4 136 résultats
236387Paris, Librairie Générale, Versailles, Chez Bernard, 1872 3 vol. in-12, pagination multiple, broché. Dos abîmés et cassés. Rousseurs.
235694Paris, A. Chevalier [Typographie Rouge frères, Dunon et Fresné], 1871 in-12, 164 pp., un f. n. ch. de table, broché. Petits manques de papier aux couvertures.
1874103524Paris, F. Jeanmaire, Ernest Weil, Librairie 1874 2 titres en 1 volume. In-4 27,5 x 18,5 cm. Reliure de l’époque demi-chagrin rouge à petits coins, dos à nerfs encadrés de fers dorés, 363-XXIV-800 pp., texte à 2 colonnes, 200 illustrations contenant 700 sujets - Nombreuses illustrations dans le texte de Louis Lion gravées par Trémelat, 3 planches à pleine page représentant des sceaux de corporations, table des matières en fin de chaque titre. Reliure légèrement frottée, intérieur frais.
177128799LANMEUR 1771 un double feuillet (document authentique) de 4 pages avec en-tête préimprimé en noir et manuscrite à l'encre brune, sur papier ligné et filigrané : "GAUDIN", format : 20,5 centimètres de large x 26 centimètres de haut, , signature du Maire : BUTTON, LETTRE DE VOEUX POUR LA NOUVELLE ANNEE ECRITE PAR LE MAIRE DE LA COMMUNE D' ARS, ILE DE RE : MR BUTTON A MR Jean-Louis ADMYRAULD, PREFET DE LA CHARENTE- INFERIEURE A LA ROCHELLE, ARS, LE 2 JANVIER 1834,
186028765ARTHON-EN-RETZ 1860 document de 16 pages manuscrites à l'encre brune sur papier vergé ligné filigrané : "Timbre IMPERIAL", format 21,5 centimètres de large par 30 centimètres de haut, timbre fiscal "Timbre IMPERIAL- 1f 25c" + timbre imperial gauffré à froid en haut de la première page à gauche, signé Maitre FLANDRIN NOTAIRE A SAINT-PERE-EN-RETZ, LE 23 AOUT 1860 in-fine,
200147076Paris: Amis de la Commune de Paris 2001. First Edition. Large slim folio 37cm.; publisher's pictorial staplebound wrappers; 18pp.; color illus. throughout. Extremities rather worn corners starting to curl closed tear to rear wrapper fore-edge margin; Very Good only. Catalog of an exhibition commemorating the Paris Commune. Featured artists include François Arnal Henri Cueco François Féret André Fougeron Gérard Gosselin François Hilsum Ladislas Kijno Peter Klasen Jacques Monory Melik Ouzani Ernest Pignon-Ernest Jean Rustin Max SchÅ“ndorff Antonio Segui Anne Slacik Yvon Taillandier Boris Taslitzky Vladimir VeliÄkovic Jacques Villeglé and Catherine Viollet. OCLC does not list any copies in North America as of December 2019. Amis de la Commune de Paris] unknown
9455Librairie Marcel Rivière & Cie. 1911. In-8° broché. 88 pages. E.O.
187359111873 demi- chagrin rouge. (Bel exemplaire, sauf pour un manque de percaline sur le Ier plat). in-4, IV, 804pp. (impr. sur 3 colonnes), P. Librairie du Moniteur Universel Decembre 1873,
1895835601895 Saint-Etienne, Théolier, 1895, plaquette in 8° brochée, 18 pages ; portrait en frontispice.
238825Paris, Imprimerie de la veuve Poitenin, s.d. (1871) in-18, 71 pp., broché sous couverture verte.
