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19035548Bangkok Thailand 1903. Die-cut pen and ink and watercolor menu 17 x 13 cm. Text in printed in French on the verso and in Thai on the recto. The fanciful menu for a dinner in honor of Prince Maha Valiravudh of Siam depicts a royal procession. Printed fare includes both Western and Thai dishes including: Dindon Froid Oie Rotie Froide Aspci de Foie Gras Jambon d'Yorck Petits Fours and Creme Glacées on the Western side; and Kanom Buang de Siam et d'Annam Mieng Lao-Kanom Chieb Sai Krok Khao Kanon Pang Natang Mee Khao Tang and Punlami Dong Dang for the Thai dishes. Wear to edges of the die-cut with perhaps some loss to the tip of the bright red and yellow pennant; six small ink designs added. Still bright colorful and near very good. unknown
T27781<p>Nava Sathapatayakram: Naval Architecture</p><p>Asa Magazine Special Issue: published for 6 Aniversary of King Bhumiphol 1999</p><p>PRINT Bangkok 1999 WL CODE T27781 SIZE 96 pp. fully illus. 215 x 275 mm BOOK WEIGHT 0.250 Kg PACKING WEIGHT 0.200 Kg</p> paperback
2015__1626430101Bridge21 Pubs 2015. Paperback. New. 282 pages. 9.25x6.50x0.75 inches. Bridge21 Pubs paperback
201852290Leiden: Brill 2018. First edition. Hardcover. Fine. Octavo. xi 3 240pp. Bibliography. Text in English and transliterated Jewish-Babylonian-Aramaic. Dark blue over pictorial olive buckram spine lettered in white. Illustrated with an archaeological sketch facsimiles of notes and color photos of bowl fragments. A fine as new copy. <br /> <br /> "The presentation transcriptions translations and commentaries are excellent examples of the finest scholarship from some of the leading scholars in the study of ancient Aramaic and its dialects. The manuscript and the bowls it introduces should be eagerly received and examined by graduate students and scholars of the Hebrew Bible esoteric traditions of later antiquity like the seals of Solomon demonology etc. and the historical development of Aramaic." - Peter T. Lanfer Occidental College in: Review of Biblical Literature 8 2019 <br /> <br /> The collection of Aramaic magic bowls and related objects in the Vorderasiatisches Museum in Berlin is one of the most important in the world. This book presents a description of each object and its contents including details of users and other names biblical quotations parallel texts and linguistic features. Combined with the detailed indices the present volume makes the Berlin collection accessible for further research. Furthermore sixteen texts which are representative of the whole collection are edited. This book results from an impressive collaboration between Siam Bhayro James Nathan Ford Dan Levene and Ortal-Paz Saar with further contributions by Matthew Morgenstern Marco Moriggi and Naama Vilozny and will be of interest for all those engaged in the study of these fascinating objects. OCLC<br /> <br /> Volume 7 in the Brill series "Magical and Religious Literature of Late Antiquity. Brill hardcover
020464Leiden/Boston Brill 2022. X 254 p. Hardcover Very fine copy. Leiden/Boston, Brill 2022 hardcover
42505233like new. unknown
42505233-nnew. unknown
2020__3506703390Ferdinand Schoningh Wilhelm Fink & 2020. Hardcover. New. 350 pages. 9.61x6.38x1.06 inches. Ferdinand Schoningh Wilhelm Fink & hardcover
1947263679London : Foulis 1947. First Edition. Hardcover. Very good cloth copy in a near-fine very slightly edge-nicked and dust-dulled dust-wrapper now mylar-sleeved. Remains particularly and surprisingly well-preserved overall; tight bright clean and strong. SIGNED and inscribed. Physical description; 175 p. 8 p. of plates : ill. ports. ; 23 cm. Subjects; Bira B. Automobile racing — History. London : Foulis hardcover
1939mon0001622155Sun Engraving Co. Ltd 1939T. hardcover. Good. . First edition. Hardback. With dust jacket. Sun Engraving Co. Ltd hardcover
20001-0898714532Society for Industrial & Applied 2000. Paperback. New. 965 pages. 11.00x8.50x2.00 inches. Society for Industrial & Applied paperback
1168412382.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1161270337.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1161110127.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
026529889X.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1332642578.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1990ZB1247588Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics SIAM 1990. Price HAS BEEN REDUCED by 10% until Monday June 29 SALE item 454 pp. Paperback fine. - 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. Photos available upon request. Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) paperback
