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2024SKU1745078Del Rey 2024-07-23. hardcover. New. 6x1x9. New Book Ships with Tracking Del Rey hardcover
1999Q-1573227390Riverhead Trade 1999-08-01. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Riverhead Trade paperback
1998Q-1573220884Riverhead Hardcover 1998-04-13. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Riverhead Hardcover hardcover
1999DADAX1573227390Brand: Riverhead Trade 1999-08-01. First Paperback. paperback. New. 5.75x1.00x8.50. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Brand: Riverhead Trade paperback
19131206T032London: John Murray 1913. 1st Edition . Hardback. Printed pages: xviii 318. Very Good. 6.25 x 8.75 inches 15 x 22.5 cm. Orange buckram binding. Top page edge gilt other edges untrimmed. Fading to spine a little light marking to rear board. Old repair to upper corner of rear board. Light foxing to map at p1 and to the first couple of pages of text other very clean throughout. Previous owner's inscription to front free endpaper dated 13th April 1913. Overall condition is Very Good. Size: 6.25 x 8.75 inches 15 x 22.5 cm. John Murray hardcover
0835123332.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1990128211Beijing: Foreign Languages Press 1990. Oversize Hardcover. Very Good/Good. Ex-library copy with the usual stamps and markings. Interior pages clean and unmarked; tight binding. 179 pages. Many color illustrations. Includes paintings from regions all over China. Keywords: Folk Art From Shanghaim Zhejiang Province Jiangsu Qinghai Xinjiang Uygur Guizhou Yunnan M Sichuan Shaanxi Shanxi Tianjin Hebei Henan Shandong Jiangxi Fujian M Guangdong Hunan Hubei Foreign Languages Press hardcover
940351440X.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
20182-9655506282China Architecture and Building Press 2018. Paperback. New. 272 pages. Hebrew language. 11.00x8.50x0.64 inches. China Architecture and Building Press paperback
1998MH 501China: China Steel 1998. Illustrated & in Chinese - Has Box Cover - EMAIL for Pictures & FG 3150. Hard Cover. Good /Box Jacket. China Steel Hardcover
16750Geneva: Collections Baur 1972. 1st. Hardcover. Fine/Near Fine. 11.5x9.5x1.5in. #353 of 1100 copies; dust jacket lightly yellowed on spine in VG cardboard slipcase. Dust jacket in clear protector. <br>Volume Three of the Baur collection centers on Chinese Ceramics with particular attention to Monochrome glazed porcelains of the Ch'ing Dynasty. <br>4.97lb 11.5x9.5x1.5in Collections Baur hardcover
196916751Geneva: Collections Baur 1969. 1st. Hardcover. Fine/Near Fine. 11.5x9.5x1.5in. #969 of 1100 copies; dust jacket lightly yellowed on spine in VG cardboard slipcase. Dust jacket in clear protector. <br>Volume Two of the Baur collection centers on Chinese Ceramics with particular attention to porcelains of the Ming Dynasty. Illustrated with 237 plates in color. <br>4.97lb 11.5x9.5x1.5in Collections Baur hardcover
1860178252London.: The Illustrated London News. June 231860. Black and white full-page engraving on a newspaper leaf 28 x 40 cm related text on the verso one small marginal edge-tear upper corner creased but the image in very good condition. Fine engraving of the combined Expeditionary Force at its encampment at Tsim Sha Tsui Kowloon nearing the culmination of the Second Opium War.The descriptive text notes on the verso : "The expeditionary force is arriving rapidly; every day troop-ships come into the harbour. Probyn's horse Sikhs to the number of five hundred are encamped on the mainland; Armstrong guns also are there. I never saw anything more picturesque than the camp: the scenery is beautiful." see detail in attached image. <br> <br>From the Estate of the late collector and scholar Arthur Hacker. . The Illustrated London News. unknown
1982163783Canberra.: Contemporary China Centre The Australian National University. January 1982 - July1987. A broken run of 10 issues of the Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs no. 7-10 12 14-18 published semi-annually by Contemporary China Centre Australian National University from January 1982 to July 1987 stamps of ANU Asian Studies faculty some fading on spine and little rubbing on covers at extremities paperback in good condition. The ten issues cover a wide range of topic on China. Some interesting highlights in the series are: <br>On the `Two Roads' and Following our Own Path: The Myth of the `Capitalist Road' pp. 55-83 issue no.7; Speculation in a Distorting Mirror: Scientific and Political Fantasy in Contemporary Chinese Writing