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2014100144880Gorgias Press 2014 300 pages in8. 2014. Broché. 300 pages. Édition bilingue syriaque-anglais du 'Livre des Degrés' une collection de 30 sermons (memre) écrits par un auteur anonyme en Perse à la fin du IVe siècle. L'ouvrage décrit la vie spirituelle d'une communauté chrétienne avant l'avènement du monachisme en mettant en lumière les devoirs et problèmes de deux catégories de chrétiens engagés : les Justes et les Parfaits
606136Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1990. In-8, cart. éd. sous jaquette ill., 231 pp., nb. fig. et ill. photogr. en n/b. in-t., texte en anglais, bibliographie, index. Epuisé chez l'éditeur.
555602N.Y., Cooper Square, 1972. In-8 reliure éditeur pleine toile bleue, titre doré au dos, VI-495 pp., 6 carte h.-t., index.
557006London, Longmans, Green & Co, 1873. Fort in-8, rel. de bibliothèque de l’époque, demi-chagrin rouge à coins, dos à nerfs, titre et filet doré, chiffre doré en queue, tr. marbrées, XIII-[1]-458 pp., frontispice lithogr. en couleurs, ill. dans le texte, 2 plans dépliants h.-t. Index.
220917Londres, John C. Nimmo, 1900 in-8, x pp., un f. n. ch., 273 pp., [2] ff. n. ch., percaline cerise, dos et plat supérieur ornés de motifs dorés, tête dorée (reliure de l'époque). Coiffe supérieure et mors abîmés, décoloration sur les plats.
197649738Museum of Mankind, The Ethnography Departement of the British Museum, 1976. Format 19x25 cm, 89 pages. Exemplaire agrémenté d'un envoi autographe de l'auteur en page de titre. Très bon état
555413London, Eyre Methuen, 1979. In-8, rel. d’éditeur toile violette sous jaquette ill. en couleurs, XVIII-332 pp., texte en anglais, ill. en noir h-t. Index. 3e édition.
555896New York, Arno Press, 1973. In-8, rel. d'éditeur toile violette, X-638 pp., texte en anglais, ill. dt une grande carte dépliante en couleurs. Index (The Middle East Collection).
548210London, A. & C. Black LTD, 1916. In-8, cartonnage d'édition pleine-toile beige, décor polychrome sur le premier plat, titre en long sur le dos, VI-10 pp. de texte, 32 planches en couleurs et 37 dessins h.-t. en noir, qq. annotations à l'encre au contreplat.
555659University of La Verne Press, 1988. In-8, broché, XIII-189 pp., texte en anglais. Bibliogr., index.
557029Beirut, Hamaskaine Press, 1973. Grand in-8 carré, rel. d'éditeur toile brune sous jaquette, 330 pp. (Middle East Law Series, II).
556659London, Longmans, Green, and Co, 1891. In-12, rel. d’éditeur percaline bleue, premier plat illustré, XIV- 191 pp., texte anglais + 23 p. (cat. de l’éditeur), carte en couleur en frontispice, 12 planches h.-t. et fig. en noir in-t.
556800Beirut, Haigazian University, 2010. In-8 broché, 105 pp., bibliogr.
556621Beirut, Khayat’s, 1960. In-8, toile bleue d’éditeur sous jaquette, XIII-297 pp., texte anglais, pl. en noir fine et carte dépliante.
4to. (2), LIV, 130, (2) pp. Title printed in red and black with engraved title vignette. 1 folding genealogical table. Contemporary half calf with gilt spine and spine label (chipped). First edition; "a groundbreaking achievement" (Fück, p. 111). Reiske's unvocalised edition of Tarafah's text, with a Latin translation on opposite pages and the commentary of Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Nahhas. "The appended notes trace the poet's chain of thought and elucidate the various themes with their poetic phraeseology by comparison with parallels in other works [...] A geneaological plate visualizes the kinship between Tarafah and other northern Arabian ports, facilitating the reader's checking the chronological approaches suggested in the prologue" (ibid.). In sharp contrast to his teacher Schultens, the brilliant scholar Reiske (1716-74) was one of the first Arabists whose work was fully independent of the constraints of Biblical exegesis. - The sixth century Arab poet Tarafah was the author of the longest of the seven odes in the celebrated collection of pre-Islamic poetry "al-Mu'allaqat" (Moallakah). Some critics judge him to be the greatest of the pre-Islamic poets, if not the greatest Arab poet. - Very rare. Schnurrer 202. Fück 110. Graesse IV, 554. Van der Aa VI, 69ff. Encyc. Britt. 26, 415. OCLC 22661575.
New English Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 16 cm). In Turkish. 86 p. Tezkire. Translated by Hicabi Kirlangiç. I. Tahmasb was an influential Shah of Iran, who enjoyed the longest reign of any member of the Safavid dynasty. He was the son and successor of Ismail I (Shah Ismail). PERSIAN LITERATURE Tazkira. 86 p.
Folio. (4), 392 pp. Original printed boards with later cloth spine. First edition of this Uyghur work ("Mémorial des Saints") by Farid al-Din `Attar (d. ca. 1230), preserved in a ms. in the Bibliothèque Nationale. Printed in the language's characteristic Arabic-derived alphabet. - Edges rubbed and bumped; covers stained. Interior foxed throughout. An uncut, untrimmed copy. Collection orientale, tome 16: 2me série, tome II (wants the first volume containing the French translation). OCLC 7524145.
Head-and-shoulders portrait. Chromolithograph. 60 x 44.6 cm. Very rare Weißenburg broadsheet showing the portrait of an oriental ruler: the last-but-one Khedive (Viceroy) of Egypt, Tewfik Pasha (ruled 1879-1892). These oriental broadsheets were usually sold with the fictitious imprint of Hassan Auvès in Cairo; this one also states the actual publisher, Camille Burckardt's successors. - Slight horizontal crease; edges somewhat browned. All of these prints are very rare; a different print commanded £21,250 at Sotheby's in 2012.
