4 136 résultats
18749Paris, Alphonse Lemerre, 1871. In-12 de XIII et 446 pages. Excellent état intérieur. Toile grise, nombreux tampons de l'O.R.T.F., Radio-France. Couvertures conservées.
18723Paris, Plon, 1871. In-8, 375 pages. Quelques rousseurs. Demi-chagrin rouge d'époque, dos à nerfs, bon état. Nombreux tampons de Radio France ou de l'O.R.T.F.
188395247Librairie Hachette et Cie 1883 4 volumes. In-12 18,5 x 12 cm. Reliures demi-chagrin bleu, dos à nerfs, XVI-416-371-376-398 pp, 1 fac-similé replié, pièces justificatives, table des matières, table des noms propres. Bon ensemble.
1878111270Paris, Librairie Hachette et Cie 1878 In-8 relié 22 cm sur 13. IV-543 pages. Jaquette en assez bon état. Bon état d’occasion.
21025Paris, Le Chevalier 1874 [suivi de :]Paris, Arnaud & Labat, 1875[suivi de :] Paris, Le Chevalier 1874. 2 vol. in-4, 1022 pp. + 676-267 pp., demi-maroquin à coins rouge, dos à nerfs, tête dorée, couverture conservée (dos légèrement insolés, quelques petits frottements et épidermures, quelques petites déchirures marginales sans atteinte).
215341871 . Edit. Fasquele ,1904 . In 12 br. 296 pp.Orné de gravures et de documents de l'époque .
165567Paris, Ernest Leroux [puis :] Imprimerie A. Lahure, 1924-1945 2 forts vol. in-8, [4]-607 et [4]-III-616 pp., index, broché.
ORD-2465Première édition. Paris. Victor Bunel. 1871. Gd in-8 (204 x 311mm) dos lisse parchemin portant le titre et la date en caractères dorés, page de titre roussie sinon bel exemplaire auquel on a rajouté les fac-similé des numéros 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 16, 17, 22, 26 de Le Franc-Tireur Manceau et le numéro 27 intitulé Le Franc-Tireur de la Guerre.
14723Paris, Victor Bunel, 1871 ; in-4. 655 pp. Demi-basane rouge, dos lisse, titre et filets dorés. Des éraflures au dos. Des rousseurs. Notes manuscrites sur la première garde : "Souvenir d'amitié à mon cher Lucien Grenier. 3 mai 1874. G. Bouverie. Puisse ce souvenir nous unir pour toujours".
206038Paris, Vallée, 4 feuillets in-folio, Dérelié.
175790Lyon, Josserand, juillet 1871 in-12, 36 pp., broché.
1726AQ31788London: Printed by George James Printer to the Honourable City of London 1726. Single leaf broadside. Somewhat marked with some creasing and tearing to extremities especially at horizontal folds. A rare survival of an early eighteenth-century broadside reprinting - ordered to be distributed within the capital by the Common Council of the City of London Corporation - of two specific English laws applying severe penalties to negligent careless and criminal servants. The vast majority of the Common Council of the City of London Corporation were issued either in folio or as here broadside format. As the preamble states the intention of this was so that this legal reminder could be be 'sent into the several Wards' of London 'and by the Beadles delivered to every House-keeper that all Servants may be acquainted with the same and know the Penalties therein contain'd'. The two specific laws highlighted are 'the Clause relating to Servants in a late Act of Parliament passed in the Sixth Year of Queen Anne.Entituled An Act for the better Preventing Mischiefs that may happen by Fire' and 'also another Clause relating to Servants.Entituled An Act for the more effectual Preventing and Punishing of Robberies that shall be committed in Houses'. The first as the broadside shows made the provision for the forfeiture of 'One hundred Pounds unto the Church-Wardens of such Parish where such Fire shall happen to be distributed amongst the Sufferers by such Fire' by any 'Servant or Servants' who 'thought Negligence or Carelessness shall fire or cause to be fired any Dwelling-House or Out-House or Houses'. The second barred 'all and every Person or Persons that shall be at any time from and after the First Day of July in the Year 1713 feloniously steal any Money Goods or Chattels Wares or Merchandizes of the Value of Forty Shillings or more.shall by Virtue of this Act be abolutely debarr'd of and from the Benefit of Clergy'. ESTC locates copies at just three British libraries BL Guildhall Museum of London and just two elsewhere Harvard and Kansas. ESTC T40013. Dimensions 308 x 390 mm. Printed by George James, Printer to the Honourable City of London unknown
