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19911880466121Wiley 1991. Paperback. Good. Missing dust jacket; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More Spend Less.This is the hardcover edition. This could have light cosmetic flaws but remains in good condition. No dust jacket included with this book. Secure packaging for safe delivery.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Wiley paperback
1991Q-0471619965Wiley 1991-01-24. Paperback. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Wiley paperback
1991SKU0209776Wiley 1991-09-03. Paperback. Good. Textbook May Have Highlights Notes and/or Underlining BOOK ONLY-NO ACCESS CODE NO CD Ships with Tracking Wiley paperback
biblio18<p>New book</p> Wiley
627586like new. unknown
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627713like new. unknown
1991x-0471619965John Wiley & Sons Inc 1991. Paperback. New. 384 pages. 11.25x9.00x1.00 inches. John Wiley & Sons Inc paperback
6503107John Wiley & Sons pp. 768 1st Edition . Papeback. New. John Wiley & Sons unknown
70-4470London: Vanity Fair 1869. Original color lithograph 14 x 9 inches. Good. Some foxing on verso lightly visible on front. One page biography of subject laid in. Scarce. Published on October 23 1869 depicting Acton Smee Ayrton 5 August 1816 – 30 November 1886 a British barrister and Liberal Party politician. Vanity Fair was a British magazine known for its social political and literary content. It gained fame particularly for its caricatures of prominent figures of the time. These caricatures drawn by renowned artists captured the essence of their subjects with a mix of humor satire and artistry. London: Vanity Fair, 1869 unknown
19732110502150307750Asahishinbunsha 1973. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Asahishinbunsha paperback
70-3552London: Vanity Fair 1875 . Original color lithograph 15 x 10.5 inches. Very Good. One page biography of subject laid in. Vincent Brooks Day & Son Lith. Scarce. Published on November 20 1875 depicting Robert Browning 7 May 1812 – 12 December 1889 an English poet and playwright whose dramatic monologues put him high among the Victorian poets.Vanity Fair was a British magazine known for its social political and literary content. It gained fame particularly for its caricatures of prominent figures of the time. These caricatures drawn by renowned artists captured the essence of their subjects with a mix of humor satire and artistry. London: Vanity Fair, 1875 unknown
19782111902153101844Atago shobo 1978. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Atago shobo paperback
18-1345London: Vanity Fair 1885. Original colour lithograph. 40 x 27 cm 15.75 x 10.6 inches. Good. Foxing and wrinkling in margins and 2 half-inch tears in bottom edge not affecting image. Dated 26 Sep 1885. Vincent Brooks Day & Son Lith. Scarce.Aretas Akers-Douglas 1st Viscount Chilston GBE PC JP DL 21 October 1851 – 15 January 1926 born Aretas Akers and known as Aretas Akers-Douglas between 1875 and 1911 was a British Conservative statesman who sat in the House of Commons from 1880 until he was raised to the peerage in 1911. He notably served as Home Secretary under Arthur Balfour between 1902 and 1905. London: Vanity Fair, 1885. unknown
18-3291London: Vanity Fair 1871. Original colour lithograph. 13.5 x 8.5 inches accompanied by 1 sheet of letterpress description. Very Good. Trimmed at bottom of page with some loss of text. Published in Vanity Fair 17 June 1871.Algernon Borthwick 1st Baron Glenesk JP 27 December 1830 – 24 November 1908 known as Sir Algernon Borthwick Bt between 1887 and 1895 was a British journalist and Conservative politician. He was the owner of the Morning Post which merged with The Daily Telegraph in 1937. London: Vanity Fair, 1871. unknown