1608L6GEZEYF77VKThe Hague 1608. Folio 34 x 21 cm. Dutch manuscript translation written in brown ink on paper in a slightly sloped Dutch gothic cursive hand 35 lines with text area 21 x 17.5 cm plus 2-line drop-title very neatly written of a 1607 letter from Ekathatsarot King of Ayutthaya Siam/Thailand to Maurits of Nassau Prince of Orange received in 1608 distributed as a manuscript tidings. 1 leaf. A contemporary Dutch manuscript translation of a letter written late in 1607 by King Ekathotsarot of Ayutthaya then generally called Siam in the West and more or less the present-day Thailand sent with the first Siamese embassy to the Netherlands and addressed to the Dutch stadtholder Maurits of Nassau Prince of Orange who received it in September 1608. We have found no printed version of the present text it supplies details that we have not found in any other source and the original Thai version appears not to survive giving the present document the greatest importance for understanding the earliest diplomatic relations between Siam and the Dutch Republic and throwing light on activities of the VOC Dutch East India Company in its earliest years. It names two Siamese ambassadors who apparently headed the embassy of fifteen people. Ekathotsarots letter proposes a friendship and alliance between the two nations requests various goods and military aid against the Portuguese in Tanassery Tenasserim in the Kingdom of Taungoo now the Tanintharyi region of Myanmar formerly Burma. He sends various presents which are listed and offers to send anything Maurits wishes to have from Siam and neighbouring regions noting that all the princes and kings of the neighbouring regions are his subjects except for the King of Queda! meaning Kedah on the Malay peninsula who is his enemy.Prince Ekathotsarot ca. 1556-1610 succeeded his brother to the throne ruling as King Sanphet III from 1605 to 1610. He brought stability to Siam and was eager to expand trade with many foreign powers including the Dutch Republic. The Dutch were disappointed in their hopes to use Siam as a stepping stone to trade with China but the Siamese did allow the VOC to establish trading posts at Sangora in 1607 and Ayutthaya in 1608.In late 1607 the VOC sent the Siam embassy of fifteen people from Ayutthaya the capital of Siam to Pattani in Southern Thailand and from there the ship sailed to Bantam Banten the main base of the VOC on Java. As instructed by the VOC five persons including two ambassadors were sent with the return fleet from Matelief to Fort Rammekens Holland. This brought with them his letter to the Dutch stadtholder whom the Dutch and Siamese called the King of Holland in their correspondence. The present title indicates that the original letter in the Thai language was written in gold: the original letter of King Ekathotsarot was engraved on a golden roll which was stored in an ivory case. The visit of the Siamese embassy to the Dutch Republic has been reported in a printed newsletter published in 1608 telling both the reception of the Siamese embassy by Prince Maurits in The Hague as well as the demonstration of the newly invented telescope. Present day three copies of this newsletter have survived. It says the Portuguese had told the Siamese that the Dutch were just pirates without a country but Ekathotsarots letter shows he was quite well informed knowing what the Dutch had that he wanted and knowing what to offer them in return. He offers free trade for Dutch merchants in the region and requests Dutch ships with captains and soldiers to help drive out the Portuguese iron cannons with the largest cannonballs and especially skilled artisans who could smelt and cast iron people skilled in the use of artillery and skilled gilders and tanners.With a few tiny holes in the paper along the old folds not affecting the text and a small marginal tear and stain at the foot but otherwise in very good condition and with all three deckles intact the left edge was the centre of the sheet. Perhaps the only surviving version of a 1607 letter from the King of Siam to the Dutch stadtholder Maurits Prince of Orange: a unique source of information on Dutch-Siamese relations and on the early history of the VOC.l Cf. John Anderson English Intercourse with Siam in the Seventeenth Century London 1890; Han ten Brummelhuis Merchant courtier and diplomat; A history of the contacts between the Netherlands and Thailand Lochem 1987; Dirk van der Cruysse Siam & the West 1500-1700 Paris 1991 /Chiang Mai 2002; J.J.L. Duyvendak The First Siamese Embassy to Holland in: Toung Pao 32 1936; Paul Pelliot Les relations du Siam et de la Hollande en 1608 in: Toung Pao 32 1936 George Vinal Smith The Dutch in Seventeenth-Century Thailand DeKalb Ill. 1977; Henk Zoomers & Huib Zuidervaart ed. Embassies of the King of Siam sent to His Excellency Prince Maurits Arrived in The Hague on 10 September 1608 Wassenaar 2008 none of these titles has cited the content of the Kings letter proving both the importance and rarity of the manuscript. unknown
20192-1734069627Elfatih Eltahir 2019. Paperback. New. 206 pages. 9.00x6.00x0.49 inches. Elfatih Eltahir paperback
185671211Bangkok Siam: printed at the Washington Press by J. H. Chandler 1856. 8vo approx. 8½" x 6¾" pp. 25 1; self-wrappers; Thai and English text on opposite pages; small hole from an old adhesion in the middle of the fourth and fifth leaf sense at least in the English version remains clear; some curling at the edges and small marginal nicks and tears; in all a good clean copy. The first treaty between the US and Siam had been negotiated by Edmund Roberts in 1833. It ensured free trade and most favored nation status for the United States. Sir John Bowring negotiated a new treaty on behalf of Great Britain with the recently enthroned King Mongkut aka Rama IV. When the Americans learned of this mission they sent Townsend Harris who was on his way to Japan to Bangkok to update the original treaty for the U.S. which was signed on May 29 1856. Townsend Harris 1804-1878 was an American merchant and politician who served as the first United States Consul General to Japan. He