pp. 51-64. issue no.8; China and the Law of the Sea Convention pp. 35-53 issue no.9; Traditional Mongolian Performing Arts in Inner Mongolia pp. 17-38 issue no.10; Laissez-Faire Socialism Prosperous Peasants and China's Current Rural Development Strategy pp. 1-34 issue no.12; China's Economic Growth Structural Transformation and Food Trade pp. 65-83 issue no.14; The Role of Hong Kong in China's Export Drive pp. 83-101 issue no.15; `Good Mao' `Bad Mao': Mao Studies and the Re-Evaluation of Mao's Political Thought pp. 1-6 issue no.16; Patterns of Divorce in China pp. 53-75 issue no.17; The Struggle to Dictate China's Administration: The Conflict of Branches vs Areas vs Reform pp. 15-45 issue no.18 . Contemporary China Centre, The Australian National University. paperback
1989163787Canberra.: Contemporary China Centre The Australian National University. July 1989 - July1992. A broken run of 5 issues of the Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs no.2224252728 published semi-annually by Contemporary China Centre Australian National University from July 1989 to July 1992 stamps of ANU Asian Studies faculty on issue no.28 in good condition. The five issues cover a wide range of topic on China. Some interesting highlights in the series are: <br>Sex Differences in Mate Selection and Sexuality in the People's Republic of China pp. 63-83 issue no.22; The Chinese Communist Party and Chinese Society: Popular Attitudes Toward Party Membership and the Party's Image pp. 51-92 issue no.24; Science as Politics and Politics as Science: Fang Lizhi and Chinese Intellectuals' Uncertain Road to Dissent pp. 1-36 issue no.25;Anthropology by Other Names: The Impact of Sino-Soviet Friendship on the Anthropological Sciences pp. 133-149 issue no.27; Enterprise Response to Market Reforms: The Case of the Chinese Bicycle Industry pp. 111-139 issue no.28 . <br>Issue no.25 includes some articles on 1989 Chinese Democracy Movement. . Contemporary China Centre, The Australian National University. unknown
1985163786Canberra.: Contemporary China Centre The Australian National University. July 1985- January and July1988. A run of 7 issues of the Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs no. 14-19/20 including a combined volume issues no.19 and 20. The journal was published semi-annually by Contemporary China Centre Australian National University from July 1985 to January and July 1988. Some very light fading on spine in good condition. The seven issues cover a wide range of topic on China. Some interesting highlights in the series are: <br>China's Economic Growth Structural Transformation and Food Trade pp. 65-83 issue no.14; The Role of Hong Kong in China's Export Drive pp. 83-101 issue no.15; `Good Mao' `Bad Mao': Mao Studies and the Re-Evaluation of Mao's Political Thought pp. 1-6 issue no.16; Patterns of Divorce in China pp. 53-75 issue no.17; The Struggle to Dictate China's Administration: The Conflict of Branches vs Areas vs Reform pp. 15-45 issue no.18; Hong Kong: The Decline of Political Expectations and Confidence pp. 241-267 issue no.19 and 20. . Contemporary China Centre, The Australian National University. unknown
20117409Pictorial paper boards with glossy embossed illustrations housed in paper slipcase with same glossy illustrations. Both Chinese and English text throughout. Contains many different stamps and couple cards all put out by the China National Philatelic Corporation in commemoration of the Year of the Rabbit Xin-Mao Year 2011. No previous owners' names or other markings. All stamps and accompanying items appear to be present. Light wear to slipcase see image. 10.5 x 10.25 inches. Shipped through boxed USPS Priority insured mail. China National Philatelic Corporation hardcover
196511335London: The Oriental Ceramic Society 1965. 1st. Hardcover. Fine/Very Good. 11.3x8.8x0.9in. 1 of 500 copies; dust jacket with spots of foxing on spine at folds and along bottom edge of front and back panels. Dust jacket in clear protector. <br>The catalogue of an exhibition organized by the Arts Council of Great Britain and the Oriental Ceramic Society at the Arts Council Gallery London May 26 - July 2 1964. 463 objects are described and illustrated on 144 black and white plates. <br>80pp 2.35lb 11.3x8.8x0.9in The Oriental Ceramic Society hardcover
199424211Jiangxi Museum 1994. Hardcover. Very Good/very good. Unmarked. 98 color plates. Unclipped dust jacket. Text primarily in Chinese with some English. Measures 9x11.5 inches. Jiangxi Museum hardcover