18-1302London: Vanity Fair 1874. Original colour lithograph. 40 x 27 cm 15.75 x 10.6 inches. Good. Some toning foxing and creases and a vertical fold down the center. Letterpress clipping with biography of subject pasted on verso. Dated 14 Nov 1874. Vincent Brooks Day & Son Lith. Scarce.Christopher Sykes 1831 – 15 December 1898 was an English Conservative politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1865 to 1892. He was a friend of Edward VII as Prince of Wales. Sykes was the second son of Sir Tatton Sykes 4th Baronet and his wife Mary Ann Foulis daughter of Sir William Foulis 7th Baronet. His father was a popular horse breeder who bred bloodstock; however he was an authoritarian father who bullied his children. Sykes was educated at Rugby School and Trinity College Cambridge. He began mixing with London's great and good and became a connoisseur of books china and furniture. He was a Deputy Lieutenant and J.P. for the East Riding of Yorkshire. At the 1865 general election Sykes was elected Conservative Member of Parliament MP for Beverley. At the 1868 general election he was elected MP for the East Riding of Yorkshire. He held this seat until 1885 when it was divided under the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 and was then elected for Buckrose one of the constituencies into which his previous constituency had been divided. He held the seat until 1892. Between 1868 and 1892 he made only six speeches and did not speak on any particular issue except in favour of a bill for the preservation of seabirds earning him the nickname Gull's Friend. He was considered to be the basis for the character "Mr Brauncepath" in Lothair the novel by Benjamin Disraeli. He was honoured with the Order of St. Lazarus of Belgium in 1879. Sykes became a close friend of Edward VII as Prince of Wales. The Prince was entertained in great splendour at Brantingham Thorpe Sykes' country house in Yorkshire during the Doncaster Races and at his London home in Berkeley Square. The Prince exploited his friend and subjected him to humiliations for example on one occasion poured a decanter of brandy over his head. However Sykes's lavish entertainment of the Marlborough House Set soon put a strain on his finances. Nearly bankrupted in 1890 Sykes was forced to sell both Brantingham Thorpe and his London home. At a general election two years later he lost his parliamentary seat. Despite this the Prince of Wales never forgot his devoted friend and after Sykes' death in 1898 he installed a tablet to his memory at Westminster Abbey. London: Vanity Fair, 1874. unknown
18-1347London: Vanity Fair 1885. Original colour lithograph. 40 x 27 cm 15.75 x 10.6 inches. Good. Toning and stains with minor loss in bottom edge. Dated 21 Feb 1885. Vincent Brooks Day & Son Lith. Scarce.Charles Henry Wilson 1st Baron Nunburnholme 22 April 1833 – 27 October 1907 was a prominent English shipowner who became head of the Thomas Wilson Sons & Co. shipping business. Together with his brother he expanded the activities of the company into one of the largest in Britain. He also served as Liberal MP for Hull for thirty years and in 1906 received the title Baron Nunburnholme. London: Vanity Fair, 1885. unknown
18-1339London: Vanity Fair 1885. Original colour lithograph. 40 x 27 cm 15.75 x 10.6 inches. Very Good. Minor toning and wrinkling in margins not affecting image. Dated 31 Oct 1885. Vincent Brooks Day & Son Lith. Scarce.Charles Thomson Ritchie 1st Baron Ritchie of Dundee PC 19 November 1838 – 9 January 1906 was a British businessman and Conservative politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1874 until 1905 when he was raised to the peerage. He served as Home Secretary from 1900 to 1902 and as Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1902 to 1903. London: Vanity Fair, 1885. unknown
18-1297London: Vanity Fair 1875. Original colour lithograph. 40 x 27 cm 15.75 x 10.6 inches. Good. Some toning and foxing and a vertical fold down the center. Letterpress clipping with biography of subject pasted on verso. Dated 3 Apr 1875. Vincent Brooks Day & Son Lith. Scarce.Dwight Lyman Moody February 5 1837 – December 22 1899 also known as D. L. Moody was an American evangelist and publisher connected with the Holiness Movement who founded the Moody Church Northfield School and Mount Hermon School in Massachusetts now Northfield Mount Hermon School Moody Bible Institute and Moody Publishers. London: Vanity Fair, 1875. unknown
18-3262London: Vanity Fair 1871. Original colour lithograph. 13.5 x 8.5 inches accompanied by 1 sheet of letterpress description. Very Good. Published in Vanity Fair 29 July 1871.Edward Miall 8 May 1809 – 30 April 1881 was an English journalist apostle of disestablishment founder of the Liberation Society and Liberal Party politician. London: Vanity Fair, 1871. unknown