negotiated the the Treaty of Amity and Commerce or the "Harris Treaty of 1858" between the US and Japan and is credited as the diplomat who first opened Shogunate Japan to foreign trade and culture in the Edo period thereby paving the way for greater Western influence in Japan's economy and politics. Prior to his efforts in Japan however Harris was rerouted from his trip to Japan to make his way to Siam. Re-designated the Treaty of Amity Commerce and Navigation the amendments granted Americans extraterritorial rights in addition to those in the Roberts Treaty. Two American missionaries played essential roles in the negotiation of the Harris Treaty: Stephen Mattoon worked as a translator for Townsend Harris during the negotiations. He graduated from Princeton Theological Seminary in 1846 and the following year went to Bangkok where he worked as a Presbyterian missionary. He was subsequently appointed the first United States consul to Siam. Shortly after his return to the United States in 1865 he became president of the Biddle Memorial Institute in Charlotte North Carolina where he remained until his death in 1889. This copy of the Harris Treaty was passed down through his family and is accompanied by an 1880 letter to his sister on Biddle Institute letterhead. The Treaty of Friendship and Commerce between the United States and Siam granted American citizens extraterritorial rights and secured important diplomatic and trade privileges for the U.S. in Siam. Included are articles addressing the ownership of land in Siam by Americans; the mutual protection of American and Siamese citizens at sea and on land; parameters of trade between the two countries; free exercise of religion by Americans living in Siam; limitations on travel by American ships of war; and details on trade and import duties and the special exclusion thereof for opium; and other rules and regulations concern smuggling false manifests port clearances etc. Includes a list of 44 articles that are free from taxes rhinoceros hides elephant bones kingfisher's feathers ivory etc. on the recto of the final leaf. Both the American and British treaties with King Mongkut's government were printed by John Hassett Chandler by turns a "U.S. Consul tutor printer and book binder punch-cutter and type founder inventor engineer designer and engraver mechanic artist author missionary translator and interpreter" genealogy.com. He was born in 1813 at Pomfret Connecticut and came to Bangkok in 1843 as a Baptist missionary and set up the first printing press in the kingdom to use Thai characters. Chandler would later assist Mongkut in setting up another press inside the palace. In 1856 Harris chose Chandler and Mattoon to serve as his advisors at the court. Both of them already held positions in the Royal household and Chandler had grown so close to the Mongkut and his family that he was one of two missionaries the king chose to join the procession at the ratification ceremony for Harris's Treaty. Most of the publications of the Washington Press in Bangkok were religious in nature although there are also a number of almanacs grammars dictionaries and newspapers for the period from 1830 to 1860. The Bowring and Harris treaties appear to be the only official documents issued by the press. The Harris Treaty is also one of the earliest primary sources documenting American colonial interests in Asia. It is extremely rare and we can trace only six institutional copies at LC AAS Cornell Colgate University of Hong Kong and Strasbourg the last of which is apparently missing the title page. See also Conroy- Krutz Missionary Diplomacy: Religion and Nineteenth-Century American Foreign Relations. Cornell University Press Ithaca 2024. And Lord Donald C. Missionaries Thai and Diplomats. Pacific Historical Review 354 1966. printed at the Washington Press by J. H. Chandler unknown
2010DADAX3639279948VDM Verlag 2010-09-12. paperback. New. 5.91x0.17x8.66. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. VDM Verlag paperback
3639279948.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
100374Eyre & Spottiswoode. London. 1948. Eyre & Spottiswoode. London. 1948. First edition. Hardback. No DW. Original green cloth sunned to spine head and tail of spine and corners slightly crumpled. Pages browned otherwise clean and sound. PRESENTATION COPY FROM CHULA "For Robin with love from Chula November 1948." Robin's ownership signature to reverse of front free endpaper. Robin Dalton lived to 101 and had an extraordinary life and career. As a literary agent she represented Edna O'Brien John Osborne Iris Murdoch Ben Travers George Orwell Margaret Drabble B. S. Johnson Bernice Rubens and many more. She also produced films spied for Thai Government and for over five years dated the cousin and best man of Prince Philip David Milford Haven. It was he that introduced her to the Chulas and after being snowed in for five days at their Cornish house in 1947 they became her lifelong friends. On her honeymoon to her second husband in Cornwall Robin was approached by Chula who asked her to become an intelligence officer for the kingdom of Thailand. Officially she was a press attaché. "What went on taught me that every single crazy thing you see in a spy film or book is true." Within a day of husband's early death Lisba Princess Chula had offered to pay for her daughter's Lisa's education hardcover