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1731018259Paternoster Row & St Paul's Churchyard London: J & J Knapton; A Bettesworth & C. Hitch; J. Pemberton & D. Browne 1731. Sixth edition. The title pages to parts II and III are dated 1730 as is Hereforshire Orchards;the title page to the appendix is 1731. Thick octavo pp xiv 608 25 with an engraved frontispiece and thirteen engraved plates of which eight are folding several plates are folded awkwardly and several have frayed margins but only one has very slight loss of the engraved surface and it is this one which protrudes slightly from the fore-edge some age-toning occasional small splash marks a little wear throughout light early manuscript notes on the front endpapers contemporary full calf a bit worn and marked but perfectly sound lacking tiny pieces at head and tail of the spine the remains of a contemporary manuscript label on the spine. A reasonably good copy of one of the most influential of eighteenth century gardening books. Blanche Henrey 503. Little is known about Bradley's childhood aside from an early interest in gardening and the fact that he lived in the vicinity of London a city at the time with many amateur naturalists. Though Bradley lacked a university education his first publication Treatise of Succulent Plants gained him traction with influential patrons like James Petiver and later Hans Sloane. With their support he was proposed and elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1712 at the age of 24. Two years later Bradley visited the Netherlands and took an interest in horticulture. He spent the next decade back in England writing treatises on topics related to this central interest like weather fertiliser productivity and plant hybridisation. In recognition of his work in the field and with the thereafter unfulfilled promise that he would found and fund a university botanical garden the University of Cambridge named Bradley its first professor of botany in 1724 a position he would hold until his death. As Bradley was not a wealthy man in his later life and as this was an unsalaried position the newly minted academic continued to focus most of his efforts on making a living through publishing. According to his rival and successor John Martyn as well as his successor son Thomas Martyn Bradley did this at the expense of his students whom he reportedly neglected to even lecture to. Bradley made notable innovations and discoveries across a wide array of disciplines. For example this work included directions for the making and use of a rudimentary kaleidoscope to aid in formal garden design and layout. He also wrote about cooking and was the first to publish recipes in the English language using the then-exotic pineapple as the main ingredient. His History of Succulent plants was the seminal treatise on the topic and his studies of tulips and auriculas helped further accurate theories of plant reproduction. Bradley was also a pioneer in the examining of fungal spore germination and the pollination of plants by insects. His publications additionally contained information on how to build and use greenhouses early theories regarding agricultural productivity and pond ecology. . Sixth edition. Half-Leather. Fair. J & J Knapton; A Bettesworth & C. Hitch; J. Pemberton & D. Browne Hardcover
1837045152London: James Ridgway and Sons Piccadilly 1837. First Edition First Printing . Hardcover. Very Good/No Jacket. 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. Quarto. 428 pages indexed. COLLATES COMPLETE with 48 uncolored plates. Hardcover bound in original green publisher's cloth. Moderate rubbing and wear to the binding. The corners are a little bumped and there is some pale spotting along the fore edges and top edge of the binding. A sound copy with secure inner hinges. Prior owner's 1954 inscription on the front flyleaf of "William Lanier Hunt" INSCRIBED on the title page "From the Author." The text is a little toned but generally clean. There is some offsetting from the plates. Contains 48 uncolored plates. William Lanier Hunt 1906-1996 the 1950s owner was the "Dean of Southern Horticulture." He donated land along the Morgan Creek in southern Orange County NC to the North Carolina Botanical Garden and is now known as the Hunt Arboretum. <br/> <br/> James Ridgway and Sons, Piccadilly hardcover
12mo., Sixth Edition, on laid paper, with engraved frontispiece, some light offsetting to title; attractively bound in twentieth-century full polished calf, back with gilt bands, second compartment with red leather label lettered and ruled in gilt, a remarkably well-preserved, bright, crisp copy. Although attributed on title to Thomas Mawe, Gardener to the Duke of Leeds, this extraordinarily popular and influential work was actually written by the diffident John Abercrombie (1726-1806). The manuscript was duly submitted to Griffin, who asked his friend Mawe to read it. 'Mr. Mawes [sic] bore testimony to the merit of the production, and prefixed his name to the publication in order to give it that celebrity to which it was so justly entitled, for which he received a gratuity of twenty guineas' (Henrey p.363). The work was a tremendous success, continuing to be republished for over fifty years after the author's death, although his name did not appear on title until the seventh edition. It was heavily plagiarised, perhaps most notoriously as 'The Modern Gardener' (1771) by James Meader, who was subsequently sued, convicted and prevented from republication. Curiously, despite its immense popularity, EARLY EDITIONS ARE VERY SCARCE, ESPECIALLY IN THIS CONDITION. See Henrey II, 358 et seq.