187000009868New York: Oxford: Printed at the University Press 1870. Early Reprint. Hardcover. Very Good. Pot 128mo or Minion 48mo according to Griffiths. 39 40-414 5 4-334 4 pp. 10 cm x 7 cm. Full sheep with gold lettering on the spine spine in four compartments; all edges gilt. Marbled endpapers and pastedowns. Griffiths 34. An early reprint of this edition first published in 1867. A charming pocket-sized Book of Common Prayer nicely bound. A Very Good copy with the rear hinge slightly strained binding tight and secure a touch of rubbing to the boards' edges. Oxford: Printed at the University Press hardcover
1973FRAHISTO65978520526Valence, Imprimerie Sorepi, 1973, 15,5 x 24, 258-VIII pages sous couverture souple illustrée. Ouvrage enrichi de IV hors-textes noir & blanc. Préface de Jacques de Font-Reaulx. Tirage limité à 1000 exemplaires. Dédicace autographe de l'autrice.
1828SEM18275Boston: From the Press of the Christian Examiner 1828. Third Edition with Alterations and Additions. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo. 386 pp. Full contemporary leather rubbed. Bookplate of The Bishop Vail Library of Kansas 1889. And later stamp of a seminary library. <br/><br/> From the Press of the Christian Examiner hardcover
17151067831715. London: printed by John Baskett and by the assigns of Thomas Newcomb and Henry Hills 1715. <br /> <br /> Folio 380 23 3 pp. unpaginated text ends on Aaa4 as per ESTC. Engraved frontispiece by Loggan after Caspars. Title-page printed in red and black ruled in red throughout. Contemporary red morocco covers tooled in gilt with a wide scrolled border central gilt block of the arms of the Duke of Chandos backstrip richly gilt gilt edges a lovely binding of the period in the style of Mearne skillfully restored at head and foot and along joints. Armorial bookplate of John van Hatten.<br /> <br /> § Lovely prayer book bound for James Brydges 1st Duke of Chandos 1674-1744. It once rested on an embroidered cushion in the Duke and Duchess's private pew in his magnificent chapel at Cannons described by the architect Gibbs as "the finest in England." The centerpiece of the elaborately-tooled binding is the Duke's gilt arms supported by two otters beneath a ducal coronet. Four other bindings with the block are recorded by the British Armorial Bindings database. Full description and provenance available on request. ESTC T81463. unknown
17182514The Hague: C. Fritsch 1718. Very good. 8vo. xliv 728 2 pp. text lightly foxed. Collation: a-b⸠cⶠA-2Y⸠2Zⶠ-2Z6 a blank as per the Emory Pitts copy. Bound in 18th-century red morocco boards elaborately gilt à la dentelle spine elaborately gilt with raised bands morocco label a.e.g. spine and extremities somewhat rubbed. Bookplate of the Washington Cathedral Library inside upper cover. Title-page trimmed at top removing the name of an early owner and backed with later paper. Preserved in a protective cloth case. AN ENIGMATIC BINDING AT ONE TIME ATTRIBUTED TO ROBERT AITKEN OF PHILADELPHIA THE MOST FAMOUS OF ALL EARLY AMERICAN BOOKBINDERS. CERTAINLY IT SHARES THE EXTREMELY DISTINCTIVE SPINE TOOL WITH THE NYPL-LENOX COPY OF AITKEN'S 1782 BIBLE WHICH WE EXAMINED PERSONALLY AND YET THE DENTELLE TOOLS ARE SIMILAR TO THOSE EMPLOYED BY RICHARD MONTAGU FOR THOMAS HOLLIS. <br /> <br /> This is the first complete German edition of the Book of Common Prayer including the Lections and Ordinals. It was probably translated into German by J.J. Caesar chaplain to King Frederick I of Prussia who had attempted to united the Lutheran and Reformed churches of Germany into a single episcopal church in communion with the Church of England.