and stopped at Wellington and Auckland. They had a special excursion to Rotorua by train. Then the ship sailed to Fiji Chuuk and Saipan before returning to Yokosuka Japan in April 1926. Images in this commemorative album show the Commandant and his officers with local dignitaries and mixing with the locals at the ports they visited <br> <br>This fascinating record offers an extensive and detailed photographic record of all the ports that were visited during the tour. The captions are in Japanese. The album also contains photographs of the crew as well as details of their lives on board. . 練習艦磐手. [Renshūkan Iwate]. hardcover
Milano, Agnelli, 1930, in-16, cart. edit., titolo e fregi oro, sovracc. illustrata a colori (questa con lievi mancanze), pp. 268, [4].
2ª ediz. Milano Agnelli 1930. In 16° gr.; pp. 272; leg. cart. edit. (bruniture marg., dedica all’ occhiello).
1952MM365391952 16 p., 64 plates, 1 coloured frontispiece, cloth (dust jacket). Ex library Dr. H.P. Wagner (with his signature).
1960125614Montrouge, Imprimerie Draeger frères 1960 In-folio 36 x 27 cm.Cartonné sous couverture rempliée, dos muet, non paginé [20] pp., orné d'une illustration couleur en double page par A. Brenet. et de 15 photographies du chantier dont 2 contrecollées en couleurs. Exemplaire en bon état.
Tela c/sovraccoperta, cm25x33, pp 361 (7); illustrato a colori. Heavy item, an additional shipping fee may be required.
25086‘H M Ship America Palermo. / Septr 11. 1813.’. An excellent letter describing the state of affairs in Sicily during the period of British occupation 1806-1814. The recipient Sir Sidney Smith see Oxford DNB was second in command to Sir Edward Pellew head of the Mediterranean squadron which included Bromley’s ship HMS America a 76-gun third-rater launched only three years before in 1810. The present letter is written with the ship on the verge of a notable engagement described in the European Magazine March 1814 pp.245-247 quoting from the London Gazette. From Bromley’s entry by P. R. Eldershaw in the Australian Dictionary of Biography it would appear that he was merely incompetent and that the true embezzler of the £8388 Naval Office and Treasury funds discovered in 1824 was his convict clerk Bartholomew Broughton. Bromley certainly did all he could to pay the money back. The present item is 4pp 4to on a bifolium. In good condition lightly aged with folds for postage. Signed ‘E F. Bromley’ and with valediction addressed to ‘my Dear Sir Sidney’. Begns: ‘My dear Sir: / by the return of the Thistle to the Fleet I embrace the opportunity of giving you my little Information of what is going on here: it would seem by the precautions taken that we are a little afraid. The Sicilians are not quite so well-disposed towards us as we could wish - one Hundred Men as a Picquet from each of our Regts. mount Guard every night - the Artillery Horses are constantly kept saddled. and the troops told to hold themselves in readiness to turn out at a moments warning.’ He continues: ‘Their Parliament is now sitting - and have been extremely Violent on the Subject of Quarantine at Messina. Genl. Montreson Sir Henry Tucker Montresor had given their board of Health some cause of complaint respecting his Interference this came here officially and they noted his conduct censurable and that two of their Members should be sent to England with a Complaint to the Prince Regent this was however lost in the House of Lords.’ He reports that ‘such is their dread of the Plague’ that the Sicilians would not allow the ‘Horses lately arrived from Egypt’ to land: ‘they are gone to Spain - but to obviate the difficulty arising from the want of those Horses they voted 15000 Dollars for the purchase of others in this country’. The second half of the letter covers topics including Prince Belmonte’s departure from office the king never going ‘to the city’ the throwing open of ‘all reserves respecting. Game’ that do not have ‘a wall of a certain Height around them’ the ill effects of ‘regulations. respectingg the Necessaries of Life’: ‘Fish is hardly to be procured - and yesterday not an Egg to be found in the Markett’ a report from Naples of a renewal of the armistice ‘another from Messina Via Clabria says Austria has joined the Allies and that Hostilities have recommenced’. Bromley concludes: ‘all here looking out anxiously for the expected promotion - I am much afraid I shall loose sic my good Captain the future admiral Sir Josias Rowley 1765-1842 who most probably will be Included. This loss I shall feel in no trifling degree - for I have experienced the utmost kindness from him’. After a reference to ‘Harris’ he ends with ‘respects to Captn. Smith’. ‘H M Ship America Palermo. / Septr 11. 1813.’ unknown