First English edition, 8vo, [16], 352pp., engraved frontispiece, [16], 352pp., 12 engraved plates, text browned and spotted throughout, light stain to fore-edge, nineteenth-century red half morocco, rear cover crudely reattached, upper cover detached. A translation of 'Curiositez de la nature' 1705, by P. Le Lorrain de Vallement. Henrey, British botanical and horticultural literature before 1800, 588.
128747aafParis, J. Rothschild, 1873, in-4°, VIII + 320 p., illustré de 78 xylogravures partiellement à pleine page y compris le frontispice-titre + 50 très belles planches en couleurs avec leurs pages de protection (= serpentes - ainsi évitant les chromolithographies de coller l’une à l’autre), un cahier légèrement avancé, qqs légères rousseurs, reliure en percaline rouge à 4 nerfs, dos orné en or, tranches dorées. Bel exemplaire.
50065 tomes reliés cartonnage éditeur - 20x29 - 756, 767, 744, 755 et 802 pp - 1938 - éditions librairie sciences et arts, G. DOIN et cie, Paris.
180320933Paris, Bossange, an XI - 1803. In-8 de [4]-XXX-384 pages, plein veau moucheté brun, tranches mouchetées bleues, gardes de papier dominoté.
Very Good Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928) Original notebook in marbling wrappers. Slight chippings on the cover's extremities. Demy 8vo. (21 x 16 cm). In Ottoman script (Old Turkish with Arabic letters) text with Latin titles. [84] blank pages, color, and b/w ills. Scarce, richly illustrated Ottoman and a rare botanical manuscript on gardening, featuring as well the European flower cultivation of Turkish and Middle Eastern flowers. The manuscript starts with an introduction on gardening and floriculture and mentions trees and proper soils, tree and flower planting methods, pine trees, etc. In the "flowers" section, detailed descriptions on floriculture of Daisy, Begonia, Chrysanthemum, Dianthus, Hydrangea, Souvenir de la Malmaison, Oeillet Marguerite, Geant de Nice, Nicotinia, Generaria, Frimula, Calcealaire, Hyacinthus, Istanbul Lâlesi [i.e. Tulip, or Pauble de Constantinople], Albus, Bulbocodium, Bicalor Empress, Bicalor Emperor, Penoncul, Freesia, Ixia [i.e. Lillies], Cyclamen, Glaieul colvillei, Sparaxis, Cycl. Persicum, Iris, Azalea, Giroffe, Lobelias, Meuflia (Snapdragons), Silene, Gloximia, etc. and 19 numbered illustrations which are hand-drawn in color and b/w show the gardening and decorative elements in English and French styles.
8vo., First Edition, with decorative title in green and black, and illustrations in the text, free endpapers very lightly spotted; original ivory pictorial cloth, upper board blocked in green, backstrip lettered in green, covers lightly age-soiled else a very good, bright copy in price-clipped dustwrapper, the latter lightly frayed at lower edge, wanting lower half of backstrip, and with one closed tear on rear panel. Vita Sackville-West contributes chapters 9-12, based on her broadcasts from October 1933 to January 1934. EXTREMELY SCARCE, ESPECIALLY IN THE DUSTWRAPPER. Cross & Ravenscroft-Hulme, B16 (recording 'dustwrapper not seen').
1776183754Nürnberg, Lochner, 1776. 4°. M. 4 gef. Kpfr.-Taf. 2 Bl., 966 S., 36 Bl. Hldr. d. Zt. Einbd. berieben, etwas bestoßen. Rücken m. Kleberest. St. verso Tit. Gebräunt, teils etwas braunfl.
