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1826L3 box764 b3v7<p>Platonis et que vel Platonis esse Feruntur vel Platonica Solent Comitari Scripta Graece Omnia ad Codices Manuscriptos Volume 7. Recensuit Variasque Inde Lectiones Diligenter Enotavit Immanuel Bekker. Annotationibus Integris Stephani Heindorfii Heusdii Wyttenbachii Lindavii Boeckhiique. Adjiciuntur Modo Non Integrae Serrani Cornarii Thompsoni Fischeri Gottleberi Astii Butmanni et Stalbaumi Necnon Ex Commentariis Aliorum Curiose Excerpta. 1826 MDCCCXXVI Londini: Excudebat A. J. Valpy A. M. Sumptibus Ricardi Priestley. Blue cloth hardcover 566 pp for Volume 7.</p> A. J. Valpy hardcover
1826L3 box764 b3v8<p>Platonis et que vel Platonis esse Feruntur vel Platonica Solent Comitari Scripta Graece Omnia ad Codices Manuscriptos Volume 8. Recensuit Variasque Inde Lectiones Diligenter Enotavit Immanuel Bekker. Annotationibus Integris Stephani Heindorfii Heusdii Wyttenbachii Lindavii Boeckhiique. Adjiciuntur Modo Non Integrae Serrani Cornarii Thompsoni Fischeri Gottleberi Astii Butmanni et Stalbaumi Necnon Ex Commentariis Aliorum Curiose Excerpta. 1826 MDCCCXXVI Londini: Excudebat A. J. Valpy A. M. Sumptibus Ricardi Priestley. Blue cloth hardcover 640 pp for Volume 8.</p> A. J. Valpy hardcover
1826L3 box764 b3v9<p>Platonis et que vel Platonis esse Feruntur vel Platonica Solent Comitari Scripta Graece Omnia ad Codices Manuscriptos Volume 9. Recensuit Variasque Inde Lectiones Diligenter Enotavit Immanuel Bekker. Annotationibus Integris Stephani Heindorfii Heusdii Wyttenbachii Lindavii Boeckhiique. Adjiciuntur Modo Non Integrae Serrani Cornarii Thompsoni Fischeri Gottleberi Astii Butmanni et Stalbaumi Necnon Ex Commentariis Aliorum Curiose Excerpta. 1826 MDCCCXXVI Londini: Excudebat A. J. Valpy A. M. Sumptibus Ricardi Priestley. Blue cloth hardcover 575 pp for Volume 9.</p> A. J. Valpy hardcover
23811‘The Hague / November 28th. 1860’. An excellent letter in which a serving Victorian ambassador discusses the nature of diplomacy and gives a vivid assessment of his former superior Sir Hamilton Seymour whom he jokingly characterizes ‘the great Elchee’. See both men’s entries in the Oxford DNB. 7pp 4to. On two bifoliums. In good condition lightly aged and with creases from folding into a packet. Minuted on reverse of last leaf. Addressed to ‘The Honble. George Elliot’ he received his KCB in 1862 and headed ‘Private’. Beginning on the subject of his brother-in-law Henry Lockwood 1825-1882 Napier writes: ‘My dear Elliott Many thanks for your kind letter informing me that Lord John Russell had moved Lockwood from Constantinople to Stockholm. It must be in many respects a great advantage to Lockwood and he will be very grateful to Lord John for the change. I hope that my brother in Law did not incur any blame from being involved in the dissensions of the Constantinople Embassy. I do not know all the circumstances indeed I have heard one side much more than the other. The malignant atmosphere of the place could not have been more strikingly shewn than in a musunderstanding between a most amiable Minister and a very devoted and agreeable subordinate. Such at least was Lumley to Sir Hamilton when I knew him.’ Napier had served as first secretary to Sir Hamilton Seymour in St Petersburg with John Lumley-Savile the future Lord Savile as second secretary. Napier considers Lumley as secretary to the Constantinople ambassador Sir Henry Bulwer is in Napier’s view ‘most in the wrong. Bulwer has a natural fondness for the twilight in business matters and this fanciful partiality for secrecy and winding may have led him to keep some things close from his Secretary’. After a comment on Lords Cowley and Shatford he continues: ‘The great Elchee never gave me a key or shewed me a Dispatch but when I wanted to know anything I would go to his room and talk to him about George Canning or the greek Revolution; or Sophocles or the Emperor Nicholas. Shaking such provocations in the face of that furious genius he would rowse up and open the flood gates of his conversation one thing led on another and at length he had disburdened himself of the past the present and the future. I was young and liked the humour of the thing besides I admired the old man angry so intense so handsome so austere so like Cato outside. And we cannot deny them generous sympathies and great services. Cowley Henry Wellesley 1st Earl Cowley who had been Minister Plenipotentiary was older and more than even on a foot of equality. He could not ever abide him. In fact your Secretary seems the natural enemy of his Chief. Please God I may not find it so if I ever become an Ambassador.’ Over two pages he discusses the ‘most just and wise regulations’ of the Foreign Office and what may happen ‘if your Ambassador is as wild as Nebuchadnezar and your Secretary not as discreet as Daniel’ before continuing: ‘You must have observed that Diplomacy is becoming a caste that we are a sort of Brahmins. Every man has a son in the possession. The diplomatic qualities will become progressive and hereditary. The Children will be wiser than their fathers. I have myself a son who is as smooth as Jacob and who never smiles unless he meets another young augur.’ He jokes: ‘You must be prepared to have an application soon for an unpaid attachéship. My second son is turbulent. I intend him for a naval reformer. I suppose your brother Henry has some of the same.’ This leads to a discussion of Elliot’s wider family the Mintos and the jesting reproach: ‘You are allowing Elcho and The Duke of Argyle to run away with the sympathies of Scotland. This must not be. There will not be a piece of bannock left in the land for a true Whig.’ ‘The Hague / November 28th. 1860’. unknown
24668All fourteen items printed for the House of Commons in London in 1886: items 9 12 and 14 by Eyre and Spottiswoode the rest by Henry Hansard and Son. The present collection reflects the state of Kipling’s India during the high summer of the Raj. At the end of 1884 Lord Dufferin replaced the Earl of Ripon as Viceroy and apart from a period of seven months between June of 1885 and January of 1886 when Lord Salisbury and the Conservatives were in power following the death of General Gordon and Lord Randolph Churchill was Secretary of State Gladstone and the Liberals were in power. All the items in the present collection are scarce: disregarding electronic reproduction the only copies on JISC LHD appear to be held by the deposit libraries and UCL. Each item was printed separately and it would appear from similar cases that the title and contents leaves were specially produced for this collection and a few others such as that of the Bodleian. Fourteen discrete items as evidenced by different gradations of fading in a sturdy rebinding in buff-coloured buckram with reinforced hinges and the original plum leather labels gilt laid down on the spine: ‘ACCOUNTS AND PAPERS / 12’ and ‘VOL 49’. A total number of 782 folio pages according to a nineteenth-century manuscript pagination. Binding and contents in good condition although the paper of the items is discoloured and somewhat brittle with a few closed tears here and there. Two leaves have been specially printed for the collection: one with the title and another with two pages of contents. The title reads: ‘Accounts and papers: thirty-nine volumes. / - 12. - / East India. / Session 1. - 12 January 1886 -- 25 June 1886. / Session 2. -- 5 August 1886 - 25 September 1886. / Vol. XLIX. / 1886.’ In manuscript on reverse of title: ‘This Book is to be preserved in the Libraries of the Home Office 1886’. ‘WITHDRAWN’ stamp at foot of same page. All but items 3 10 and 12 have details printed in characteristic fashion at right angles on the reverse of the final leaf. The contents arranges the items under the following headings: Accounts 1; Home Accounts 2 Financial Statement 1886-87 3 Income Tax Act 4 Loans raised in England 5 and 6 Loans raised in India 7 and 8 Railways 9 East India Progress and Condition 10 Revenue and Expenditure 11 Silver Question Great Britain and India 12 Transfer of Government to Simla 13 Statement of Trade 14. The fourteen items are: ONE: ‘Accounts’ Statement showing the principal Figures in the East India Accounts for 1883-84 and 1884-85 and Estimates for 1885-86 and 1886-87 with Explanations. / India Office 11 June 1886. / J. A. Godley / Under Secretary of State for India.’ By ‘Mr. Stafford Howard’. Printed 16 June 1886. 17 1 pp. TWO: ‘‘Home Accounts’ Home Accounts of the Government of India. / list of twelve items / India Office 11 May 1886. / J. A. Godley Under Secretary of State for India.’ Printed 14 May 1886. 