PRESSES INTERNATIONALES. 1963. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Coins frottés, Dos plié, Quelques rousseurs. 185 pages - Quelques photographies en noir et blanc hors texte - 2 photos disponibles. . . . Classification Dewey : 843.0872-Le roman policier
Reference : R160201394
"Collection "" Inter Espion Choc "" - Traduit de l'anglais par J. Hall Classification Dewey : 843.0872-Le roman policier"
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Mainz, Bln., Kupferberg, 1966.
40,(7) p. 16 plates. Cloth 27 cm (Including dustjacket)
Paris, Masson & cie, 1960. Seconde édition. Un fort volume de presque 2 kilos. Imprimé sur papier couché, reliure éditeur plein tissu beige à la Bradel, nom d'auteur, titre et éditeur au plat de couverture et au dos. In-8, 25 x 17,5 cm, (viii) 770 pp. Tranchefile. Avec 675 figures plus XIII planches d'un projet de classification en fin d'ouvrage. Bibliographie d'une trentaine de pages. Illustré par Mme Nabias et M. Izard. Chapitres : Technique radiographique, L'image radiographique normale du rhinopharynx, Les tumeurs malignes du rhinopharynx, L'image radiographique normale du larynx, de l'oro-pharynx et de l'hypopharynx, L'ossification et la calcification du larynx normal, etc. Quelques défauts superficiels au dos et aux plats, menues rousseurs aux toutes premières et dernières pages ainsi qu'aux tranches. Marges jaunies, à part ça intérieur frais. Bien complet.
Ouvrage de référence sur les tumeurs du larynx et du pharynx qui fera honneur à la bibliothèque de tous les oncologues ou de quiconque s'intéresse à ce genre de tumeur.
Paris, G. Steinheil, 1903. Seule et unique édition. Rare. In-4, 25 x 17 cm pour 247 pp. Relié demi-cuir caramel lisse à coins. Dos à 5 nerfs, deux pièces de titre noir avec nom d'auteur et titre en doré et filets dorés. Fleurons dorés. Plats orangés marbrés sur les couvertures, gardes marbrées orangées. Portrait de l'auteur en frontispice. Table des matières en début d'ouvrage. Quelques figures, deux planches couleur. 19 chapitres. Bibliographie en fin d'ouvrage.
Charnières frottées, dos un peu vieilli, premières pages légèrement jaunies et roussies, sans perte au frontispice, trace de réparation à la page du sommaire, à part ça intérieur remarquablement préservé. Il ne s'agit pas d'un livre de bibliothèque.
Lucjan Paff (edited and translated by), Józef Piłsudski (signed by)
Reference : 517
(1945)
This is a set which belonged to Janusz Gluchowski, a high-ranking Polish military officer at the time of the WW2. The set contains three original B&W pictures. First one: undated postcard showing Marshal Jozef Pilsudski, signed by himself in black ink, 8.5 x 13.5 cm, with two embossed mentions above and below. Second picture: undated postcard showing Poland President Gabriel Narutowicz, with a written mention on the back. Third picture: 11 x 15.5 cm photograph. General Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski inspecting a British Cromwell tank, accompanied by Polish officers of the 3rd Armored Regiment (3 puk pancerny). The image was captured during an official ceremony in the city of Kelso, Scotland, in the immediate post-war period, on June 15, 1945. The scene shows the General in an observation position, climbing onto the tank while surrounded by Polish soldiers. The tank corresponds to a British model widely used by Polish forces in exile during the Western European campaign. On the reverse, the following handwritten inscriptions appear: VI 1945, Kelso. N. Wódz gen. Bór-Komorowski dokonuje inspekcji 3 p. panc. N. Wódz w towarzystwie bryg. puku na czogu." / June 15, 1945, Kelso The book is an illustrated three-languages (Polish, English and Italian) set commemorating the struggles of the Polish II Corps. Edited by Wyda Rererat [Referat] Kultury i Prasy Kresowej Dywizji Piechoty in Rome, 1945. Oblong book of 21 x 19 cm, unpaginated (144 pp.). Cover detached. Endpapers and first page show Janusz Gluchowski's stamp. In publisher's photographically illustrated wrappers. Each page contains a photographic image or a photomontage accompanied with a short text in three languages. Front cover shows some wear and tear, the binding is a bit loose - we would advise having this book bound. The Polish II Corps was a major tactical and operational unit recruited from Polish deportees in the Soviet Gulags in 1943. First they fought in the Middle East, and in 1944 February they were transferred to Italy and as independent part of the British Army to fight in the