184835332Philadelphia: R. S. H. George; Thomas Wardle 1848. Leather bound. Fair. Thick 16mo. approx. 5.5" x 3.5". Dark leather binding with faded gilt illustrations on the covers. Gilt lettered title on the spine. Three title pages in one book. Part I 673 pages; part II 284 pages; part III 846 pages. Frontispiece illustration. Leather is chipped head of the spine and worn on the joints and board edges. End papers resemble wallpaper designs. Staining to the front and rear end sheets. Tears to the front end sheets and tissue protecting the frontispiece with no loss of print. Light toning and scattered foxing. The first title page is dated 1848 the second dated 1849 and the third dated 1848. R. S. H. George; Thomas Wardle unknown
005091London: John Reeves Two works in one - Common Prayer 510p; Psalms 84p n.d. but after 1801. Full morocco smooth back divided into five panels title in gilt to second panel remaining panels decorated with small fleuron tools in blind covers with a single line border tulip frame with volute corner pieces rope roll in gilt to inner edge a.e.g. Rubbed to extremities with small amounts of loss to colour. Internally very lightly browned with one or two spots of foxing former owner's name to ffep otherwise fairly clean. Not found in Griffiths but definitely after 1801 and before 1829. Reprint. Hardback. Good. 24mo. John Reeves Hardcover
183876328London: C. Knight & Co 1838. 4to.Illustrated. xl. 712 pp. Full black morocco decorated raised bands gilt lettering to the spine and gilt decorations to the spine and boards. With gilt turn ins and all edges gilt. The 'pictorial edition' illustrated with numerous black and white woodcuts. With notes and an introductory history of the liturgy by Reverend Henry Stebbing. Rubbing to the spine and edges and a slight lean to the binding. Some foxing scattered throughout and an ink inscription to the front pastedown dated 1860. Binding firm. A VG copy of the book of common prayer. Binding 26.8 cms tall. . Very Good. Full gilt-decorated Morocco. 1838. C. Knight & Co [1838] unknown
73678Cambridge: Printed by John Archdeacon Printer to the University 1777. Religion ANTIQUARIAN BIBLE. Small octavo 16 x 10cm not paginated pencil note to rear states 'correct collation 20/4/60'. Includes Calendar and Tables. Georgian binding of full red morocco gilt spine ruled in in panels with all edges gilt marbled end papers inner gilt dentelles. Contents clean and fresh no signs of ownership very light wear externally. A fine copy in an elegant English book binding likely by the university binder. Cambridge: Printed by John Archdeacon Printer to the University, 1777 unknown
74640Oxford: Printed by T. Wright and W. Gill and sold by S. Crowder and W. Jackson 1773. Common Prayer FINELY BOUND. Octavo 21 x 14cm unpaginated. Reasonable sized print over two columns. Contemporary black full calf with raised bands and gilt tooling to spine and boards. All edges gilt with comb marbled endpapers. A charming early bookseller's label to front pastedown for the George Street Stationer 60 Gracechurch Street. Black ink ownership and gift inscriptions through several generations to verso of fly-leaf and both sides of the first blank. A minor stain to the top edge of the first 20 or so leaves otherwise internally clean. Moderate general wear to attractive contemporary binding with some minor repair to head of spine. Very good. ESTC: T87274. Oxford: Printed by T. Wright and W. Gill, and sold by S. Crowder and W. Jackson, 1773 unknown