1923024452London: Ernest Benn Limited 1923. First Edition . Original Cloth Gilt. Very Good. 11 1/4" Tall. B/W and Color Plates Throughout. 21 Pp 152 Plates Each With Text On Tissue Guards. #169 Of 1500 Copies. Slight Wear Spine Gilt Brilliant Hinges Tight No Names Or Marks Small Areas Of Minor Discoloring Neatly And Professionally Refreshed On Front Cover Also Minor Professional Repairs To Lower Tip Of Rear Cover. <br/> <br/> Ernest Benn Limited hardcover
1796177644London.: G. Nicol. April 121796. Large format engraving 29.9 x 45 cm; 37 x 50 cm sheet trimmed to the platemark spots of browning to the image mainly affecting the sky and marginal foxing corners a little toned old paper repair affecting the caption only no loss the sheet creased at the corners and a little dusty but a strong dark impression in very good condition. Intricate and wonderfully composed engraving after a drawing by the artist William Alexander 1767-1816 prepared for the folio atlas to George Staunton's account of the Macartney Embassy to China of 1793. The engraver James Fittler 1758-1825 was appointed by George III to be his Marine Engraver. Despite the serried ranks of the Chinese noblemen attendants and the figure of the Emperor himself occupying almost the entire engraving it is the figure of Lord Macartney making an entrance stage right who steals the show. Fittler has amplified Macartney as "hero" with the dramatic use of tone: Lord Macartney is bathed in light a representative of the British Empire "on which the sun never sets". The page attending Macartney is the figure of George Staunton's son Thomas. <br>A dramatic evocation of the might of Empire. <br> <br>From the Estate of the late collector and scholar Arthur Hacker. . G. Nicol. unknown
201352665No publisher given 2013. First edition & 1st printing. Card wrappers. Small-size 16cm x 11cm chapbook contain eight stories ''The 9th Technique'' and ''7 Microstories'' - ''a gift for all attendees of World Fantasy Convention 2013''. The author though a Guest of Honour at the 2013 World Fantasy Convention was not able to attend as explained in his short introduction. Fine as new copy. No publisher given unknown
195053183London: Hodder & Stoughton Ltd. 1950. 8vo. ix 1 xi-219 1 pp. Photo frontisp. numerous photo plates text illustrations. Blue-green publisher’s cloth gilt illust. on front cover gilt lettering on spine map endpapers edgewear rubbing rubbing to corners minor bumping w/ d.j. cover art by Jean Maln chipping tears w/ minor loss to spine closed tears to fore-edges old tape repairs still G/Fair copy w/ former ownership signature on ffep. First edition stated of this memoir of the novelty and dangers faced by the author and her husband Eric Shipton noted British Himalayan mountaineer who participated in many of the Mt. Everest expeditions in the 1930s and later in 1951. This fascinating account of China during and after World War II provides an engaging narrative of his years as British Consul-General at Kashgar. Hodder & Stoughton, Ltd., hardcover
A9781297971785Hardback. New. hardcover
90438Various places 1764-1914. . Collection of 15 titles in 18 vols.<br /> Extensive collection of Russian works focusing mostly on Northern China and Mongolia including important and rare travel trade and exploration accounts.<br /> <br />Assembled by Angus Ivan Ward us consul in China and Russia during troubled times and ambassador in Afghanistan.<br /><br />Ward 1893-1969 served in the U.S. Army during World War I and then became U.S. Vice Consul in Mukden China in 1926; then in Tientsin in 1927-29 and again in 1932. He was sent to Moscow in 1938 and served as U.S. Consul General in Vladivostok during WWII in 1943. Before becoming U.S. Ambassador in Afghanistan in 1952-56 he was back in Mukden as Consul in 1948 where he became the subject of the Ward Incident 1948-49. During the final years of the Chinese Civil War Ward and the consulate staff were imprisoned and held under house arrest by Mao Zedong's People's Liberation Army for almost a year creating a diplomatic rift with the United States.<br /><br />Ward's collection is remarkable for its wide range comprising 150 years of Russian approach to China and their neighbouring region Mongolia before the Russian revolution. Including important as well as lesser works most in first editions and all rarely found on the market the collection not only presents an excellent panorama of Russian exploration of the region but also allows a rare understanding of the commercial and diplomatic relations between these two giant states. It is completed by scholarly works on local languages and cultures.