251663 February 1806. On board HMS Captain. An interesting and well-written poem unpublished casting light on the life of a midshipman in the Royal Navy in the year after Trafalgar. The author of this poem is frustratingly elusive he was perhaps a member of the family of the antiquary Francis Grose 1731-1791 but the 1787 Captain was a 74-gun third rater of some renown having been captained by Nelson at the 1797 Battle of St Vincent. In the year following this poem she would act as one of the escorts for the expedition that left Falmouth and eventually attacked Buenos Aires. She was broken up in 1813 after being wrecked off Plymouth. The present item is a holograph of an eighty-six-line poem in heroic couplets. Headed ‘The Cockpit’ and signed and dated at the end ‘J H Grose Assistant Surgeon of his Majesty’s Ship Captain - / Feby. 3rd. 1806/.’ 4pp 4to. On bifolium. In good condition on lightly creased and worn unwatermarked gilt-edged wove paper with several crease from folding. Tiny closed tear at leading edge of the first leaf. The poem begins: ‘Within those sacred Bulwarks of the deep / Where gallant sailors constant vigils keep / Lies an abode obscur’d from chearful day / Where all their sunshine is a taper’s ray. Yet here Britannia boasts a youthful band / Who for the welfare of thine native land / Leaves all the blandishments of youthful ease / And quit the welcome home for boisterous seas. / Furnish’d with Fenning Bonnycastle Moore mathematical text books used in a midshipman’s education / And other books of celebrated lore / A quadrant pocket case of instruments complete / A Leather Hat & uniform thats neat.’ A little later there is more detail of maritime life: ‘Arrived on board his future messmates join / And ask him in the starboard birth to dine.’ Naval fare is satirized: ‘Oh hard salt junk - bad biscuit & thick wine.’ The new midshipman’s duties are described: ‘When night comes on & round the Cockpit goes / The careful master who the lights must close / His hammock slung above the cable tier / He well may ask - “can mortals sure lie here†He has a fitful sleep ‘Till Hammocks up proclaim his time to rise / And hot Burgon his breakfast now supplies.’ The sailor has ‘grieved when quarter Masters yells / Assail’d the Reefer’s ears with “past eight†bells’. There follows a criticism of complaining ‘Landsmen’ after which comes the couplet ‘But thou O Reynolds one exception claim / From those who bear of tyranny the names / And grateful here the Poet repays / A faint but faithful tribute to thy praise.’ It is accompanied by the following note in the margin at top right of p.3: ‘Capt. Robt Carthew Reynolds of H. M. S. Princess Royal a Gentleman not more distinguished for his Valour than his Urbanity’. Reynolds 1745-1811 captained the Princess Royal from to 1807 was promoted to Rear-Admiral the following year and died on his flagship the St George in a great storm that killed two thousand sailors off Jutland in December 1811. A little less than half the poem remains and it continues in much the same tone with reference to the popular maritime poet Thomas John Dibdin 1771-1841: ‘Dibdin! thy Muse will cheer the Sailor’s heart / Thy loyal songs their energy impart.’ The poem concludes: ‘And thus successive years renew their reign / Till six long twelvemonths ease the Reefer’s pain. / When having pass’d the due examination / A wardroom then becomes his future station. / In such abodes immortal Nelson dwell’d / Whose matchless deeds all heroes have excell’d. / And here exulting may Britannia trace / The infant heroes of a future race; / By none in virtue or in arms suppass’d / And save My Country Heaven! shall be their last!’ 3 February 1806. On board HMS Captain. hardcover
262281 June 1910; on embossed letterhead of Tower House Tower Street Portsmouth. See his entry in the Oxford DNB. 1p 16mo. In good condition lightly aged. Folded once for postage. Signed ‘W. L. Wyllie.’ He is sorry that he will be unable to avail himself of ‘the kind invitation to dinner sent me by the Master of the Salters Company’. He is starting for Norway on the last day of the month and will not return until the end of July. 1 June 1910; on embossed letterhead of Tower House, Tower Street, Portsmouth. unknown