74646Cambridge: Printed by John Archdeacon and sold by John Francis and Charles Rivington etc. 1781. Common Prayer FINELY BOUND. Duodecimo 15 x 9cm unpaginated. Small print over two columns with frequent woodcut illustrated plates through the text including a frontispiece. Contemporary dark brown full morocco with blind decoration to boards. One proud gathering. Well-thumbed with some minor chips and tears to edges but internally clean. Extensive ink records of births and deaths of the Mercer family between the 1780's and the 1870's to endpapers and to the verso of the title page. Re-cased lacking fly-leaves. Moderate general wear to binding. Good. ESTC: T87364. Cambridge: Printed by John Archdeacon, and sold by John, Francis and Charles Rivington [etc.], 1781 unknown
20060106822London: The Folio Society 2006. Leather Bound. pp. 718. Large 8vo. Dark green leather spine with gilt lettering and decorations over beautifully marbled boards. Top page edge gilt other edges green. Wood cut illustrations throughout. Light shelfwear; very good. Dark green slipcase is decorated in gilt and shows light rubbing. Ornamented with wood cuts from designs of Albert Durer Hans Holbein and others. In imitation of Queen Elizabeth's Book of Christian Prayers. Foreword by Sir Patrick Cormack. The Folio Society unknown
93932Oxford; London. Printed at the Clarendon Press By W. Jackson & A. Hamilton; Printed by John March 1791; 1792. . 24mo 14 x 8 cm; contemporary ownership inscription in pen to front free endpaper; contemporary red panelled calf gilt smooth spine gilt in five compartments all edges gilt near fine.<br /><br /> A lovely sammelband comprising the Book of Common Prayer and a revised metrical psalter for use in church.<br /> Griffiths 10. Oxford; London. Printed at the Clarendon Press, By W. Jackson & A. Hamilton; Printed by John March, 1791; 1792. unknown
1794C3188<p><b>A splendid copy of the Good and Harding Book of Common Prayer in a striking masonic binding by John Lovejoy.</b><br /></p><p>The London bookbinder John Lovejoy <i>fl.</i> c. 1781–1812 is known by his distinctive Masonic bindings employing an array of Masonic tools often arranged in striking compositions. He was himself a Mason from around 1791 until 1812. His practices as an employer however earned him a certain notoriety among binders and the nickname 'the Tyrant': as a journeyman in 1781 he advocated a reduction in the working day from fourteen to thirteen hours but when a master binder he bitterly opposed such a change and was among the employers who prosecuted the leaders of the 1786 strike. Although it is accepted that Lovejoy was not as previously thought the only binder using Masonic motifs close comparison of the tools with other examples of his work suggests this binding to be his. </p><p>Good and Harding's 1794 Common Prayer appeared in two settings one octavo and the other a splendid large quarto as here. The fine series of stipple-engravings shows both biblical and liturgical scenes including several by Federico Bartolozzi and Luigi Schiavonetti after Thomas Stothard and Silvester Harding. The plates are variously dated between 1791 the date of the dedication and 1794 suggesting the work was several years in progress and perhaps issued in parts; copies are rarely seen with all fifteen engravings. </p><p>ESTC T88819; <i>for Lovejoy see</i> Ramsden <i>London Bookbinders 1780-1840</i> pl. XIX; <i>and </i>Howe & Childe <i>The Society of London Bookbinders 1780-1950</i>. </p><p>Large 4to 278 x 226 mm pp. xxviii 634 2 63 1 blank 176 with engraved dedication dated 23 July 1791 and 15 stipple-engraved plates by various artists; with part-titles stipple-engraved head-piece vignette to p. 1; a few signatures heavily spotted otherwise a very good copy; in contemporary green straight-grained morocco by Lovejoy borders gilt with masonic tools between swags of 3 foliate tools outer borders roll-tooled in gilt spine gilt in compartments lettered directly in one others with central Sun tool winged Asclepian staff as corner-pieces arranged with stars points fleurons and heads board edges turn-ins and morocco hinges roll-tooled in gilt edges gilt endbands sewn in red white and green on 2 cores ribbon place-markers marbled endpapers; a few minor scuffs and marks very short split to upper joint lower corners lightly bumped neatly retouched at extremities nonetheless very well-preserved; early ink ownership inscriptions 'Elizabeth Tynell' to front free endpaper verso and 'John Smith' to front flyleaf.</p> Millar Ritchie for J. Good and E. Harding
