12 557 résultats
PR121665Printed coulored coat of arms Portielje. Size 135 x 120 mm. In good condition light visibility of glue on the back of the print on the top left and right. unknown
PR121664Printed coulored coat of arms Prince. Size 135 x 120 mm. In good condition light visibility of glue on the back of the print on the top left and right. unknown
26701, Nancy, Claude Leseure 1775, in-12, br. provisoire, (lég. fané), 51p.
br. provisoire, (lég. fané)
1988140164Adelaide: The Author in co-operation with the Ragless Reunion Committee 1988. First Edition. Hardcover. Fine. Adelaide The Author in co-operation with the Ragless Reunion Committee 1988. Large quarto 339 pages with numerous maps and illustrations many from photographs. Colour-pictorial papered boards; a fine copy. This copy comes with a Lutheran Publishing House 'award winning book' wraparound. The Author, in co-operation with the Ragless Reunion Committee hardcover
1988144159Adelaide: The Author in co-operation with the Ragless Reunion Committee 1988. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Adelaide The Author in co-operation with the Ragless Reunion Committee 1988. Large quarto 339 pages with numerous maps and illustrations many from photographs. Laminated colour-pictorial papered boards lightly sunned on the spine and along the top edge of the front cover; an excellent copy. The Author, in co-operation with the Ragless Reunion Committee hardcover
1984119713Éditions Le Jas, n° 93 1984 In-8 broché 22,7 cm sur 18. 115 pages. Illustrations en noir et blanc in-texte. Bon état d’occasion.
54659, France, P.U.F. 1992, in-8, br., bon état, 154p.
1871List3241Rhode Island Massachusetts and New York 1871. Thirty-two letters two apparently missing final pages; with fifteen pages of incomplete letter material. Excellent to Near Fine. Letters from some of the young ladies of the Hazard family primarily Gertrude Minturn 1843–1877 Anna Peace 1845–1868 and Esther Robinson 1848–d. Hazard with some from other family and friends. The family was descended from Thomas Hazard one of the founding settlers of Newport Rhode Island.1<br /> <br /> The girls were educated and often write from school; Anna and Esther attend the ‘Friends School’ in Providence which is probably the Moses Brown School and Gertrude attends Dr. Dio Lewis’s School for Young Ladies in Lexington Massachusetts. Founded by Diocletian Lewis a temperance and physical culture advocate the school incorporated his exercise system developed to condition weaker individuals. Gertrude describes a regimen of thirty minutes of walking plus an hour and a half of exercise and discusses Dr. Lewis:<br /> <br /> “Dr Lewis gives familiar lectures on any subject which the scholars propose. He is a very pleasant genial man and takes part in the games & dancing with the greatest spirit. There are about 20 scholars. Some of them board in the village but are subject to the rules of the school. This building is very large and is mostly occupied by the patients of Dr Lewis’ ‘Movement Cures’ to whom most of his time is devoted. The scholars and patients associate together. Indeed we are under very little constraint the teachers leaving our actions to be regulated by our own sense of propriety; and they seldom find occasion to reprove the scholars for misdemeanors.†November 23 1864<br /> <br /> Meanwhile Anna and Esther’s education is more on the religious side; Esther writes:<br /> <br /> “We have not been to meeting very often since we returned from our lovely visit to Newport but the first Sunday morning I did think all the time of it as I said I was going to. We were edified this morning by a sermon from Elizabeth Meader or rather a torrent of noise so that I am nearly deafened now. I don’t think I ever heard a more horrible combination of sounds from the mouth of any human being.†January 8 1865<br /> <br /> Though speaking in tongues is most strongly associated with Pentecostalism it is not unheard of in Quakerism. In his book of genealogy and reflections the girls’ father Thomas Hazard 1797–1886 connects the family’s “strong religious tendencies†to his own interest in spiritualism.2 This interest in mediumship comes up several times in the letters first in 1864 when one of the girls reports that “Pa writes us that at a circle which he attended a few days ago a clairvoyant medium described our house at Vaucluse perfectly†February 24 1864 and later when one of the girls attends a circle with their father in Philadelphia:<br /> <br /> “Yesterday morning Pa & I had a sitting with a Mrs. Robinson a trance speaking medium. The communication from mother was the most beautiful I ever heard. She spoke to us just as she used to on earth using the same expressions. It seemed as if I could almost see her – we are going again on Monday.†February 8 1867<br /> <br /> That is the pair spoke to Frances Minturn Hazard who had died in 1854.<br /> <br /> Of interest to researchers of the Hazard family and Rhode Island Quakers.<br /> <br /> 1 Caroline Elizabeth Robinson The Hazard Family of Rhode Island 1635–1894 Printed for the Author 1896.<br /> 2 Thomas R. Hazard Recollections of Olden Times Sanborn 1879 228. unknown
