5 résultats
47599n.p.:: n.p. Very Good. N.D. Paperback. No publication date noted but from the 1930s. Text is in German. Tipped-in color cigarette card illustrations throughout. First edition paperback. Light shelf wear else very good in oblong illustrated wraps. . n.p., paperback books
1989203296Milan: Art World Media 1989. paperback. near fine. Illustrated profusely throughout in b/w and color. 347pp separate booklet with English translation. Thick 4to glossy pictorial paper wrappers very slightly edge-worn. Milan: Art World Media 1989. A near fine copy.<br/><br/> Art World Media unknown books
17110Women Education Europe Identification Card for Sophia State Girls' High School СофийÑка държавна ДъвиуеÑка Ð³Ð¸Ð¼Ð½Ð°Ð·Ð¸Ñ 1916. Sophia is the largest and Capital city of Bulgaria. 4.5 x 3.25 in. Original blue cloth folder. Identification photo of teenge girl pasted inside dated 19.III.1916. Original silver gelatin print 2.75 x 2 in. This young student wears a dark pinafore uniform and a fashionable hat and looks confidently out at the viewer. This was mere months after Bulgaria declared entered World War I in October 1915. Normal education was disrupted for most Bulgarian students during the Balkan Wars 1912-1913 and WWI 1915-1918 so this girl was likely very grateful for the opportunity to study. Original education department stamps in blue ink. In very good condition. unknown books
1979208096Geneva 1979. hardcover. near fine. Addressed to the League of Nations 1919-1939. Illus. 640pp. 4to red cloth. Geneva 1979. Near Fine.<br/><br/> Single volume on territorial and border changes to Bulgaria after World War I. International Documentation on Macedonia No. 4-5-6. Text is mostly in French with some text in English.<br/><br/> unknown books
WRCAM35472London: His Majesty's Stationery Office 1920. iv86pp. Folio. Original printed front wrapper rear wrapper lacking. Wrapper chipped at edges. Closed tear in titlepage repaired with tape closed tear in final two leaves with no loss. Good. Lacks the folding map. Though they fought together in common cause the defeated nations of World War I signed separate treaties with the victorious Allies the Treaty of Versailles with Germany being only the most famous of five treaties ending the Great War. This is the official British printing of the Treaty of Neuilly-sur-Seine made between the Allied and Associated Powers and defeated Bulgaria and signed more than a year after the Armistice of November 1918. The first part prints the Covenant of the League of Nations. The second part sets the new national boundaries under which Bulgaria had to give land to Yugoslavia and western Thrace to Greece. Under the section on reparations Bulgaria had to recognize her complicity with Germany in waging the war the infamous "war guilt clause" and also had to agree to pay penalties in the amount of 2250000000 francs. Other clauses address political military the Bulgarian army was limited to twenty thousand men economic and labor issues. Though the United States was a signatory to the Treaty of Neuilly-sur-Seine the Senate refused to ratify it. This treaty is an important part of the settlements ending the First World War little known and scarce on the market. His Majesty's Stationery Office unknown books