57 1 pp. THREE: ‘‘Financial Statement 1886-87’ Indian Financial Statement for 1886-87. / India Office 28 May 1886. / J. A. Godley Under Secretary of State for India.’ By ‘Lord George Hamilton’. Printed 31 May 1886.’ 101 pp. FOUR: ‘‘Income Tax Act’ Return to an Address of the Honourable The House of Commons dated 31 May 1886; - for / “Extracts of the Proceedings of the Council of the Governor General of India assembled for the purpose of making Laws and Regulations regarding the Act No. 2 of 1886 for imposing a Tax on Income derived from other sources than Agriculture.†/ India Office 3 June 1886. / J. A. Godley Under Secretary of State for India.’ By ‘Lord George Hamilton’. Printed 4 June 1886. 85 1 pp. FIVE: ‘‘Loans raised in England’ Return of all Loans raised in England under the Provisions of any Acts of Parliament chargeable on the Revenues of India outstanding at the commencement of the Half-year ended on 30th September 1885; with the Rates of Interest and Total Amount payable thereon and the Date of Termination of each Loan; the Debt incurred during the Half-year; the Moneys raised thereby during the Half-year; the Loans paid off or discharged during the Half-year; and the Loans outstanding at the close of the Half-year; &c. / India Office 21 January 1886. / J. A. Godley Under Secretary of State.’ Printed 22 February 1886. 3 1 pp. SIX: ‘‘Loans Raised in England’ Similar Return of all Loans raised in England chargeable on the Revenues of India outstanding at the commencement of the Half-year ended on 31st March 1886; &c. / India Office 6 April 1886. / J. A. Godley Under Secretary of State.’ Printed 8 April 1886. 3 1 pp. SEVEN: ‘‘Loans Raised in India’ Return of all Loans raised in India chargeable on the Revenues of India outstanding at the commencement of the Half-year ended on 30th September 1885 with the Rates of Interest and Total Amount payable thereon and Date of the Termination of each Loan; Debt incurred during the Half-year; Moneys raised thereby during the Half-year; the Loans paid off or discharged during the Half-year; and the Loans outstanding at the Close of the Half-year. / India Office 18 February 1886. / J. A. Godley Under Secretary of State.’ Printed 24 February 1886. 3 1 pp. EIGHT: ‘‘Loans Raised in India’ Similar Return of all Loans raised in India chargeable on the Revenues of India outstanding at the commencement of the Half-year ended on the 31st March 1886; &c.’ 3 1 pp. NINE: ‘‘Railways’ Administration Report on the Railways in India for 1885-86 by Colonel F. S. Stanton R.E. Director General of Railways. / Part I.’ Printed 1886. 109 1 pp. TEN: ‘‘East India Progress and Condition’ Statement exhibiting the Moral and Material Progress and Condition of India during the Year 1884-85. / Twenty-first Number.’ Printed 21 June 1886. 90 pp. ELEVEN: ‘‘Revenue and Expenditure’ Estimate of Revenue and Expenditure of the Government of India / For the Year 1885-86 compared with the Results of 1884-85. / India Office 11 June 1886. / E. Stafford Howard Under Secretary of State.’ Printed 16 June 1886. 15 1 pp. TWELVE: ‘‘Silver Question Great Britain and India’ Correspondence between the British and Indian Government respecting the Silver Question.’ Printed 1886. 32 pp. THIRTEEN: ‘‘Transfer of Government to Simla’ Return showing the Annual Dates since the Transfer of the Government of India to the Crown in 1858 of the Migration of the Government of India at Calcutta to Simla and the Dates of its return to Calcutta and so far as possible the extra Annual Cost upon the Taxpayers of India in consequence of this Annual Migration of Government. / India Office 15 June 1885. / J. K. Cross / Under Secretary of State for India.’ By ‘Sir John Gorst’. Printed 26 August 1886. 14 1 pp. FOURTEEN: ‘‘Statement of Trade’ Statement of the Trade of British India with British Possessions and Foreign Countries for the Five Years 1880-81 to 1884-85.’ Printed 1886. 163 1 pp. All fourteen items printed for the House of Commons in London in 1886: items 9, 12 and 14 by Eyre and Spottiswoode, the rest by hardcover