<br /><br />Although Russian envoys and merchants were visiting and residing in Mongolia and China in the 17th century printed accounts of the relations between these countries became available to Russian readers only in the mid 18th century. At first they were Russian translations of works by Chinese authors such as An Account of the Chinese Mission to the Kalmyk Khan on the Volga in 1714 and Their Journey through Russia by Tulishen 16671741 which describes in detail the first official diplomatic mission of China to a European State. This early and important work later published in English by Staunton himself is represented here by a fine example of the first edition in Russian. <br /><br />One of the first Russian scholars of China is the celebrated and prolific monk Iakinf Bichurin 1777-1853. Leader of the 9th Russian Mission to Peking he spent 14 years in China learning the language and exploring the region. His Notes on Mongolia 1828 illustrated with fine hand-coloured plates is the first fundamental study of Mongolia by a Russian sinologist. When Bichurin's mission left Beijing the smooth transition with the new mission was under the control of the diplomat Egor Timkovskiy 1790-1875. His 3-volume Travels through Mongolia to China in the years 1820 and 1821 1824 became the first significant travel account of a Russian to China collecting material on Eastern Turkestan Mongolia Tibet China and Korea.<br />The 1860 Beijing agreement ending the Second Opium War brought a new turn to the Russian exploration of the region. It was the result of Russian diplomatic efforts to facilitate negotiations between China on one side and Britain and France on the other and it allowed the establishment of a permanent Russian diplomatic presence in Beijing. The negotiations and Russia's role are described in detail in Baron Buksgevden's Russian China 1902.<br /><br />The last quarter of the 19th century was the most fruitful period for Russian exploration and the Ward collection includes some of the most important accounts published at that time. Due to an extension of the Great Game to the East many scientific Russian expeditions to Tibet and China were subsidized by the Russian Imperial Geographical Society with often a hidden agenda focusing on mapping the region and gathering intelligence data. <br /><br />An excellent example is given by Mikhail Pevtsov 1843-1902 a Russian army officer and student of Nikolay Przhevalskiy. His Account of a Travel around Mongolia and Northern Provinces of Continental China 1883 mapped unknown parts of Mongolia and Inner China which he discovered during his 1878-79 exploration. Similarly a generation later another military Vasiliy Novitskiy published an account on central Mongolia 1911 accompanied by fifteen accurate and detailed maps of the region. <br /><br />One of the most famous Russian explorers of the region is Grigoriy Potanin 1835-1920 who conducted eight expeditions to Mongolia Tibet and China with some of them lasting up to two years. The present collection includes his rare and fundamental 2-volume study of Central Mongolia and the Eastern border of China published in 1893 to which Ward added a scarce volume of articles by Alexandra Potanina 1843-93 Potanin's wife and the first woman to be accepted as a member of the Russian Geographical Society. <br /><br />A diplomat himself Ward extended his interest to the economic and diplomatic relations between Russia China and Mongolia. Exploration missions were indeed often useful to trade missions organized by the largest Russian trading companies trying to find new routes to the East and to understand the legal and economic aspects of trading in the region. Fascinating accounts were published including for example an Expedition to China in 1874-75 by Yu. Sosnovskiy 1883 Notes the Russian-Mongolian Trade by M. Bogolepov 1911 and Moscow Trade Mission to Mongolia by V. Popov 1912.<br /><br />Ward was a bibliophile and took great care of his purchases. All books are in excellent fresh condition and except the very rare Timkovskiy they are all complete with maps and illustrations. They have been bound in the mid 20th century in a uniform dark burgundy or brown colour in full cloth or in a quality half calf for the most important works except a couple of books such as the Tulishen which is in contemporary Russian half calf. During the binding work the maps were usually professionally laid on linen and carefully stored at the back of each volume in a pocket specially made. Most of the books bear Angus Ward's bookplate on the upper pastedown; some have supplementary earlier provenances.