4 995 résultats
28655Paris, Edition Rombaldi, 1971. 14 x 22, 292 pp., quelques illustrations, reliure d'édition, très bon état.
24790APliures au dos, couverture défraîchie, aspect jauni, intérieur propre.
NB1944BROCHE EDITIONS HACHETTE 1955 UN EX LIBRIS EN PAGE DE GARDE PARFAIT ETAT Photos sur demande.
1971100117010Laurent rombaldi 1971 in8. 1971. Relié.
1955R260152166HACHETTE. 1955. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos plié, Intérieur frais. 270 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 840-Littératures des langues romanes. Littérature française
19715003754111971 1971.
32075P., Baillière, 1874, grand in 8° broché, 151 pages ; petit accroc au 2 derniers feuillets ; couverture fanée avec manques, dos cassé.
0332716988.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1850#299<p>Broadside 14" x 8" double column signed in type by three selectmen with attestation by town clerk at end. Folded in quarters with several tiny holes no loss a number of creases minor stains one short marginal tear etc. but overall quite sound.</p><p>Comprised of 19 Articles proscribing certain types of behavior the unique broadside specifies fines or other punishments for lawbreakers. Most interesting is Article 4: "No boy or other person shall be allowed to play at the game of bat and ball in the public streets of the village. Any person offending against this article shall forfeit and pay fifty cents for each offence."</p><p>In addition to the obvious like public drunkenness these include: riding horses at a gallop in town or more than a walk on the covered bridge; "any boy or other person" who hangs onto a sleigh or carriage; anyone "causing dogs or any other animals to fight" in the streets; "Any person wantonly exposing himself sic naked in sight of any dwelling house"; a person injuring an ornamental tree on any street; anyone mutilating or pulling down signs or public notices or throwing dirt or setting off firecrackers or sliding down hills in the public streets &c. &c. </p><p>According to internet resources Biddeford Maine passed a city charter and adopted a mayoral form of government in 1855.</p><p>Not recorded in OCLC.</p>
35601068, A Tours, chez Jean Masson, (1769); plaquette in-8, brochée. 16 pp. Très belle copertine, illustrée sur les deux plats de grands bois à pleine page avec des vases remplis de fleurs.- Sur le titre bois avec l'astrologue.
13398P., Perrin (Collection "En Flanant à travers la France"), 1918, in 8° broché, 374pp. ; illustrations ; couverture fanée.(C2396)
5752Paris, Perrin, collection "En flanant à travers la France", 1912, 1 demi veau glacé, dos à nerfs orné, tête dorée. in-8 de (10)-374 pp., frontispice, illustrations h.t. ;
1856133893Couverture souple. Lithographie 32 x 46 cm. Rousseurs.
186100280440Oliver Ditson Co. 1861 Maine 4th Regiment made up of Mid Coast volunteers. Nickerson later became a major at Gettysburg. This Quartette is extremely rare no copies listed OCLC. or held in Library of Congress. Decorative scroll lettering 2 loose pages have foxing and staining minor tears to edges a few pencil notes rear reading: ".a name then" Maine December 25th 1861" Song- "Not To Fast" "Hail to thee chieftain. McClellan was soon fired by Lincoln. Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. 1st Edition. Soft cover. Good. Oliver Ditson Co. paperback
1715WRCAM39807London 1715. 1p. with printed docket title on verso. Small folio. Antique-style three-quarter calf and marbled boards spine gilt leather label. Ornamental upper border. Minor foxing. Very good. A rare and early petition relating to British settlement in the eastern part of present-day Maine. The authors refer to petitioning "his Majesty in Council on the 6th Day of December last for having a Colony settled between New England and Nova Scotia" with "over one thousand disbanded men" and to be funded with the proceeds of a proposed coinage operation. The only copy of this document listed by OCLC and ESTC is at the New-York Historical Society which estimates merely that the document was printed during the 1700s. The historical context the text cited above and discovery of this broadsheet among similar petitions dating almost exclusively to 1714 and 1715 however make 1715 an extremely likely date of printing. In the Treaty of Utrecht 1713 the French ceded the land east of the Kennebec River presumably the area in question here to the British; this event and the reference to "disbanded soldiers" suggest that the War of the Spanish Succession had recently ended which it finally did in 1714. George I succeeded Queen Anne in late 1714 which means the petitioning of "December last" could not have been earlier than that year. With the new monarchy and a major upheaval in the House of Commons following the general election of 1715 petitionary literature distributed in the lobby of Parliament surged with this document almost certainly among the examples from that year. <br> <br> The petitioners evidently officers who had served in the recent war call attention to the fact that the lands they hope to settle "were formally survey'd and given by King Charles the Second to the Duke of York" and that the area has been confirmed as rich for farming. They ask that Parliament allow them to present their formal proposals for the settlement or "if not thought proper to have a Colony settled in that part of North- America" at least still to grant them a contract to coin 1000 tons worth of half- pence and farthings. <br> <br> A very important Maine document one of only two surviving copies. hardcover books
