96 résultats
1857R79507Paris, Gaume frères 1857 xxii + 462pp., 23cm., br.orig. (dos peu restauré), bon état, R79507
1861701643Berlin, Küntzel & Beck, 1861. 217 Seiten, 1 Blatt. Halbleder der Zeit mit Goldprägung. Porträt aufgezogen. Papier stärker gebräunt und fleckig. Besitzeinträge von alter Hand.
188321152Paris, Ernest Leroux, 1883. 4°. Mit 67 Abbildungen und einer Karte. IX,(1),125,(1) S. Illustr. Orig.-Halbleinen.
1870GAL8Kjøbenhavn, Woldikes Forlag, 1870. 520, 524 Seiten, Abb, Stahlstiche, H 20,2 x 14 cm, goldgepr. (Rücken) HalbLeder mit Lederecken (teilw. schadhaft) Ränder beschabt, Buchblock fest, guter Zustand. fest gebunden/ hardcover
189917534Lpz: Brockhaus 1899. XIX, 496/XI, 496 S., 256 Abb., 4 Chromotaf., 7 Ktn. Reg. HLdr.d.Zt. * 2 Taf. lose bzw. locker in Bindung* 2 der gef. Karten lose beiligend mit hinterlegten Falzen*
1827134221827 P., Chez G. Dufour et Ed. D'Ocagne et Amsterdam, même maison de commerce, 1827, 2 tomes reliés à l'époque en 1 vol. in-18 (136 x 85 mm) 1/2 basane marron, dos lisse, titré "Recueil de Voyages intéressans" et tomaison dorés, plats de papier marbré bleu, tranches marbrées, de (2) ff. (faux-titre et titre) - 200 pp. ; (2) ff. (faux-titre et titre) - 167 pp. - (1) pp. (avis et liste des souscripteurs).Mors légèrement épidermés, manque minime au coin inférieur de la coiffe supérieure, rares pointes de rousseurs, bel exemplaire.
1891ABE-1769902412345428 PAGES-23 CM X 31 CM-LE TRANSCANADIEN ET L'ALASKA, PAR M.E. COTTEAU 1890, TEXTE ET DESSINS INEDITS, 32 PAGES-DU NIGER AU GOLFE DE GUINEE, PAR LE CAPITAINE BINGER 1887-1889, TEXTE ET DESSINS INEDITS, 112 PAGES-LA SARDAIGNE, PAR GASTON VUILLIER 1890, TEXTE ET DESSINS INEDITS, 80 PAGES-A TRAVERS L'ARMENIE RUSSE KARABAGH VALLEE DE L'ARAXE MASSIF DE L'ARARAT, PAR MADAME B. CHANTRE 1890, TEXTE ET DESSINS INEDITS, 64 PAGES-DE PARIS AU TONKIN A TRAVERS LE TIBET INCONNU, PAR M. BONVALOT, 128 PAGES-RELIURE CARTONNEE
189914032Leipzig, Brockhaus, 1899. XIX S., 1 Portrait, 512; IX S., 1 Bl., 1 Portrait, 496 S., mit 256 Abb., 4 Chromotafeln u. 5 (von 7) Karten. Farbig illustr. Orig.-Leinwand.
1857100152090Librairie de Gaume Frères 1857 in12. 1857. Cartonné. 2 volume(s). Évariste Huc missionnaire lazariste français relate son voyage en Tartarie et au Tibet dans les années 1840. Expulsé du Tibet avec son compagnon Gabet il décrit leur retour à Macao et fournit des informations détaillées sur les régions traversées
1894027660London 1894 Longmans, Green, and co. Hardcover
1887235021887 Paris, Librairie Hachette et Cie, 1887 (deuxième édition).] 1 volume in-12, XXXV-422 pp.,reliure demi percaline verte,dos lisse titré, enrichi d'un frontispice, de 40 gravures hors texte et d'une grande carte dépliante de l'itinéraire dans la Chine Centrale en fin du livre, reliure moderne bon état. Table des Matières : Notice sur Francis Garnier - Introduction - De Paris à Shang-hai - De Shang-hai à Han-Kéou - De Shang-hai à Pékin - Une Excursion de Trois Mois au Centre de la Chine - Mémoire sur un voyage dans la Chine Centrale - Le rôle de la France dans l'Extrême Orient.