<br />The full collection comprises the following titles. A detailed description of each with notes is available on request.<br /><br />1. - - . TULIEN Larion Kalinovich ROSSOKHIN translator Gerhard Friedrich MILLER publisher. <br /> 1714 . ' '. An Account of the Chinese Mission to the Kalmyk Khan Ayuk on the Volga in 1714 and their Journey through Russia. Published in 'Monthly Essays on Scientific Affairs'. Imper. Akad. Nauk Skt. Peterburg 1764.<br /><br />A lovely fresh example of this early account of the Chinese mission to the Kalmyk Khanate - the first Russian edition of the first diplomatic mission to China to a European state according to the sinologist Mikhail Kapitsa. In the beginning of the 18th century the Kalmyk khanate situated in the South-East of the Russian Empire enjoyed autonomy in managing its domestic and foreign affairs. Ayuka Khan had a considerable authority both within the khanate and abroad and the Russian government relied on his military support to protect the borders of the Empire and make allies with the Asian states. The Tulien's mission was pre-approved by Peter the Great and aimed at forming a military union against the Dzungar Khanate. <br /><br />Originally published in Beijing in 1723 in Chinese and Manchurian this account became known in Europe thanks to the French translation issued in 1729. In 1732 a scientist of a German origin based in Saint Petersburg and the publisher of the "Ezhemesiachnye sochineniya" "Monthly essays" Gerard Miller issued his German translation of the account. Miller however didn't fully trust the accuracy of the French text on which he based his German translation; he wished to use a Russian translation based directly on the Chinese or Manchurian original. Miller's goal was achieved when he discovered a Russian translation of the travel account done by Larion Rossokhin a knowledgeable translator from Chinese and Manchurian and a resident at the Imperial Academy of Sciences. He resided in China for many years and had a chance to work with the original Manchurian text. Before passing away in 1761 Rossokhin left all his documents and translations to the Academy of Sciences including the unpublished translation of the Tulien's work which Miller tracked down. For clarity Miller supplied his own notes and comments in addition to those of Rossokhin.<br /><br />Description and Bibliographical references: July 1764: title 96 pp.; August 1764: title 99192 pp.; September 1764: title 195-288 pp.; October 1764: title 291-384 pp.; November 1764: title 387-480 pp.; December 1764: title 481-576 pp. An account of the Chinese mission: pp. 3-48; 99-150; 195-234; 291-353; 387-427; missing upper fly leaf and small part of title page with no loss of text light spotting throughout. Contemporary half calf over marbled boards two red calf labels to spines; corners slightly bumped. <br /><br />2. TIMKOVSKIY EGOR. 1820 1821 Travels through Mongolia to China in the years 1820 and 1821. Tip. meditsinskogo dep. Ministerstva vnutrennikh del Sankt Peterburg 1824. <br /><br />First edition very rare. For several decades after its publication this account remained the most comprehensive and reliable source of information about the region and was subsequently translated into English German and French. In 1820 Egor Timkovskiy 1790-1785 writer diplomat and a Privy Councillor was entrusted to accompany a new Russian mission to Beijing led by Archimandrite Petr Kamenskiy. On the way back to Russia he was to ensure a safe return of the 9th mission headed by Iakinf Bichurin who spent 12 years fulfilling his duties in Beijing. Timkovskiy set off from Kiakhta in August 1820 and returned a year later having stayed in Beijing for 9 months. He used this time to explore geography history and culture of the region and subsequently published his findings in 1824 upon the Imperial order. <br />The first volume of his work follows the caravan route between Kiakhta and Beijing; the second one provides an overview of China Eastern Turkistan Tibet and Korea; and the third one is dedicated entirely to the description of history geography religion as well as political and economical organization of Mongolia. <br /><br />3 vols 8vo 22.3 x 14.5 cm. Half-title engr. title letterpress title XVIII 388 pp. with 1 folding plan and a map laid on linen and inserted in pocket at rear ; Half-title frontispiece letterpress title 8pp. 409 pp. with 2 facsimile 1 plate and a folding plan plan laid on linen and inserted in pocket at rear; Title 6 433 2 37 4pp. with 3 plates; lacking pp. 159-160 frontispiece and a plate in vol 3 small light marginal waterstain to some ll. in vol. 1 and 2 title and p. IX in vol. 1 with neat marginal repair not affecting text. Later half calf over maroon cloth gilt lettering to upper covers and spine exlibris of Ward to upper pastedowns. <br /><br />Provenance: Nikolay Kolchin owner's inscription to half-title in vol. II Rayskiy's library at the theologival seminary of Tambov ink stamp to title of vol. II.