24493‘Treasury. / 8 Dec 1882’. See his entry in the Oxford DNB. 3pp 12mo. Bifolium. In good condition lightly aged with thin neat strip from windowpane mount adhering to edges. Folded twice for postage. Twenty-four hands of text in secretary hand addressed to ‘W. A. Lock Esqre’ and signed in autograph ‘Sir C Trevelyan’. He thanks him for his ‘very interesting Letter’ and hopes he will ‘never think it necessary to make any excuse for writing to me other such’. He has asked ‘Mr. Farr’ for ‘any observations he might have to offer on the early part of it; and his answer is enclosed’ not present. The following paragraph reads possibly with regard to women’s suffrage: ‘What are we to do with our “monstrous Regiment†of Women Is there any remedy short of polygamy’ He turns to the subject of ‘German Immigrants’ on which he has an unusual view: ‘what are we but improved Germans We are Germans disciplined & trained by the Normans and by a long enjoyment of free institutions & of a maritime & Colonial System’. See image. ‘Treasury. / 8 Dec 1882’. unknown
20044Clarendon Hotel 24 April 1850. Four pages 12mo good condition. "I have just received from Ceylon a formal evaluation of my coffee property. The sums stated ampount to £8471 & as there is upwards of 800 acres of uncleared forest which is valued at £2 peracre the whole amount will be upwards of £10000. I send the paper in hopes it may enable your froiend . to effect a sale. His correspondent from Ceylon has enclosed a report "made by a Mr Simon Keir and Mr. George Hamilton Dundas" Keir Dundas & Co. were the "largest agency house" in Ceylon c.1850s" He continues " The sender of the Report is quoted as saying "I would still strongly advise that you put up the whole place to auction make the time of payment easy and surely you will get this low estimation value". Maddock then discusses the possibilites for the nauture of the sale instalments half shares etc "but I should prefer washing my hands of the troublesome speculator altogether and would only consent to a parnership with any one for the sake of the advantage of placing the management in the hands of one interested in the prosperity of the whole concern. The expenses are now so much reduced that I trust if I am compelled to keep this property and no peculair misfortune happens next season like the deficiency of coolies last year and a visitation of the Bug this year that it will yield a considerable income. The field that suffered most from bug is said now to be showing a prospect of 100 bushels an acre." He asks to be referred to anyone who might help when he arrives in London." Note: Wikipedia describes this period as a golden age of investment and profit etc peaking in 1870. Clarendon Hotel, 24 April 1850. unknown
18303541FBBerlin, Verlag Königlich Preußische Kalender-Deputation, 1830. 16°. 13 x 9,5 cm. 204, 108, 107, 66 Seiten. Pappband der Zeit mit reicher Blindprägung und Rundum-Goldschnitt. Pappschuber. [8 Warenabbildungen]
174231159A La Haye, chez Jean van Duren, 1736. 3 vol. au format in-12 (168 x 103 mm) de 2 ff. bl., 1 frontispice gravé n.fol., 16 ff. n.fol., 408 pp. et 2 ff. bl. ; 2 ff. bl., 1 f. n.fol., 404 pp. et 2 ff. bl. ; 2 ff. bl., 3 ff. n.fol., 322 pp., 7 ff. n.fol. et 2 ff. bl. Reliures de l'époque de plein veau glacé et marbré blond, plats jansénistes, dos à nerfs ornés de filets gras à froid, caissons d'encadrement dorés, filets en pointillés dorés, roulettes dorés, larges fleurons dorés, pièces de titre de maroquin acajou, pièces de tomaison de maroquin fauve, titre doré, tomaison dorée, palette dorée en queue, roulette dorée sur les coupes, tranches saumon.
6935(Montauban), (1724). Placard de 38 x 48 cm sur vergé (petit manque de papier dans la marge).
9740P., Lottin, 1790. In 4° de 28 pp. (taches marginales), vignette sur le titre.
93460Paris, Baudouin, 1790 in-8, 34 pp. et 34 (pièces justificatives)-[2] pp., bradel papier marbré (rel. moderne).
1 24.6x15.2 cm., 95, [2], pi? 44, [4] pp. di catalogo editoriale, due carte ripiegate all'antiporta (Routes of communcation with India ; Archibald & Peck's War Map of Egypt with Suez Canal), una tabella ripiegata a pag. 95, legatura edit. in tela decorata a secco, titoli in oro al dorso e al piatto ant., seconda edizione, piccolo strappo senza mancanze ad una carta ripiegata, qualche fioritura, esemplare in buone condizioni, in inglese
1372204Lisboa: Empressa Nacional de Publicida, 1951 in-4, 1108 pages (avec nombreux encarts), illustrations et publicités. Reliure toile avec marques d'usage, bon état intérieur. Annuaire pour le Cap Vert, l'Angola, le Mozambique, Goa, Macao, Timor.