8vo., First Edition, on laid paper, with a frontispiece, title in green and black, and 40 plates on 31; handsomely bound in full green morocco, back gilt with raised bands, uncut, illustration from dustwrapper mounted on new leaf at front, a most attractive copy ideal as a gift or for presentation.
1930047313Hampton Wick Middlesex UK: A. W. Darnell 1930. First Edition First Printing . Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. Quartos. 252 3; 252 pages. Indexed at the end of the first volume. Large format books the bindings measure 11 /14 inches tall by about 9 inches wide. Hardcovers bound in early 3/4 green calf with green cloth-covered boards. Bindings signed in type in the verso of the front flyleaves "Bound by Bayntun Riviere Bath England." Raised bands on the spines which have 6 compartments each. Dual leather labels per spine. The compartments are nicely stamped in decorative gilt with floral designs. Some rubbing to the bindings and spotting on the cloth. Faux marbled endpapers. Prior owner's signature of "William Lanier Hunt" on the second front flyleaves. Text is foxed especially at the front and rear. Nicely illustrated throughout. Collates complete with 24 color plates 12 per volume and numerous black and white full-page illustrations. Scarce in such nice bindings. Possibly a custom binding which would make this set unique. William Lanier Hunt 1906-1996 the former owner was known as the "Dean of Southern Horticulture." He donated land along the Morgan Creek in southern Orange County NC to the North Carolina Botanical Garden and is now known as the Hunt Arboretum. <br/> <br/> A. W. Darnell hardcover
188816176Londres, Kent & Co, [1888]. Grand in-4 de [2]-XIV-361-[3] pages, pleine percaline verte de l'éditeur décoré de fers dorés et de filets noir (accident à la reliure).
1755019284Whitehall New Bond Street St Paul's Churchyard : Printed for the author 1755. the title continues " with the Latin trivial and common English names and an English index referring to the Latin names. Also a general catalogue of seeds for the kitchen-garden flower-garden grass-land etc usually raised for sale and those imported from America". First edition. Latin title two-sided advertisement leaf for the author's works English title 12 259 advertisement leaf; Supplement 1780 - Latin title English title pp 8 120 octavo a little age-toning with a small marginal piece missing from page 8/9 and very slight damage to the next page also otherwise remarkably clean and firm a later binding of red cloth perhaps early twentieth century a good sound copy of a scarce and important work. Our copy includes both Latin title pages which are oftern missing; it also has the extra advertisement leaf also uncommon. BLANCHE HENREY 1483 - "Weston appears to have had an excellent knowledge of nursery gardening and nurseryman's sales catalogues. He was interested in agricultutr and all forms of horticulture and he also made a study of horticultural and botanical literature." HUNT LIBRARY 647 - "This in its time was a standard handbook used by botanists gardeners nurseries seedsmen. It lists trees and shrubs herbaceous plants greenhouse plants stove plants and seeds according to their Linnaean binomial and English names." . First Edition. Cloth. Very Good. Printed for the author Hardcover
1910R300022806LIBRAIRIE AGRICOLE DE LA MAISON RUSTIQUE. 1910. In-4. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 588 pages illustrées de gravures dans le texte et de 24 crhomolithographies munies de leur serpentes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
1903R300022803LIBRAIRIE AGRICOLE DE LA MAISON RUSTIQUE. 1903. In-4. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Quelques rousseurs. 588 pages illustrées de gravures dans le texte et de 24 chromolithographies munies de leur serpentes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
1905R300022804LIBRAIRIE AGRICOLE DE LA MAISON RUSTIQUE. 1905. In-4. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 588 pages illustrées de gravures dans le texte et de 24 chromolithographies munies de leur serpentes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
1906R300022805LIBRAIRIE AGRICOLE DE LA MAISON RUSTIQUE. 1906. In-4. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Quelques rousseurs. 588 pages illustrées de gravures dans le texte et de 24 chromolithographies munies de leur serpentes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