<br /><br />3. FAR EAST BICHURIN Monakh Iakinf. Notes on Mongolia. Skt. Peterburg 1828.<br /><br />A lovely fresh copy of a rare book illustrated with hand-coloured plates by one of the major Russian scholars on China. Bichurin 1777-1853 was named in 1805 leader of the 9th Russian Mission to Peking and head of the Sretenskiy monastery in this town. During his 14-year stay he learnt Chinese compiled his own dictionary and prepared other scholar works for later publication. The first volume of the present work gives an account of the journey and the second volume a detailed examination of the geographical and political condition of the Mongols and their life and customs.<br /><br />2 vols in one 8vo 20.5 x 13.2 cm. xii 231pp. with 5 hand-coloured lithographed plates; vi 339 pp. folding engraved map with hand-coloured outlines laid on linen and inserted in pocket at rear; occasional marginal notes in pencil. Later half calf over maroon cloth boards gilt lettering to upper cover and spine ex libris of Ward to upper pastedown.<br />Obolyaninov 1027. <br /><br />4. . ORLOV A. - Mongolian-Buryat grammar. Gladysheva Kazan 1878.<br /><br />8vo 25 x 16 cm. Title X 265 VI pp; light marginal waterstain to several pages at rear traces of removed label on title. Later calf over maroon cloth boards gilt lettering to upper cover and spine ex libris of Ward to upper pastedown. <br /><br />5. PEVTSOV M.V. . Account of the Travel around Mongolia and the Northern Provinces of the Inner China. Omsk 1883.<br /><br />First edition of this travel account describing unknown parts of Mongolia and inner China. Mikhail Pevtsov 1843-1902 a young Russian army officer devoted traveler and student of Nikolay Przhevalskiy went with a caravan of merchants from Bijsk to Kalgan and back through the Southern Altai Mongolia and Gobi Desert thoroughly mapping the territory of altogether about four thousand kilometers. His detailed account covers the region's terrain rivers lakes brief history of its settlements; and characterizes local trade and animal productions. The large folding map of Mongolia clearly delineates the main geographical points of the territory between Irkutsk in the north Peking in the south and Lake Zaysan modern Kazakhstan in the west.<br /><br />A 20-pp. extract was published earlier in Izvestija Imperatorskogo Russkogo Geograficheskogo Obschesctva 1880 Vol 16. issue 5 pp. 435-457.<br /><br />Provenance: E.I. Yakushkin important historian and ethnographer with a library of about 15000 volumes 1826-1905 stamps to wrapper and title; Library of Shanyavskiy University Moscow stamps to wrapper and title.<br /><br />Title 2 IV 354 2 pp. with folding map of Mongolia laid on linen and inserted in pocket at rear; library stamps to title and upper wrapper. Later maroon cloth gilt lettering to spine original wrappers bound in ex libris of Ward to upper pastedown. Cf. for Yakushkin: Ivask IIp. 96.<br /><br />6. SOSNOVSKIY Y.A. 1874-75 . Expedition to China in the years 1874-75. Ivanov Moskva 1883. <br /><br />An account compiled by the Ukrainian born Colonel Sosnovskiy 1842-1895 who headed the 1874-75 expedition to China aimed at finding new land routes to Chinese trade markets. Among other tasks set by the Russian government the expedition was to evaluate opportunities for expanding trade with China find most favourable locations for Russian consulates and fabrics and also collect intelligence information on the Dungan revolt taking place in the Eastern regions of the country. The expedition resulted in establishing a new route to China which was 1600 versts shorter than the one used before. <br />In the mid 1870s still weakened after Russo-Japanese war the Russian Empire concentrated its geopolitical interests in Asia. Its activity in Central Asia and attempts to create spheres of influence in Tibet and China brought Russia on the brick of war with England which was itself aiming to dominate in the region. Both countries were