171521151London 1715. Broadsheet. 1p. plus printed docket title on verso. Small folio. Bound to style in half calf over marbled paper-covered boards. Ornamental border. Minor foxing. Very good. A project for colonizing Maine in 1715. One of only two surviving copies.<br/> <br/> A rare early petition relating to British settlement in the eastern part of present-day Maine. The authors refer to petitioning "his Majesty in Council on the 6th Day of December last for having a Colony settled between New England and Nova Scotia" with "over one thousand disbanded men" and to be funded with the proceeds of a proposed coinage operation. The only copy of this document listed by OCLC and ESTC is at the New-York Historical Society which estimates merely that the document was printed during the 1700s. The historical context the text cited above and discovery of this broadsheet among similar petitions dating almost exclusively to 1714 and 1715 however make 1715 an extremely likely date of printing. In the Treaty of Utrecht 1713 the French ceded the land east of the Kennebec River presumably the area in question here to the British; this event and the reference to "disbanded soldiers" suggest that the War of the Spanish Succession had recently ended which it finally did in 1714. George I succeeded Queen Anne in late 1714 meaning that the petitioning of "December last" could not have been earlier than that year. With the new monarchy and a major upheaval in the House of Commons following the general election of 1715 petitionary literature distributed in the lobby of Parliament surged with this document almost certainly among the examples from that year. The petitioners evidently officers who had served in the recent war call attention to the fact that the lands they hope to settle "were formally survey'd and given by King Charles the Second to the Duke of York" and that the area has been confirmed as rich for farming. They ask that Parliament allow them to present their formal proposals for the settlement or "if not thought proper to have a Colony settled in that part of North-America" at least still to grant them a contract to coin 1000 tons' worth of half-pence and farthings. A very important Maine document one of only two surviving copies. unknown
185433648np 1854. Broadside 12" x 17". Some old folds several fox spots couple of short closed margin tears no loss. Good. Signed in type at the end by about 140 loyal Aroostook Democrats.<br/><br/> The Kansas-Nebraska Act opened the Mexican Cession to Slavery and thus repealed the 1820 Missouri Compromise. Deep divisions in the Democratic Party resulted. Many Northern Democrats resisted the call of their dominant Southern brethren to populate the newly acquired Territories with slaves. Maine's Hannibal Hamlin for example abandoned the Democrats over the Slavery issue and became a Republican and Lincoln's running mate in 1860. <br/> This broadside excoriates such apostates who have joined forces with anti-slavery men "to batten and prey upon the very life of the Democratic Party" and who are "pledged to opposition to the regular democracy." Hyperbolically the broadside accuses them of opposing the Party's "very EXISTENCE plotting her ENTIRE OVERTHROW and DESTRUCTION."<br/>Not located on OCLC as of March 2017. unknown books
1799707161799. 1799 Document Appointed a Judge to the Kennebeck County Maine Court of Common Pleas Judges. Maine. Dummer Nathaniel 1755-1815. To All Unto Whom These Presents Shall Come Greeting. Boston February 28 1799. 17" x 11" part-printed document inscribed in neat hand docketed on verso large embossed Massachusetts seal to upper-left corner signed by Governor Increase Sumner countersigned by John Avery first Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth. Light browning and edgewear light soiling and a few minor spots vertical and horizontal fold lines a few minor years along folds with no loss to text. An interesting item. $350. Dummer resided in Hallowell Maine and was judge of the Kennebeck County Court from 1799 until his death in 1815. He was also Hallowell's postmaster from 1792 to 1802. The docket note witnessed by Joseph North and William Howard attests that Dummer took his oath of office on April 2 1799. unknown books
4654LONDON HODDER 1955. FIRST EDITION VERY GOOD. F. LONDON, HODDER, 1955 unknown books
1955117568London: Hodder and Stoughton 1955. Octavo boards. First edition. A novel of time travel about a "murdered" scientist lost in a chain of endless futures trying to get back to his own time. Based on the author's radio play "The Einstein Highway" broadcast by the BBC. 21 February 1954. A fine copy in very good jacket with clipped price and general staining mostly to rear panel. Still presents well. Scarce. #117568 Hodder and Stoughton unknown books
1955304703London: Hodder & Stoughton. 192 pages. . Near Fine. Hardcover. 1st Edition. 1955. Hodder & Stoughton hardcover
4653NY RINEHART 1955. FIRST AMERCAN EDITION FINE. 1st Edition. NY, RINEHART, 1955 unknown books
1955158323New York: Rinehart & Company 1955. Octavo boards. First U.S. edition. A novel of time travel about a "murdered" scientist lost in a chain of endless futures trying to get back to his own time. Based on the author's radio play "The Einstein Highway" broadcast by the BBC. 21 February 1954. Early owners signature at top edge of front free endpaper. Age-darkening to text block common to this book a nearly fine copy in good plus dust jacket with wear and shallow chipping at edges and age tanning to rear panel. #158323 Rinehart & Company unknown books