1910R300022807LIBRAIRIE AGRICOLE DE LA MAISON RUSTIQUE. 1910. In-4. Relié. Etat d'usage, Coins frottés, Dos frotté, Pliures. 588 pages illustrées de gravures dans le texte et de 24 chromolithographies munies de leur serpentes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
1912R300022808LIBRAIRIE AGRICOLE DE LA MAISON RUSTIQUE. 1912. In-4. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Quelques rousseurs. 588 pages illustrées de gravures dans le texte et de 24 chromolithographies munies de leur serpentes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
1913R300022809LIBRAIRIE AGRICOLE DE LA MAISON RUSTIQUE. 1913. In-4. Relié. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Rousseurs. 588 pages illustrées de gravures dans le texte et de 24 chromolithographies munies de leur serpentes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
68817Liège, éd. Ecole Professionnelle, rue des wallons 59, 1938, EDITION ORIGINALE, sans grand papier, in-8, demi-toilé "brique", plats papier marbré "cailloux" multicolor avec dominante rose, auteur et titre dorés sur papier blanc collé sur dos lisse, reliure contemporaine, VI - 416 pp., 92 photos en noir hors texte et 114 figures en noir in texte, avant-propos de l'auteur écrit le 15 novembre 1938, index alphabétique des espèces citées, addenda, bibliographie, table des matières, L'auteur (1873 - 1963) fut conservateur du Jardin Botanique de l'Université de Liège en Belgique, rédacteur en chef du Bulletin Horticole, ancien directeur de l'Ecole d'Horticulture de Liège. Tout le monde connaît et a déjà vu des bégonias mais savez-vous qu'il en existe plus de 1800 espèces dont les principales viennent d'Asie et que LE GRAND SPECIALISTE est belge et s'apelle Charles Chevalier !! Ce livre est une véritable légende, tout le monde le connaît mais personne ne l'a jamais eu en main !!! N'hésitez plus ! d'une GRANDE RARETE. Très bon état de la reliure et du papier, les bords des pages sont légèrement défraîchie,
191218038Paris Charles Amat 1912 -in-8 broché un volume, broché grand in-octavo (paperback in-octavo), dos blanc (white spine) imprimé en rose et vert, première de couverture illustrée en rose et vet par P. Séguin-Bertault et imprimée en rose (front cover illustrated and printed), quatrième de couverture illustrée en vert (back cover illustrated), toutes tranches non-rognées (all no smooth edges) non-coupé, orné de Photographies et gravures in et hors-texte en noir + 18 planches de roses en couleurs (16 en cromolithographies, 2 en sanguine ) par P. Séguin-Bertault (dont 3 par Guillot), 236 pages, 1912 Paris : Charles Amat, libraire-Editeur,
72612Paris, éd. Audot (éditeur du "Bon jardinier"), 1844 - 1845 (du 1er mars 1844 au 20 février1845), tête de collection (du n° 1, première année au n° 36), in-4, demi veau brun foncé, plats papier marbré dans les roses foncé, filets, tomaison (1) et titre dorés sur dos lisse, reliure d'époque, 8 pp. par numéro, mensuel, ill. par une belle gravure "encadrement" sur chaque numéro et de nb. gravures in-texte, sommaire pour chaque numéro, table alphabétique et liste des figures en fin de volume, Alexandre Isabeau (1793 - 1873) fut un médecin, agronome, hygiéniste et homme de lettre, membre de la Société Royale d'horticulture. Il fut aussi professeur d'histoire naturelle. Il compte 34 ouvrage à son actif. Notre exemplaire regroupe les 36 premiers numéros de cette revue qui concerne l'ensemble des activités d'une ferme, culture et élevage, ainsi que l'élaboration de jardin potager et floral. Chaque revue parle également du moyen de bien tenir sa maison. Bien complet, en fin de volume, de la liste des gravures et de l'index des sujets traités dans ces 36 numéros. Il semblerait que l'expérience éditoriale s'est arrétée après ces 36 nuùéros ! D'après mes recherches, cette revue est Très RARE et surtout reliée de cette façon ! Très bon état, tant de la reliure que du papier.
19116267BBKöln, Hermann Schaffstein, (1911). Quer-4°. 25 Bl. Mit 16 chromolithogr. Tafeln von Ernst Kreidolf. Chromolithogr. Orig.-Halbleinenband + Wichtig: Für unsere Kunden in der EU erfolgt der Versand alle 14 Tage verzollt ab Deutschland / Postbank-Konto in Deutschland vorhanden +, 6267BB|6267BB_2|6267BB_3 [3 Warenabbildungen]