1855List3242Newport Rhode Island: N.p. 1855. Broadside measuring 21 ¾ x 10 inches folded with some damage to edges with two holes in the center intersecting with text. Very good to excellent. A HAP-HAZARD SONG was written around 1855 by an author using the pseudonym “Miss Terious Devil-up-mentsâ€. It concerns the legal cases of Ives vs. Hazard and Ives vs. Armstrong which involved a dispute over the sale of a farm belonging to Charles T. Hazard a less well-off cousin in the prominent Hazard family. Hazard assisted by his better-known cousin Thomas R. Hazard wanted to back out of the sale of his farm to wealthy Providence merchant Robert H. Ives claiming that his wife had not agreed to it. In 1855 the court decided against Hazard. The broadside mocks the Hazards’ efforts; it opens by telling the story of an “insane jackass†later “Assard†i.e. Hazard who is stung to death by bees and has its hide used to bind Thomas Hazard’s 1857 book concerning the case An Appeal to the People of the State of Rhode Island in Behalf of the Constitution and Laws. It then launches into a parodical song which seems to allege that it was Thomas Hazard not Mrs. Charles Hazard who wanted to keep the farm and that Hazard’s book accused Ives of greed when it was really the Hazards who were greedy; and mocks the opposition to farmland being sold off to the wealthy merchant class:<br /> <br /> “Then they made tremendous speeches / All about ‘the rights of man’ / Which literally translated means / ‘Each one get all you can!’â€<br /> <br /> The chorus which is “to be sung ironically†reads:<br /> <br /> “Ho! Yeomen of Rhode Island / Wherever you may stand / The farms belong to all of us / It is our Native Land.â€<br /> <br /> We find nine copies of A HAP-HAZARD SONG on OCLC. N.p. unknown
ZZ90460-007Original preparatory drawing ontwerptekening of the coat of arms of the Riel family. Size 200 x 130 mm. In handwritten text underneath by the designer: uitgevoerd voor J.M. Riel architect Den Haag. unknown
ZZ90460-008Original preparatory drawing ontwerptekening of the coat of arms of the Rietstap family. Size 192 x 175 mm. unknown
ZZ90460-054Original preparatory drawing ontwerptekening of the coat of arms of the Rijckman/Ryckman family. Size 160 x 130 mm.Together with printed coloured coat of arms of Ryckman de size 110 x 120 mm. unknown
ZZ90460-113Original preparatory drawing ontwerptekening of the coat of arms of the Rijpkamal family. Size 150 x 125 mm. With the text: Riemer Rijpkama Bijsitter van Utingera anno 1760. unknown
ZZ90460-053Original preparatory drawing ontwerptekening of the coat of arms of the Rijser family. Size 195 x 130 mm. With the date 1563 on top. unknown
ZZ90460-012Original preparatory drawing ontwerptekening of the coat of arms of the Robertson family. Size 180 x 130 mm. With card with explanory notes. Wapenspreuk: Virtutis gloria merces. unknown
ZZ90460-013Original preparatory drawing ontwerptekening of the coat of arms of the Robijns family. Size 160 x 140 mm. unknown
ZZ90460-104Printed Colored coat of arms Rochussen. Size 130 x 120 mm. unknown
ZZ90460-015Original preparatory drawing ontwerptekening of the coat of arms of the Rochussen family. Size 215 x 255 mm. unknown
ZZ90460-105Printed and drawn design coat of arms Roelans. Size 160 x 110 mm. unknown
ZZ90460-107Printed Coloured coat of arms Roell and Van Gheel Roell. Size 140 x 270 mm. unknown
ZZ90460-108Drawing of coat of arms Roell. Size 250 x 180 mm. unknown
ZZ90460-109Printed coulored coat of arms Roell. Size 130 x 120 mm. unknown
ZZ90460-017Original preparatory drawing ontwerptekening of the coat of arms of the Röell family. Size 190 x 135 mm.NL Röell is een Nederlands regentengeslacht dat afstamt van een gelijknamig Duits adellijk geslacht. Johann von Röell door koop in 1647 heer van Dölberg in Westfalen is stamvader van de Duitse adellijke tak. Vanwege zijn optreden in de Dertigjarige Oorlog werd hij in de Duitse adelstand verheven. unknown
ZZ90460-018Original preparatory drawing ontwerptekening of the coat of arms of the Roest family. Size 190 x 135 mm.Together with the printed coat of arms of Roest van Alkemade. Size: 130 x 140 mm. unknown