24437‘His Majesty’s Ship Arethusa / Corunna 18th. August 1810’. See his entry and that of Stuart in the Oxford DNB. 3pp 4to. On bifolium. Sixty-six lines of neatly-written text signed ‘R Mends’ and addressed ‘To / The Honble Chas. Stuart / His Majestys Envoy / Lisbon’. A vivid and substantial historical document. Of his activities around this time the Oxford DNB writes: ‘In the summer of 1810 in command of a squadron on the coast of Spain Mends destroyed several French batteries for which service in addition to a formal letter of thanks from the junta of Galicia he received the order of the Cross of Victory of the Asturias and the nominal rank of major-general of the Spanish army.’ He begins by osberving that the ‘Correspondence with Biscay has been kept so profoundly abstracted’ from his knowledge that he really knows ‘nothing of the matter beyond having directed every Ship on the Station to attend to it in preference to every other object. ie to receive on board any Agent who might present himself as so employ’d’. He continues with reference to ‘the mode of carrying on this correspondence’ ‘the Deputy Commissary Mr. White’ ‘Arana’ ‘the Blockaded Ports’ ‘the Nimrod cutter’ ‘the House of Mr. Dickinson’ ‘Don Raymond de Castro the late Captain General of Galicia’ ‘the Ifegena’ ‘Santona’ ‘General Renovales’. He concludes: ‘I am now getting under weigh for Bermio sic with a large Quantity of Ammunition on board for Biscay & Navarra and shall immediately return here to conduct the Expedition which I make no doubt will succeed in a very extensive degree - God grant that we may receive such accounts from your side of the Country as we hope soon to send from this’. ‘His Majesty’s Ship Arethusa / Corunna 18th. August 1810’. unknown
1907009702St. Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences 1907 8vo 24.5 cm 2 146 pp 7 folding maps and plans. Publisher's cloth with gilt lettering to upper cover and spine binding slightly stained and rubbed ownership entry on the front free endpaper number in red pencil to title page. The volume presents the complete geodetic results of thirty years of systematic triangulation survey of the Russian and adjacent coastlines of the Black Sea and Sea of Azov conducted by the Hydrographic Expedition of the Black Sea from 1871 and continued by the Separate Survey of the Black Sea to 1901 covering seven component triangulation chains from the Nikolayev Bakal Yenikalsky Taganrog Mariupol Berdyansk and Feodosiya bases with all angles measured by theodolites to 10-arc-second precision coordinates calculated using Legendre's formulae on the Bessel ellipsoid to 0.001 arc-seconds and results presented in extensive numerical tables. Complete with all large folding plates comprising a schematic overview map of the principal triangulation network corrected to 1903 and five detailed triangulation chain diagrams showing all measured points triangle sides and base measurements with distances in versts. A work of fundamental importance to the geodetic and cartographic history of the Black Sea region representing the primary positional control data upon which subsequent Imperial Russian and later Soviet hydrographic charting of these waters was founded. Imperial Academy of Sciences hardcover
1903009701St. Petersburg: R. Golike & A. Vilborg 1903 8vo 24 cm LXIX 539 pp 2 folding maps 1 folding table 98 plates of photographs and diagrams. Publisher's cloth title gilt binding slightly rubbed and stained gilt partly faded. From the library of Paul v. Hintze stamps on endpapers. The fourth edition of the sailing directions for the Black and Azov Seas comprising an extensive physical-geographical survey covering coastlines currents temperatures salinity ice conditions weather prediction and storms followed by ten navigational chapters describing all shores from the Constantinople Strait proceeding westward northward and eastward around the entire Black Sea littoral to the Anatolian coast with a full chapter devoted to the Sea of Azov. With a prefatory history tracing the work through its four editions from 1851 the present edition prepared by Lieutenant A. M. Bukhtveyev in 1901-1902 and verified in the field by Colonel K. P. Andreyev. Supplemented by 118 autotype photographic views of Black Sea shores 31 wind-rose diagrams a general chart of the Black Sea and Sea of Azov and a composite sheet of charts and plans corrected to 1 January 1903. Provenance: Paul von Hintze German Admiral and diplomat who served as Naval Attaché in St. Petersburg 1903-1908 and later as Foreign Secretary of the German Empire in 1918. R. Golike & A. Vilborg hardcover