UUI-11379Lot de 17 illustrations de format 11,5 / 18 cm , avec pour la plupart un texte au verso, représentant un couple pratiquant des activités ludiques apparemment fort agréables. Inde, fin XIXe ou début XXe dirais-je, mais je ne suis pas spécialiste. Poids 120 g. Envoi lettre verte. Frais d'envoi 3,88 euros sur la France, 7 euros pour l’étranger (tarifs de base hors envois suivis). Possibilité de remise en mains propres sur Paris, possibilité d’envoi MONDIAL RELAY, n’hésitez pas à me contacter avant de passer commande. Twitter : @Pontneuf06.
19132371913 À Paris, chez Charpentier, 1913.
177522311A La Haye [Paris], chez Gosse Fils, 1775. 2 tomes reliés en un fort vol. au format in-8 (202 x 132 mm) de 1 f. bl., 1 frontispice gravé n.fol., xlii pp., 1 grande carte dépliante gravée et 222 pp. ; 2 ff. n.fol., 1 frontispice gravé n.fol., 240 pp. et 2 ff. bl. Reliure de l'époque de plein veau glacé et marbré havane, plat jansénistes, dos lisse orné d'un filet d'encadrement doré, filets verticaux dentelés dorés, filets dorés, caissons d'encadrement dorés, large décor fleuronné doré, semis de pointillés dorés, palette dorée en tête et queue, supra-libros doré en pied, tranches rouges.
17752Paris, chez A. Nepveu, 1817. In-12, XV-202 pp. 6 pl., veau blond de l'époque, frise dorée en encadrement sur les plats, dos lisse orné de filets et fleurons dorés, pièces de titre et de tomaison noires, tranches dorées (épidermures, rousseurs, quelques taches).
198466840Paris, 1984, in-8, 77pp, reliure éditeur, emboitage pleine toile, Taches d'humidité sur reliure et emboîtage sinon très bel exemplaire de ce rare ouvrage complet de la cassette vidéo et des trois photographies originales! 77pp
Raffigurazione dell'India e della Penisola Malese ed i territori della Cambogia e Vietnam. Curiosa la raffigurazione dell'isola di Haynan
1701PHO-436RELATION DE L'INQUISITION DE GOA. Enrichi de beacoup de Figures en Taille douces. Chez Jean Viret, Librairie, en Rue Merciere, au coin de Rue Ferrandiere, A Lyon, 1701. in-12 (Cm.15x9) Pg.(4), 219, (15). illustré de 8 planches HT dont 3 dépliantes par Vermeullen ,reliure en veau recouvert de papier , travail de vers , 1 planche déchirée avec manque , exemplaire usagé
98413Paris, Caüet, Editeur, Maumus, Libraire-Dépositaire, 1838, 1 volume in-8 de 215x135 mm environ, 1 feuillet blanc, (6) ff. (faux-titre, titre, dédicace, notice, avertissement), 302 pages, 1 feuillet d'errata, 1 feuillet blanc, demi-percaline brune, titres dorés sur dos lisse. Des rousseurs, mors en partie fendus (mais structure solide), une coiffe ébréchée, frottements sur les coupes, tampon sur la page de titre et faux-titre, sinon bon état.
295629Imprimerie Impériale Paris 1860 In-8 ( 220 X 135 mm ) de 267 pages, demi-veau bleu, dos à nerfs orné de filets et fleurons dorés. EDITION ORIGINALE RARE. Coiffes et coins usés, bon exemplaire.
PARIS, chez André Cailieau, 1722 - Tome I seul (sur 2 - In-12 - Reliure plein veau fauve de l'époque - Dos à nerfs cloisonnés et fleuronnés, pièces de titre et de tomaison crise et havane - titre bi-colore en rouge & noir - 438 pp., 3 ff.n.ch. de table et de privilège - 3 cartes dépliantes & 9 planches hors texte, dont 3 dépliantes - Ex-libris manuscrit de l'époque "Pestet de normanville" - envoi rapide et soigné Relation considérée comme apocryphe, bâtie d'après plusieurs mémoires, et principalement consacrée au Brésil et au Pérou, Coreal , supposé voyageur espagnol, né, dit-on, en 1648, mort en 1708 à qui on attribue une relation d'un voyage aux Indes occidentales, publiée à Paris (1722, 2 vol. in-12 avec cartes et grav.); elle eut du succès et il y en a plusieurs éditions). Mais on doute fort de l'existence de ce François Coreal .