<br /> <br /> Published in 1718 our binding belongs certainly to the latter half of the 18th-century; it is therefore this book's second binding. The spine label reads "Prayer Book" and not "Gebet-Buch" and thus it was bound either in America or England and not in Germany or The Netherlands. Based on tool identification our binding may have been made in the same workshop as that which bound the Lenox-NYPL 1782 Aitken Bible. In 1902 the NYPL binding was attributed Aitken's own shop William Loring Andrews Bibliopegy in the United States p. 59 with a poor reproduction on plate XIV. Whereas the Lenox copy is by comparison relatively plain it shares with ours the unmistakable deformed bird / floral ornament in the spine compartments. The repeated tools on the covers have so far resisted identification despite extensive searching over a period of several years through innumerable reference works on early American and British bookbinding printed and online. Concerning the former there is a very serious lack of published scholarship and so we set our sights on the largest collection of unpublished notes on American bookbinding in the world namely Willman Spawn's gargantuan hopelessly disorganized archive of rubbings and files at the American Philosophical Society. We proceeded through Box 28 and yet more than 100 boxes remain to be explored. Whatever his nationality our binder was inspired by the work of Richard Montagu specifically his work for Thomas Hollis ca. 1758-1761 see Howard Nixon's Five Hundred Years of English Bookbinding nos. 68 and 69 although the tools are NOT identical to ours. <br /> <br /> According to a typed note from the American Cathedral Library where the present volume resided for at least 60 years until it was purchased by William Reese it was bound possibly for presentation to William White 1748-1836 the first Bishop of Philadelphia. On this card the identity of the binder is confidently assigned to Robert Aitken himself. Whether or not the binding originated from Aitken's shop or if indeed it is even American there can be no doubt that it was in Philadelphia at a very early date and its provenance is unbroken since that time see below. Certainly William White would have had need for a German language Book of Common Prayer to administer to his already significant German-speaking congregation. White knew well his Philadelphia neighbor Robert Aitken and as one of the Chaplains of the Congress of the United States he examined Aitken's Bible when it was in 1782. White was also the first President of the first Bible Society in the United States founded in Philadelphia in 1808. <br /> <br /> That Aitken printed and published the 1782 Bible does not automatically imply that he was the binder of the Lenox-NYPL copy or any others but the names of several of his former employees are known including James Muir who remained in Philadelphia and William Andrews who relocated to Boston. Another copy of the 1782 Aitken Bible remains unstudied namely that in the John Carter Brown Library which features a similarly decorated spine. <br /> <br /> Our binding was no doubt an expensive commission; that the tooling on it has remained so fresh is perhaps due to a paper or fabric covering that seems to have once surrounded it: inside the boards are traces of adhesive near the gutter margins at the top and bottom precisely where a covering would have been attached. <br /> <br /> Of this first edition of the German Language Book of Common Prayer there are copies at Huntington Lancaster Theological Seminary Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity United Lutheran Seminary Philadelphia and Emory. <br /> <br /> ¶ PROVENANCE: William White Bishop of Philadelphia -- old presentation inscription excised from title-page no doubt written in English in the 18th century with one remaining word clearly visible: "To" -- Suffrage Episcopal Bishop of Pennsylvania Samuel Bowman 1800-1861 -- by descent to his daughter Ellen Ledlie Bowman married Thomas Hubbard Vail Episcopal Bishop of Kansas -- by descent to their daughter Kellen Sitrgreaves Vail Motter 1870-1952 -- donated to the National Cathedral Library of Washington DC -- purchased by William Reese who sold it to us on behalf of a private collector -- bought back by us in 2023. <br /> <br /> For an account of Robert Aitken's bindery see Willman and Carol Spawn's "The Aitken Shop: Identification of an Eighteenth Century Bindery and its Tools" in: PBSA LVII 1963 pp. 422-437 although the title is misleading as the images are unnecessarily few in number ditto Willman Spawn's "Extra-Gilt Bindings of Robert Aitken 1787-88" in: Proceedings of the AAS pp. 415-417. The dentelle tools on the covers of our binding appear to be reproduced here for the first time. C. Fritsch unknown