1987009700Leningrad: Main Directorate of Navigation and Oceanography Ministry of Defence of the USSR 1987 4to 26 cm 584 pp. Publisher's cloth with gilt lettering and Soviet naval anchor-and-star emblem to upper cover number stamped on the front board rebacked binding somewhat skewed with extensive manuscript corrections and annotations in red ink throughout including a densely completed "Лист для учёта корректуры" Correction Record Sheet correction slips inserted for crossed out parts. Publication No. 1244 copy No. 5536 stamped "Для служебного пользования" For Official Use Only. Comprising a general survey navigational-geographical and hydrometeorological overviews and nine chapters of detailed coastal navigation covering the entire Black Sea littoral from the Kiliya mouth of the Danube through the Crimea Caucasian coast Turkish coast and Bulgarian and Romanian shores to the Bosphorus; with a reference section distance tables and alphabetical index; illustrated throughout with coastal profile engravings and navigational diagrams; tracking amendments applied through 1991 the final entries postdating the dissolution of the USSR. A later and substantially expanded edition than the 1968 issue this copy is of exceptional documentary interest as a working navigational instrument actively corrected and used through the final years of the Soviet Black Sea Fleet with the correction record providing a remarkable archival trace of operational naval use up to and beyond the collapse of the Soviet state. Main Directorate of Navigation and Oceanography, Ministry of Defence of the USSR hardcover
1968009699Leningrad: Hydrographic Directorate of the Ministry of Defence of the USSR 1968 4to 26 cm 440 pp with a loosely inserted pamphlet of corrections 14 pp. Publisher's cloth with gilt lettering and Soviet naval anchor-and-star emblem to upper cover binding slightly rubbed and dusted paper somewhat toned library stamps on the title. Publication No. 1244 copy No. 1433. Comprising a general survey navigational-geographical and hydrometeorological overviews and detailed coastal navigation in nine chapters covering the entire Black Sea littoral from the Kiliya mouth of the Danube to Cape Kaliakra; with a reference section including port and anchorage data distance tables and territorial waters information plus alphabetical index and correction notes. Stamped throughout “ДЛЯ СЛУЖЕБНОГО ПОЛЬЗОВАНИЯ” For Official Use Only with library stamp of the Technical Library of TsKB “Chernomorsudoproekt” Central Design Bureau for Black Sea Shipbuilding to the title page. Accompanied by the separately issued Сводная Корректура 1969 г. Consolidated Correction Supplement for 1969 copy No. 1535 a printed pamphlet with manuscript annotations in red ink updating the main volume in accordance with Notices to Mariners through September 1969. A complete and rare Soviet navigational publication for the Black Sea of considerable historical interest due to its restricted official-use classification and direct institutional provenance from a major Soviet shipbuilding design bureau. Hydrographic Directorate of the Ministry of Defence of the USSR hardcover
1931GR424Αθήνα, ΤΕΧΝΗ 1931, σχ. 4ο, 556, 83 σ. με πολλά σχέδια. Ι/2 βιβλ. εριφίου.
Very Good English Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In Turkish. [xiii], 496 p. Turkish and Greek relations throughout history until Cyprus Event in 1974.
190818742St. Petersburg, Kügelgen, 1908. X, 127 SS., mit sehr zahlreichen Tabellen, statistischen Tafeln u. fotografischen Schiffs-Abbildungen, sowie 2 (von 3) mehrf. gef. farbigen Karten als Beilage. 8°, hellgrauer Orig.- HLwdbd. mit weißgepr. Deckeltitel. Kanten berieben.
1988107788München, Verlag C.H. Beck, 1988.
198815799München, Verlag C.H. Beck, 1988.
1988225892München, Verlag C.H. Beck, 1988.
190113578Berlin, Deutsches Verlagshaus Bong & Co., 1901. Mit zahlreichen Schwarzweiß-Abbildungen im Text und auf Tafeln, sowie einer farbigen Kunstbeilage. HLwd. d. Zt., 836S., 2° (=37 x 26 cm) [2 Warenabbildungen]
189640833HB1896. Leipzig und Wien Franz Deuticke 1896. 2 Bl. 359 S. Halblederband der Zeit mit umlaufendem Marmorschnitt vorderes Außengelenk leicht angeplatzt Ecken und Stehkanten mäßig berieben. Vorderes Innengelenk angeplatzt Vorsatz Titel sowie S. 161 gestempelt. Papier altersbedingt gebräunt sonst sehr sauber und in guter Erhaltung. unknown
18969293AB1896. Leipzig und Wien F. Deuticke 1896. 2 Bl. 359 S. Hlwd. d. Zt. Erste deutsche Ausgabe. - Albert/Norton 1486; nicht bei Hirschberg und Becker Coll. - Sehr seltene offenbar nur in kleinster Auflage erschienene Arbeit in der am Beispiel der multiplen Augenmuskellähmung Überlegungen zum Verhältnis der Ophthalmologie zur Neurologie unternommen werden. Am Schluß mit einem achtseitigen Literaturverzeichnis. Erschien einer Anmerkung auf S. 351 zufolge noch vor der italienischen Original-Ausgabe. Der Verfasser Alessandro Marina wirkte in Triest.- Sehr gut erhaltenes Exemplar. Titel mit Besitzerstempel. unknown