Edizione: Prima edizione . Pagine: 374 . Illustrazioni: Tavole fuori testo in bianco e nero e a colori . Formato: 8° . Rilegatura: Brossura con sovracoperta . Stato: Ottimo . Collana: Grandi opere .
8vo (155 x 204 mm). Ottoman manuscript on laid paper. 134 pp. on 68 ff., written space ca. 90 x 140-145 mm. 15 lines, per extensum, written in a heavily Persian-influenced naskh style in black ink, gilt ("taddib") section titles, rubricated and sometimes written in gilt for emphasis, no catchwords, but extensively vocalized Turkish text with Arabic diacritics. Gilt gadval borders around introductory double page, remainder of text within double red rules. Frequent marginalia and occasional glosses, with some prayers and charms. Early full leather binding with fore-edge flap, spine and flap hinges reinforced with later leather. Complete Ottoman medical manuscript, copied by the scribe Celalu'd-din Mehmud al-'Ala'i in 1408 CE, still during the lifetime of the book's author, the Anatolian religious scholar and physician Haci Pasha (known in the Arabic tradition as Haggi Basha Galalu'd-Din al-Hidr bin 'Ali bin al-Hattab al-Aydini). - The introduction (1v-2r) sets out the work's content and structure, presented, with Arabic technical terms adopted into Turkish, as a compendium ("muhtasar") and facilitation ("teshil") of medical knowledge, offering a discussion of definitions, medical practices, the administration of solids and liquids, and a description of diseases with their symptoms and related therapies. The following sections treat dietary matters including regimens for exercise ("hereket"), meals ("gazalar"), hot baths ("hammamlar") and vomiting ("istifrag"), as well as self-medication (4v-15v), fevers ("buhran", 16r-17r), and the therapeutic and prophylactic properties of various foods (17v-26r). The third and by far the most extensive section (26r-67r) provides definitions and summary descriptions of the most common ailments with their aetiologies (proceeding from symptomological analysis, "alamet") and treatments. A single final page (67v) entitled "Kitabu'l-Ihtilac" ("Book of attraction or palpitations") contains apotropaic phrases to be pronounced over the patient and a short poem in 11 couplets, followed by the four-line colophon (68r). - Haci Pasha was a famous 14th century physician from Anatolia who moved to Cairo, then the thriving capital of Mamluk Egypt, to refine his medical knowledge during what is today regarded as the beginning of the most famous period of Ottoman medicine. The present treatise enjoyed significant success for many decades and directly influenced the work of one of the most renowned Ottoman physicians of the 15th century, Serefeddin Sabuncuoglu (1385-1468), who composed the first surgical atlas in Ottoman Turkish. - Margins somewhat fingerstained in places with a light waterstain throughout, but generally very well preserved.
1997040024USA and London: Greenwood Press 1997. First Edition. Cloth. Very Good/No Jacket. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Type: Book N.B. No Dust Jacket. Head and tale of spine and corners of boards very slightly bumped. Greenwood Press hardcover
8vo. 44 pp. Ottoman Turkish in Arabic type. Original red printed wrappers. First and only edition. - A rare copy of what likely is the only extant written record of the situation of Muslims in Brazil in the 19th century, a minority formed mostly by former African slaves and their descendants. Abdurrahman was a crew member of one of two Ottoman warships thrown off their course to Basra by a storm on the Atlantic near Cape Verde, which dragged them in the opposite direction, to Rio de Janeiro. While his companions continued their voyage to the Arabian Gulf, Abdurrahman remained in Brazil, and his account focuses entirely on his religious work there. He describes the lessons he gave and a Portuguese booklet he prepared to outline the basics of Islam, which was memorized by most of his students, and he criticizes their way of life, including their former religions, their practice of fasting in the month of Saban instead of Ramadan, and the frequent baptism of Muslim children. The book includes geographical descriptions of Brazil and Rio de Janeiro and mentions tropical fruits unfamiliar to the author, who finishes with the route he took home to Istanbul a few years later, including stops at Lisbon, Cordoba, Tangier, Mecca, and Damascus. - While it discusses the voyage to the New World only briefly, this is in fact the second of two known accounts of the first voyage ever made to the American continent by the Ottoman navy, published only three years after the other travelogue (by Faik Bey). Abdurrahman wrote his account in Arabic and had it translated into Ottoman Turkish by Antepli Mehmed Serif. - A small waqf stamp to the final page. Covers slightly faded, else very good. Several copies in libraries worldwide, mostly in the United States, but none in auction records. Özege 20671. Baysal, Osmanli türklerinin bastiklari kitaplar, 2641. OCLC 68231927. Cf. Snowden, Accidental Turks in Brazil and Beyond. Kabacali, Gezi edebiyati seçkisi (2004).
1964126453Zodiaque, 1964, gr. in-8°, 323 pp, 130 héliogravures et 8 pl. en couleurs hors texte, cartes et plans, index, reliure toile éditeur, sans la jaquette, bon état (la Nuit des Temps, 21)
582366La Pierre-qui-Vire, Zodiaque, 1964. In-8, rel. pleine toile, jaquette ill. en coul., 322 pp., 99 fig. in-texte, 130 ill. photos et héliogravures en noir et coul., la plupart à pleine page. Bibliographie.
1962ca1177Editions du pont Royal album cartonné 1962 In-4 (24,5 x 30,5 cm.), album cartonné, plats illustrés, 262 pages, illustrations noir et blanc in-texte ; légers frottements aux coiffes, coins et mors, par ailleurs bon état. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.