1717D19721London: John Baskett for John Sturt 1717. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo 196x122 mm contemporary red morocco elaborately gilt-tooled to all-over pattern of floral and ornamental tools rebacked retaining most of worn original backstrip endpapers renewed. Volvelle on page v supplied in facsimile. xxii 166 pages; lacks the final ad leaf. Text and numerous illustrations entirely engraved throughout by John Sturt including micrographic portrait of George I double portrait of the Prince and Princess of Wales and different historiated or ornamental border on each page. 19th-century German owners' inscriptions on front endleaf. <br/><br/> John Baskett for John Sturt hardcover
179935220Oxford England: Printed at the Clarendon Press by W. Dawson T. Bensley and J. Cooke Printers to the University 1799. Leather bound. Fair. 12mo. Three separate title pages. Red moroccan leather with gilt decorations on the spine. Marbled end papers. Gilt edges are faded. Text block is toned and shaken with loose signatures.There is a partial clipping pinned to the last two pages. Unpaginated signatures are numbered. Type is printed in double columns. Fair only. <br /> <br /> First title page is for the Book of Common Prayer. The second title page reads: "A Companion to the Altar" is printed in London no date. 55 pages 1 page advertisement. Includes frontispiece. The third title page reads - "A New Edition of the Psalms of David Fitted to the Tunes in Churches" by N. Brady. Printed in London 1799. 90 pages. Bound in back are 2 pages with the heading: "At the Kensignton. December 3 1696. Present The King's Most Excellent Majesty in Council." Second page is dated May 23d 1698. The first sentence reads - "His Majesty having Allowed and Permitted the Use of a New Version of the Psalms of David by Dr. Brady and Mr. Tate in all Churches." The printed name of H. London is at the bottom of the text. Printed at the Clarendon Press by W. Dawson, T. Bensley, and J. Cooke, Printers to the University unknown
1819000010310Oxford: Printed at the Clarendon Press by J. Cooke and S. Collingwood 1819. Later printing. Hardcover. Very Good. 24mo. 14.5 cm x 8.5 cm. Unpaginated. Mid-nineteenth century brown morocco with gold borders and decorations on the boards spine in five compartments with decorations and lettering in gold gold decorations on the turn-ins; all edges gilt. Coated brown endpapers and pastedowns. Griffiths 245. An early ninteenth century printing of an Oxford Book of Common Prayer. A beautifully bound example. A tiny split to the bottom of the rear joint; leaves show a contemporary gift inscription and a touch of foxing. Printed at the Clarendon Press by J. Cooke and S. Collingwood hardcover
233276Paris, Adolphe Josse [Typographie Rouge frères], 1872 in-12, VII pp., 302 pp., un f. n. ch. de table, demi-chagrin noir, dos lisse orné de filets à froid, coins en vélin (reliure de l'époque). Coins et coupes frottés.
187140847La Rochelle, A. Thoreux, s.d. (1871). In-12 carré de (IV) 79 pp., demi-chagrin noir, titre doré en long sur le dos, couverture conservée (reliure de l'époque).
235787La Rochelle, A. Thoreux [Imprimerie G. Mareschal], s.d. (1871) in-16 carré, IV pp., pp. 5-79, broché, non coupé. Dos un peu abîmé.
235471Paris, Auguste Aubry [Imprimerie F. Pichon], 1877 in-8, 24 pp., 132 numéros décrits, broché sous couverture factice de papier XXe. Premiers ff. salis.
1932321101932 Paris, Les Editions de France, 1932, in 12 broché, IX-239 pages ; papier terni ; minuscules mouillures marginales.
1932859031932 Paris, Les Editions de France, 1932, in 12 relié demi-box noir, dos à nerfs, couverture conservée, IX-239 pages ; petit manque angulaire à la première garde blanche.
231889Paris, Lib. des Contemporains, 1871 in-12, II-283 pp., demi-chagrin vert, dos à nerfs, filets à froid (rel. de l'époque). Petits frottements au dos.