182669522Worcester Massachusetts: Charles Griffin opposite the Worcester Coffee House 1826. Bifoliate newspaper approx. 20" X 14" separated at the fold but complete; lightly toned and stained all else very good. One of the earliest American newspapers to publish an article on Tibet from "Littell's Museum of Foreign Literature and Science" appearing on the front page in the sixth column: "Southern Frontier of Thibet" which focuses on the rivers in the trans-Himalayan region mentioning 'Sikhi' Sikkim and 'Bhoutia' Bhutan. A weekly the National Aegis ran from 1801 to 1831. Charles Griffin, opposite the Worcester Coffee House unknown
1883139411883 P., Plon et Cie, 1877, 1 vol. in-18 (188 x 116 mm) reliure à la Bradel, pleine toile à gros maillage verte, pièce de titre en maroquin rouge, première de couverture conservée, de (2) ff. (faux-titre et titre) - VI - 333 pp. - (1) f. (table des gravures).Rousseurs essentiellement concentrées sur les gravures hors texte, bon exemplaire par ailleurs.
189994196Leipzig, F. A. Brockhaus, 1899. XIV, 511 S. Mit 202 Abb. im Text u. a. Taf., 8 Chromolithogr. u. 1 mehrf. gefalt. farb. Kte. (alle nach Aufnahmen bzw. Zeichnungen des Verfassers). Gr.-8vo. 23,5 cm. Rotes OLn. mit mont. farb. VDeckl-Abb.
180611721ABFrankfurt, Leipzig, 1806. Kl. 8° (18 x 10,5 cm). 231, (1); 250 S. Handgebundener Halblederband der Zeit.
1872027655Paris 1872 A. Barraud Hardcover
1857100151580Librairie de Gaume Frères 1857 in12. 1857. Relié. 2 volume(s). Récit de voyage du missionnaire Évariste Huc qui accompagné de Joseph Gabet a traversé la Tartarie et le Tibet entre 1844 et 1846. Ils ont atteint Lhassa avant d'en être expulsés par un mandarin chinois. L'ouvrage est un classique du genre mêlant observations ethnographiques et aventures
1857AB1069Paris:: Gaume freres 1857. 1857. 2 volumes. 12mo. xv 1 430; iv 524 pp. Early quarter red gilt-stamped calf marbled boards; rubbed. Bookplate; binder's rubber-stamp of L. Brisset Valognes. A folding map is expected with this title other issues not present here. In fact there are different issues of this work with different paginations. "French missionary-traveller was born at Toulouse on the 1st of August 1813. In his twenty-fourth year he entered the congregation of the Lazarists at Paris and shortly after receiving holy orders in 1839 went out to China. At Macao he spent some eighteen months in the Lazarist seminary preparing himself for the regular work of a missionary. Having acquired some command of the Chinese tongue and modified his personal appearance and dress in accordance with Chinese taste he started from Canton. He at first superintended a Christian mission in the southern provinces and then passing to Peking where he perfected his knowledge of the language eventually settled in the Valley of Black Waters or He Shuy a little to the north of the capital and just within the borders of Mongolia. There beyond the Great Wall a large but scattered population of native Christians had found a refuge from the persecutions of Kia-King to be united half a century later in a vast but vague apostolic vicariate. The assiduity with which Huc devoted himself to the study of the dialects and customs of the Tatars for whom at the cost of much labour he translated various religious works was an admirable preparation for undertaking in 1844 at the instigation of the vicar apostolic of Mongolia an expedition whose object was to dissipate the obscurity which hung over the country and habits of the Tibetans. September of that year found the missionary at Dolon Nor occupied with the final arrangements for his journey and shortly afterwards accompanied by his fellow-Lazarist Joseph Gabet and a young Tibetan priest who had embraced Christianity he set out. To escape attention the little party assumed the dress of lamas or priests. Crossing the Hwang-ho they advanced into the terrible sandy tract known as the Ordos Desert. After suffering dreadfully from want of water and fuel they entered Kansu having recrossed the flooded Hwang-ho but it was not till January 1845 that they reached Tang-Kiul on the boundary. Rather than encounter alone the horrors of a four months' journey to Lhasa they resolved to wait for eight months till the arrival of a Tibetan embassy on its return from Peking. Under an intelligent teacher they meanwhile studied the Tibetan language and Buddhist literature and during three months of their stay they resided in the famous Kunbum Lamasery which was reported to accommodate 4000 persons. Towards the end of September they joined the returning