actively conducting military intelligence in China considering it a possible future war arena. At that point Russian Empire sent multiple missions to Mongolia China and Tibet with most of them being headed by officers of the General headquarters. Sosnovskiy headed two such expeditions. <br />His account of the 1874-75 mission first appeared in the Izvestia Russkogo Imperatorskogo Obshchestva 1876 vol 12 issues 1 2 3 5 6 with the offered example being the first edition in the book form. <br /><br />Title V 894 II pp. with large folding map of China laid on linen and inserted in pocket at rear; lacking pp. 141-2 instead bound duplicate of pp. 189-190 ink stamp and inventory number to title light occasional spotting. Later maroon cloth gilt lettering to upper cover and spine ex libris of Ward to upper pastedown.<br /><br />7. POTANIN Grigoriy Nikolaevich. - Tangut-Tibetan border of China and Central Mongolia. Skt. Peterburg Suvorin 1893.<br /><br />An account of the two years expedition led by the famous Russian explorer and scientist Potanin 1835 - 1920 to the territories on the border of China and Tibet. Apart from Potanin himself the expedition of 1884-6 included his wife ethnographer Alexandra topographer A. Skassi and zoologist M. Berezovskiy. The group travelled from Beijing through two northern Chinese provinces to arrive in Gansu in 1884. Having spent a year researching the territories on the Eastern border of Tibet they travelled back to Russia in 1886 through Nanshan district and Central Mongolia. This work presents richly illustrated material collected during the expedition including geography ethnography and zoology of the region.<br /><br />2 vols 4to 29 x 22.5 cm. Title XVIII 657 XVIII 2 pp. with 42 photogravures and 3 maps incl. 2 large folding laid on linen and inserted in pocket at rear; Frontispiece title XII 437 XIX pp. Later half calf over maroon cloth gilt lettering to upper cover and spine ex libris of Ward to upper pastedowns; very slightly rubbed. <br /><br />8. DEKEN Constant de. A Travers l'Asie. Polleunis et Ceuterick Bruxelles 1894. <br /><br />8vo 22.6 x 16.4 cm. XI including title 367 pp. with 30 plates and 1 folding map; some light occasional spotting. Contemporary brown cloth gilt lettering to spine; traces of a removed label on upper pastedown.<br /><br />9. POTANINA A.V. : . Travels around Eastren Siberia Mongolia Tibet and China: collection of articles. Moskva Gerbek 1895.<br /><br />A posthumous publication of the complete collection of articles including the unpublished ones by Potanina 1843 - 1893 a famous explorer of Asia and the first women to be accepted as a member of the Russian Geographical Society. Along with her husband Grigoriy Potanin who made a very significant contribution to the research of Central Asia she took part in four expeditions to the region researching ethnography geography and economy of Mongolia Tibet and Inner China. <br /><br />8vo 24.5 x 17 cm. Frontispiece title 4 XLII 296 pp. 5 lithographed plates incl. 3 in colour. Later maroon cloth gilt lettering to spine and upper cover ex libris of Ward to upper pastedown; extremities of spine slightly rubbed. <br /><br />10. . BUKSGEVDEN Baron A. : 1860 . Russian China: notes on the diplomatic relations between Russia and China The Convention of Peking of 1860. Noviy Kray Port Artur 1902.<br /><br />The publication of this work was triggered by the events in China in 1900 when the massive rebellion against foreign intervention in Chinese provinces resulted in extensive violent attacks on foreigners official missions and Christian monuments. To protect their interests German American British and Russian forces advanced on Beijing and put an end to the rebellion which was supported by the Chinese government. <br /><br />The author found the developments of 1900 to have direct connection to the ones that took place 40 years before when at the culmination of the Second Opium War the British and French troops entered the Forbidden City in Beijing. Reflecting on these events Baron Buksgevden describes the diplomatic efforts of the Russian representative Ignatiev in 1860 to facilitate the negotiations between China on one side and Britain and France on the other and their successful outcome for the Russian Empire. <br /><br />The editor was planning to continue the work with description of the events of 1900 in China but the second part was never published. <br /><br />Small 4to 21.5 x 15.5 cm. Title 2 II 2 III 239 pp. Later maroon cloth binding gilt lettering to spine ex libris of Ward to upper pastedown.