Italian campaign, in the battles of Monte Cassino and Ancona and also the Battle of Bologna during the final offensive in Italy in 1945. The book goes through the story of Poland and the later established Polish II Corps, starting with the German and Soviet occupation in 1939. It shows the deportation of Poles to forced labour to the Gulag and, after the Polish-Russian Military Agreement in 1941, the establishment of the Polish Army on Soviet soil, also their military training and their fights in various battles. Janusz Julian Gluchowski was a Major General in the Polish Army during the Second Polish Republic. He was born on August 6, 1888, in Bukowa. He fought in the Polish Legions in World War I, the Polish-Ukrainian War, the Polish-Soviet War, and the invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany, Slovakia, and the Soviet Union in 1939, which culminated in the start of World War II. In his adolescence, he attended high school in Czstochowa. In 1905, he became a member of the Combat Organization of the Polish Socialist Party and was wounded in the hand during an attack near Czstochowa. To avoid arrest by the Russian authorities, he left for Belgium, where he studied at the University of Liège. He returned to divided Poland around 1910 and settled in Austrian Galicia. In 1912 he graduated from the Officers' School of the Riflemen's Association in Stroza, near Krakow. In the early hours of August 1914, he commanded a platoon in Oleandria and was Wadysaw Belina-Pramowski's representative during the legendary attack of the so-called Seven Lancers of Belina (Uaska siódemka). On August 6th, together with the First Cadre Company, he left Krakow and marched to Miechów. In October 1914 he was promoted to Lieutenant (Poruchik) and, in November 1916, to Rittmeister (Cavalry Master). Until 1917 he served in the First Uhlan Regiment of the Polish Legions. After the Oath Crisis (Kryzys przysigowy) he was interned first in Fort Beniaminów and later in Werl. Released in October 1918, he went to Lublin, where, in early November, he formed the Third Ulan Regiment (later renamed the Seventh Ulan Regiment of Lublin). Along with his unit, he fought in the Polish-Soviet War. On May 29, 1920, he was promoted to Polkovnik. He was transferred in July 1920 to Eastern Galicia, taking command of the First Cavalry Brigade, fighting against the Soviets in Galicia and Volhynia. After the war, he remained in this position until 1925, when he was transferred to the Fourth Cavalry Brigade. Promoted to Brigadier General on March 16, 1927. Appointed commander of the Center for Higher Military Studies on June 4, 1930, and three years later, after the death of General Stanislaw Tessaro, he was appointed commander of Military District X in Przemyl. In October 1935, he became Deputy Minister of Military Affairs. In the early days of the 1939 invasion of Poland, Gluchowski ordered General Walerian Czuma to prepare the defense of Warsaw. In mid-September 1939, he fled to Romania. After his escape, he managed to travel to the Middle East and, in January 1941, received orders to go to London. In October 1941, he was appointed Commander of the Training Brigade stationed in Scotland. On September 23, 1943, he was appointed commander of all Polish Army units stationed in Great Britain, except the First Independent Parachute Brigade, which remained under the authority of the Commander-in-Chief. He was promoted to Major General on June 1, 1945. He decided not to return to Soviet-occupied Poland and remained in Great Britain. He frequently criticized the Soviet regime and the Soviet occupation authorities in postwar Poland. Furthermore, he was one of the founders and president of the Jozef Pilsudski Institute in London. He was, therefore, an active member of the Polish community in Great Britain. He was president and honorary member of several Polish veterans' organizations. He died on June 11, 1964, in London, England.
An incredible set. Hold some high Polish history between your hands!
Casablanca éditions Atlantides 1951, pt in-8, 267 pages, un frontispice photo et un feuillet de 3 cartes rempliéHT.. Demi basane fauve bigarrée (Farairre), plats de la couverture conservés..(CXXIII)-(200 gr).
Selon la description du colonel Léopold Justinard dans son livre « Un grand chef berbère, le caïd Goundafi », Taïeb el Goundafi était discret et sobre contrairement à son rival Mtougui qui était très voyant. Madani El Glaoui était très calme et plein de bonnes sagesses.