embassy which comprised 2000 men and 3700 animals. Crossing the deserts of Koko Nor they passed the great lake of that name with its island of contemplative lamas and following a difficult and tortuous track across snow-covered mountains they at last entered Lhasa on the 29th of January 1846. Favourably received by the regent they opened a little chapel and were in a fair way to establish an important mission when the Chinese ambassador interfered and had the two missionaries conveyed back to Canton where they arrived in October of the same year. For nearly three years Huc remained at Canton but Gabet returning to Europe proceeded thence to Rio de Janeiro and died there shortly afterwards. Huc returned to Europe in shattered health in 1852 visiting India Egypt and Palestine on his way and after a prolonged residence in Paris died on the 31st of March 1860." / "His writings comprise besides numerous letters and memoirs in the Annales de la propagation de la foi the famous Souvenirs d'un voyage dans la Tartarie le Thibet et la Chine pendant les annees 1844-1846 2 vols. Paris 1850; Eng. trans. by W. Hazlitt 1851 abbreviated by M. Jones London 1867; its supplement crowned by the Academy entitled L'Empire chinois 2 vols. Paris 1854; Eng. trans. London 1859; and an elaborate historical work Le Christianisme en Chine &c. 4 vols. Paris 1857-1858; Eng. trans. London 1857-1858. These works are written written in a lucid racy picturesque style which secured for them an unusual degree of popularity. The Souvenirs is a narrative of a remarkable feat of travel and contains passages of so singular a character as in the absence of corroborative testimony to stir up a feeling of incredulity. That Huc was suspected unjustly was amply proved by later research. But he was by no means a practical geographer and the record of his travels loses greatly in value from the want of precise scientific data." Britannica. Gaume freres, 1857. hardcover
1857AB1069Paris:: Gaume freres 1857. 1857. 2 volumes. 12mo. xv 1 430; iv 524 pp. Early quarter red gilt-stamped calf marbled boards; rubbed. Bookplate; binder’s rubber-stamp of L. Brisset Valognes. A folding map is expected with this title other issues not present here. In fact there are different issues of this work with different paginations. "French missionary-traveller was born at Toulouse on the 1st of August 1813. In his twenty-fourth year he entered the congregation of the Lazarists at Paris and shortly after receiving holy orders in 1839 went out to China. At Macao he spent some eighteen months in the Lazarist seminary preparing himself for the regular work of a missionary. Having acquired some command of the Chinese tongue and modified his personal appearance and dress in accordance with Chinese taste he started from Canton. He at first superintended a Christian mission in the southern provinces and then passing to Peking where he perfected his knowledge of the language eventually settled in the Valley of Black Waters or He Shuy a little to the north of the capital and just within the borders of Mongolia. There beyond the Great Wall a large but scattered population of native Christians had found a refuge from the persecutions of Kia-King to be united half a century later in a vast but vague apostolic vicariate. The assiduity with which Huc devoted himself to the study of the dialects and customs of the Tatars for whom at the cost of much labour he translated various religious works was an admirable preparation for undertaking in 1844 at the instigation of the vicar apostolic of Mongolia an expedition whose object was to dissipate the obscurity which hung over the country and habits of the Tibetans. September of that year found the missionary at Dolon Nor occupied with the final arrangements for his journey and shortly afterwards accompanied by his fellow-Lazarist Joseph Gabet and a young Tibetan priest who had embraced Christianity he set out. To escape attention the little party assumed the dress of lamas or priests. Crossing the Hwang-ho they advanced into the terrible sandy tract known as the Ordos Desert. After suffering dreadfully from want of water and fuel they entered Kansu having recrossed the flooded Hwang-ho but it was not till January 1845 that they reached Tang-Kiul on the boundary. Rather than encounter alone the horrors of a four months’ journey to Lhasa they resolved to wait for eight months till the arrival of a Tibetan embassy on its return from Peking. Under an intelligent teacher they meanwhile studied the Tibetan language and Buddhist literature and