<br /><br /><br />11. TSYBIKOV G.Ts. - - : Guide to the stages of the Path to Awakening. Vostochniy institut Vladivostok 1910 1913.<br /><br />The first translation into a European language of the first part of this important text on Indian Buddhism in a scholar edition with text in Mongolian and in Russian with many linguistic notes. The 'Guide to the stages of the Path to Awakening' is the main work of the great Tibetan religious leader Tsongkhapa 1357-1419 which outlines the ideas of Buddhism in the form of a guide and describes the stages of the path of spiritual development up to the achievement of full awakening. <br /><br />Tsybikov 1873-1930 an explorer ethnographer and orientalist was one of the first foreigners to travel in Tibet where he secretly conducted research and recorded his journey in photographs. During his travels he obtained Mongolian texts of Lam-Rim from which he wrote a translation into Russian. According to Tsybikov only the first part of Tsongkhapa's work was available in Mongolian at that time.<br /><br />Two issues bound in 1 vol. 8vo 22.8 x 16.3 cm. 8 pp. incl. title XLVIII 312 pp. 2; 10 pp. incl. title XLI 294 II pp. Later half calf over maroon cloth gilt lettering to upper cover and spine ex libris of Ward to upper pastedown; spine very slightly rubbed. <br /><br />12. . . . BOGOLEPOV M.I. and M.N. SOBOLEV. - Notes on the Russian-Mongolian Trade. Sibirskoe tov. pechatnogo dela Tomsk 1911.<br /><br />An account of the expedition organized by Tomsk Society of the Siberia Research independently of the Moscow Trade Mission that was initiated in 1910. The expedition was subsidized by the three largest companies trading with Mongolia and aimed at researching all aspects of the Mongolian trade system including its legal and economic aspects.<br /><br />8vo 26.6 x 18 cm. Title VII 498 2 pp. with 20 photoengravings on 10 plates and 1 folding map pasted on linen and inserted in pocket at rear. Later maroon cloth gilt lettering to spine ex libris of Ward to upper pastedown. <br /><br />13. NOVITSKIY V.F. - - - 1906 Travels around Mongolia in 1906. Voenneya tipografiya Skt.Peterburg 1911. <br /><br />After the end of the Russo-Japanese war the Russian troops in Manchuria where Colonel Novitskiy served where awaiting relocation that was not promising to take place soon. Therefore it was not difficult for Novitskiy to receive a permission to explore the neighbouring Mongolia in the meantime. During his expedition which was partly sponsored by the Imperial Geographical Society Novitskiy meticulously recorded his geographical and meteorological observations as well as specimens of flora and fauna that he encountered. The account also greatly benefits from the enclosed fifteen accurate maps of the region and expedition routes compiled by Novitskiy. <br /><br />Large 8vo 27.7 x 17.6 cm. IV including title 400 pp. with 15 folding maps all pasted on linen and inserted in pocket at rear; traces of old tape to inner margin of several leaves small marginal loss to the general map of expedition route in Mongolia. Later maroon cloth gilt lettering to spine and upper cover ex libris of Ward to upper pastedown; extremities of spine slightly rubbed. <br /><br />14. . . . POPOV V.L. and others. Mo Moscow Trade Mission to Mongolia. Riabushinskiy Moskva 1912.<br /><br />An account compiled by the participants of the trade mission initiated at the meeting of the Russian industrialists and entrepreneurs in 1910. The expedition was headed by the colonel Popov and included representatives of the biggest trade companies such as V. Shkarin K. Koliadov I. Morozov and others. In Mongolia the group studied stock raising production of fur local banking and trade systems as well as the country's geographical political and administrative characteristics. <br /><br />Large 8vo 27 x 18.8 cm.Title 2 353 pp. with 35 photoengr. and lith. plates and folding map pasted on linen. Later maroon cloth gilt lettering to upper cover and spine ex libris of Ward to upper pastedown. <br /><br />15. RUDNEV A.D. - : 1 2 3 Khori-Buryat dialect: issues 1 2 and 3. Petrograd 1913 1914. <br /><br />8vo. 10 pp incl. title CXX; title 128 2 pp.; title 135 2pp. 4 pp. advert. Later maroon cloth gilt lettering to upper cover and spine ex libris of Ward to upper pastedown original upper wrappers of three issues bound in extremities of spine slightly rubbed. <br /><br />Provenance: Library of the Oriental Institute stamps to upper wrapper and titles.<br /> [Various places, 1764-1914]. hardcover