206 résultats
Broch?. 48 pages. 23x31 cm. Couverture factice.
196pp. + frontispice (portrait du fondateur Th. Verbist) et 5 planches double-page hors-texte, 22cm., reliure cart. (qqs. traces d'usage), dos en toile noir avec titre doré, bon état, [Relié avec un autre ouvrage: NN, Les missionnaires belges en Mongolie. Coup d'oeil sur l'établissement du christianisme a Pekin et en Mongolie, Bruxelles, Goemaere, 1866, 63pp.], R99383
Ouvrage complet enn 2 tomes, Tome I: 196pp. + frontispice (portrait du fondateur Th. Verbist) et 5 planches double-page hors-texte, Tome II: 292pp.+ 1 grande carte dépliante et 2 planches double-page hors-texte (dont 1 carte), 24cm., brochures originales (dos et plat inférieur du tome I remplacé, bien protégées par une couv. supplémentaire de papier cristal), tome 2 toujours non coupé, texte frais, bon exemplaire, R100078
pp.217 to 425, with folding table in finis, 29cm., text in Mongolian script, in the series "Corpus Scriptorum Mongolorum Instituti Linguae et Litterarum Comiteti Scientiarum et Educationis Altae Reipublicae Populi Mongoli" tomus IX fasc.3B, original softcover (spine bit repaired at ends, well protected by cristal paper wrappers), text and interior in very good condition, rare, OCLC 879524588, X91508
xiv + 316 + ii pp.with ills. + 16 plates out-of-text, 26cm., in the series "Senri Ethnological Reports" vol.11, softcover, stamp on title page, stain of humidity on lower edges (not affecting the text), text in good condition, X74875
Fine Fine Turkish Original bdg. Dust wrapper. 4to. (28 x 20 cm). In Turkish with Uighur texts. 334 p., color ills., maps, plans and color photographic plates. Ötüken Uygur dönemi yazitlarindan: Tes - Tariat - Sine Us. Inscriptions from the Ötüken period: Tes, Tariat and Sine Usu. Cultur and civilization traces belonging to the Uigur who they lived in today's Mongolia geography between the years of 744-840 is substantially important in the sense of Turkish history. Afterwards, the Uighurs using the system of runic in their earliest period developed Uighur writing that carried the traces of Manichaeism and was adopted from Sogd writing and they used it as formal writing. Scholars have been assuming a close historical and philological connection between the Tes, Terx and Sine Usu inscriptions of the Uighur steppe empire.