53426Oxford: Printed by T. Wright and W. Gill and sold by S. Crowder 1776. Prayer Book FINE BINDING WITH ROYAL ARMS. Folio 42 x 27cm unpaginated. Collation: ; A-H2; A-4Q2; a-f2. Printed in two columns ruled in red and black ink. Contemporary black full calf with raised bands gilt decoration to spine and boards as well as the Royal Arms of George III in gilt to both boards and his 'GR' monogram to each compartment along the spine. Upper board recently re-hinged with new leather all along the joint and a strip of matching marbled paper along the hinge. All edges gilt; marbled endpapers. Bookplate of Edmund H. Turton of Larpool House to front pastedown. Browning to some leaves. Rubbing and chipping to lower edge and corner; corners lost to A1 and A2 at the beginning of the second section. Black ink ownership inscriptions of Edmund H. Turton to top margin of title page and to the top margin of A1 in the second section. A large tear to S2 in the second section. Very good. John Turton 1735-1806 was the personal physician to King George III during his many years of madness and though his main residence was Brasted Place in Kent he acquired Larpool Hall in Yorkshire in about 1804. Edmund Peters 1796-1857 inherited the estates of his great-uncle John including Larpool Hall on reaching the age of 21 in 1817 and took the Turton name. When his son Captain Edmund Henry Turton 1825-1896 inherited in 1857 he set up home at Larpool remaining there until 1876. ESTC: T81462. Oxford: Printed by T. Wright and W. Gill, and sold by S. Crowder, 1776 unknown
49416London: J. G. F. and J. Rivington 1840. FINELY BOUND fifth edition thus. Quarto 30 x 24cm pp.6 2 lxxii 966 4. In two columns with very extensive notes by Rev. Mant. In contemporary dark brown diced calf with raised bands gilt titles to spine and further blind decoration to spine. Yellow coated endpapers; all edges gilt. Armorial bookplate of S. H. Lee Warner to front pastedown; armorial bookplate of Bryan Hall to front free endpaper. Family ownership inscriptions in black ink to verso of front free endpaper and fly-leaf indicating the gift of the book to Septimus Henry Lee Warner by his father in 1843 and then to his daughter Julia on his death in 1870. One further armorial bookplate of Bryan Hall to blank page facing the title. Light external wear - very good overall. London: J. G. F. and J. Rivington, 1840 unknown
64512Sir D Hunter Blair and M.S. Bruce Edinburgh. 1827. Full black leather gilt raised bands. All edges gilt. 12mo pocket edition. Spine a little rubbed. Foxing to endpapers. Neat ownership signature to front endpaper and some pencil annotations to rear endpaper. An unusual edition published in Edinburgh by the King's Printer also containing the Brady & Tate New Version of the Psalms of David together with a small selection of their seasonal hymns including 'While Shepherds Watched'. It is in very nice condition. hardcover
1812000812London: John Reeves 1812. Common Prayer WITH Psalms - a-b8 B-Ff8; A-F8 G4. Full contemporary morocco raised bands spine in six panels title in gilt to second panel covers with gilt single fillet border and central anchor device of the Victualling Board gilt roll to edges and inner edges a.e.g. Rubbed to extremities corners bumped and rubbed lightly browned and lightly spotted internally. The Psalms were published in 1808. The Victualling board was responsible for delivering supplies to the Royal Navy. Griffith 1812 1 though with a slightly different collation. Reprint. Full Morocco. Good. 8vo. John Reeves Hardcover