18-1342London: Vanity Fair 1885. Original colour lithograph. 40 x 27 cm 15.75 x 10.6 inches. Good. Toning and some rubbing across image. Dated 15 Aug 1885. Vincent Brooks Day & Son Lith. Scarce.Sir Edward Birkbeck 1st Baronet KCVO DL 11 October 1838 – 2 September 1908 was a Conservative Party politician in the United Kingdom. London: Vanity Fair, 1885. unknown
18-1329London: Vanity Fair 1886. Original colour lithograph. 40 x 27 cm 15.75 x 10.6 inches. Good. Minor edge wear and quarter inch tear in left margin not affecting image. Dated 23 Jan 1886. Vincent Brooks Day & Son Lith. Scarce.Frederic Harrison 18 October 1831 – 14 January 1923 was a British jurist and historian. Born at 17 Euston Square London he was the son of Frederick Harrison 1799-1881 a stockbroker and his wife Jane daughter of Alexander Brice a Belfast granite merchant. He was baptised at St. Pancras Church Euston and spent his early childhood at the northern London suburb of Muswell Hill to which the family moved soon after his birth. His father later acquired a lease on the grand Tudor manor house Sutton Place near Guildford Surrey in 1874 which descended to his elder son Sidney and about which Frederic jnr. wrote the definitive history Annals of an Old Manor House: Sutton Place Guildford first published in 1893. His paternal grandfather was a Leicestershire builder. In 1840 the family moved again to 22 Oxford Square Hyde Park London a house designed by Harrison's father. Along with his siblings Sidney and Lawrence Harrison received his initial education at home before attending a day school in St John's Wood. In 1843 he entered King's College School graduating as second in the school in 1849. London: Vanity Fair, 1886. unknown
18-3248London: Vanity Fair 1871. Original colour lithograph. 13.5 x 8.5 inches accompanied by 1 sheet of letterpress description. Very Good. Trimmed at bottom of page with some loss of text. Published in Vanity Fair 18 Feb 1871.George Hammond Whalley 22 January 1813 – 8 October 1878 was a British lawyer and Liberal Party politician.He was the eldest son of James Whalley a merchant and banker from Gloucester and a direct descendant of Edward Whalley the regicide. George was educated at University College London gaining a first class degree in Metaphysics and Rhetoric and entered Gray's Inn in 1835 being called to the bar in 1839. He was an assistant tithe commissioner between 1836 and 1847 writing over 200 articles for the Justice of the Peace between 1838 and 1842. In 1838 and 1839 he published a pair of treatises on the Tithe Acts which were expanded bound and published in 1848 as The Tithe Act and the Whole of the Tithe Amendment Acts.In 1846 he married Anne Wakeford with whom he had a son and two daughters. During the Irish Potato Famine in 1847 he established several fisheries on the Irish west coast.citation needed In 1852 he was made High Sheriff of Caernarvonshire a Deputy Lieutenant of Denbighshire and a captain in the Denbighshire Yeomanry.He was chairman of the Llanidloes & Newtown Railway the first in Montgomeryshire from its inception in 1852 and was the first chairman of the Mid Wales Railway in 1859. He was also active in the Railway Benevolent Institution and the National Temperance League London: Vanity Fair, 1871. unknown
18-1334London: Vanity Fair 1874. Original colour lithograph. 40 x 27 cm 15.75 x 10.6 inches. Very Good. Some toning and spots in margin not affecting image. Dated 19 Dec 1874. Vincent Brooks Day & Son Lith. Scarce.Sir Henry Irving 6 February 1838 – 13 October 1905 born John Henry Brodribb sometimes known as J. H. Irving was an English stage actor in the Victorian era known as an actor-manager because he took complete responsibility supervision of sets lighting direction casting as well as playing the leading roles for season after season at the Lyceum Theatre establishing himself and his company as representative of English classical theatre. In 1895 he became the first actor to be awarded a knighthood indicating full acceptance into the higher circles of British society. Irving is widely acknowledged to be one of the inspirations for Count Dracula the title character of the 1897 novel Dracula whose author Bram Stoker was business manager of the theatre. London: Vanity Fair, 1874. unknown