during three months of their stay they resided in the famous Kunbum Lamasery which was reported to accommodate 4000 persons. Towards the end of September they joined the returning embassy which comprised 2000 men and 3700 animals. Crossing the deserts of Koko Nor they passed the great lake of that name with its island of contemplative lamas and following a difficult and tortuous track across snow-covered mountains they at last entered Lhasa on the 29th of January 1846. Favourably received by the regent they opened a little chapel and were in a fair way to establish an important mission when the Chinese ambassador interfered and had the two missionaries conveyed back to Canton where they arrived in October of the same year. For nearly three years Huc remained at Canton but Gabet returning to Europe proceeded thence to Rio de Janeiro and died there shortly afterwards. Huc returned to Europe in shattered health in 1852 visiting India Egypt and Palestine on his way and after a prolonged residence in Paris died on the 31st of March 1860." / "His writings comprise besides numerous letters and memoirs in the Annales de la propagation de la foi the famous Souvenirs d’un voyage dans la Tartarie le Thibet et la Chine pendant les annees 1844-1846 2 vols. Paris 1850; Eng. trans. by W. Hazlitt 1851 abbreviated by M. Jones London 1867; its supplement crowned by the Academy entitled L’Empire chinois 2 vols. Paris 1854; Eng. trans. London 1859; and an elaborate historical work Le Christianisme en Chine &c. 4 vols. Paris 1857-1858; Eng. trans. London 1857-1858. These works are written written in a lucid racy picturesque style which secured for them an unusual degree of popularity. The Souvenirs is a narrative of a remarkable feat of travel and contains passages of so singular a character as in the absence of corroborative testimony to stir up a feeling of incredulity. That Huc was suspected unjustly was amply proved by later research. But he was by no means a practical geographer and the record of his travels loses greatly in value from the want of precise scientific data." Britannica. Gaume freres, 1857. hardcover books
1899214113Drei Jahre auf neuen Wegen in Pamir, Lop-nor, Tibet und China. 2 Bände. Leipzig, Brockhaus, 1899. Mit 7 (3 gefalteten) Karten, 4 Farbtafeln u. 256 s/w fotografischen Abbildungen u. Illustrationen im Text u. auf Tafeln. XIX, 512 S.; IX, 496 S., 1 Bl. Dekorativ illustrierte Or.-Lwd.; leicht angestaubt, Kapitale etwas bestoßen, hinteres Gelenk von Band 1 etwas fransig. [15 Warenabbildungen]
181093954Nürnberg, 1810. XX, 248 S. Mit 16 (von 18) handkolor. Faltkupfern. 20 cm. HLdr d. Zeit m. (matter) Rückenvergoldung.
1881030178Lyon 1881 Imprimerie Pitrat Ainé Soft cover Very Good 1st Edition
1881103306Lyon Imprimerie Pitrat 1881 1 vol. relié in-4, plein maroquin fauve à rabat, grand décor et encadrements de roulettes et filets à froid sur les plats, couverture conservée (reliure marocaine de l'époque), 577 pp. Edition originale française d'après l'édition anglaise d'Alexandre Csoma, traduite et augmentée de diverses additions et remarques par Léon Feer, constituant le tome 2 des Annales du Musée Guimet. Contient aussi MULLER (Max) : Textes sanskrits découverts au Japon (p. 1-37) ; O-Mi-To-King, traduit du chinois par Ymaïzoumi et Yamata (p. 39-64) et REGNAUD (Paul) : La métrique du Bharata (p. 65-130). Reliure passée, les deux derniers feuillets sont restaurés. Agréable exemplaire malgré les défauts signalés.
1881103306Lyon Imprimerie Pitrat 1881 1 vol. relié in-4, plein maroquin fauve à rabat, grand décor et encadrements de roulettes et filets à froid sur les plats, couverture conservée (reliure marocaine de l'époque), 577 pp. Edition originale française d'après l'édition anglaise d'Alexandre Csoma, traduite et augmentée de diverses additions et remarques par Léon Feer, constituant le tome 2 des Annales du Musée Guimet. Contient aussi MULLER (Max) : Textes sanskrits découverts au Japon (p. 1-37) ; O-Mi-To-King, traduit du chinois par Ymaïzoumi et Yamata (p. 39-64) et REGNAUD (Paul) : La métrique du Bharata (p. 65-130). Reliure passée, les deux derniers feuillets sont restaurés. Agréable exemplaire malgré les défauts signalés.
181115798AB1811. 10th year. Leipzig Fleischer 1811. 13 : 9 cm. XIV pages 1 leaf 315 pages 2 leaves with 10 off 12 partly folded cooper-plates. Contemporary boards. This volume of the well known and estimated series treats extensivly with Tibet. Besides also with Burma a.o. The plates show views animals people etc. - A bit stained; binding rubbed spine demaged. hardcover