The John Day Company. 1939. In-8. Relié. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos fané, Intérieur acceptable. 372 pages. Tranche de tête verte. Dos insolé. Plats très légèrement tachés. Jaquette manquante.. . . . Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
Reference : RO60111103
1st edition. Novel. Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
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Crepin Leblond. Octobre 2000. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 102 pages. Nombreuses illustrations en couleurs dans et hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 355.8-Armes
Sommaire : L'affaire Smith et Wesson (2e partie) par Olivier Achard, GC 27 Luxe et Soft Gomm de la SAPL : l'art de concilier les loisirs avec la sécurité par Jean Louis Courtois, Les armes du film The Patriot : les chemins de la liberté par Didier Bianchi, Le revolver Smith et Wesson Classic DX en .44 Magnum par Doc O'Meara Classification Dewey : 355.8-Armes
Reference : albfaba3bae17d85466
L. I. Pisarev Essays from the History of the Christian Doctrine of the Patriotic Period: The Age of the Apostolic Husbands (I and the Beginning of the Second Century) In Russian /Pisarev L. I. Ocherki iz istorii khristianskogo veroucheniya patristicheskogo perioda. Vek muzhey apostolskikh ( I i nachalo IIv.) St. Petersburg Publishing House of Oleg Abyshko 2009. We have thousands of titles and often several copies of each title may be available. Please feel free to contact us for a detailed description of the copies available. SKUalbfaba3bae17d85466.
London, J. Harris, St. Paul’s Chruch-Yard, 1823, sm. in-8vo, 1 engraved title to ‘William Tell’ + 252 p. (printed general-title for both works included) + 11 engraved plates, ex libris recent, recent h.-leather binding.
William Tell page 1 upto 120, illustrated with engraved title + 5 engraved plates with 2 engravings to each plate / The Tyrolese p. 121 upto 252 illustrated with 6 plates, each with 2 engravings, Interesting fact is that Andreas Hofer has 3 different dates of his life in this book. 1) born 22. nov. 1767 - died 21 febr. 1810 / 2) born 1767. died 24 febr. 1810 / 3) born 29 nov. 1769 died 26 febr. 1810. and an other question is ‘New edition’ is for his (A. Hofer’s) work or for both?. This edition not as such in Helveticat. cf. Quel Tell? (Payot1973) p. 161.
Phone number : 41 (0)26 3223808
(No place but Hamburg, no printer), 1724 - 1726. 4to. In contemporary full calf with four raised bands and gilt lettering to spine. Light wear to extremities. A few leaves closely trimmed slightly touching text, but generally nice and clean. 321 ff. (No. 1 - 156. All that was published).
Exceedingly rare first edition, fully complete, of the famous Hamburg-journal “Der Patriot” – it was the most significant German weekly journal at the beginning of the 18th century and served as an important platform for the emerging Enlightenment. It was published weekly in Hamburg from 1724 to 1726. Due to its popularity it saw four reprints until 1765 and was also translated into Dutch and French. The genre of moral weeklies was inspired by English periodicals, particularly the highly successful publications edited and written by Joseph Addison and Richard Steele, which appeared three times a week or even daily (The Tatler, The Guardian, and The Spectator). Unlike some other German moral weeklies, Der Patriot had an independent editorial team that did not simply translate English counterparts but instead selected and developed its own topics. Many German scholars and writers contributed to Der Patriot, but all published their articles under pseudonyms. Their true identities were not revealed until three years after the last issue was published. “In the course of the seventeenth and especially the eighteenth centuries, Hamburg’s press evolved from a mere supplier of information to a vehicle of public opinion. During the first half of the eighteenth century, Hamburg’s growing print culture was closely connected to the development of the city’s enlightened reform movement, embodied in the first Patriotic Society (1724–1726). For example, Hamburg’s own moral weekly, Der Patriot, a product of the Patriotic Society, informs both the rise of periodical press and the spread of enlightened ideals. Modeled on British periodicals, The Tatler and The Spectator, Der Patriot contained instructive essays on a variety of subjects, generally articulating middle-class norms and values. By appealing to a wide audience and disseminating useful knowledge and enlightened philosophy, such journals aimed to reorient the reader’s moral outlook and lifestyle, in particular to raise the intellectual and moral standards of its readers. Hamburg’s Der Patriot ran from 1724 until 1726, and was so popular that it was published in book form several times between 1728 and 1765. It was the most influential of the German moral weeklies. Der Patriot, seeking to enlighten and influence the morals of its readers, set itself in direct competition with the church. Aiming to “root out or at least expose all ridiculous or dangerous actions, mistakes, abuses and harmful habits through the orderly use of human reason,” Der Patriot's elevation of reason over faith angered Hamburg’s strong orthodox Lutheran church, which initiated a “pamphlet war” denouncing the journal. Der Patriot found both a multitude of detractors and supporters" roughly thirty-five pamphlets against and twenty-one in favor of the periodical appeared. This ‘battle of the pens’ certainly encouraged popular interest in Der Patriot and caused the publisher to print six thousand copies instead of the four hundred initially planned, reflecting both an expanding readership and growing popular interest in Enlightenment tenets. Der Patriot, furthermore, reflects the republic’s civic morality as it strove to promote the common good. If its attitude toward Hamburg’s governance was generally positive, it openly presented concrete proposals for improvement in the republic as well as the dangers of extravagance and excess, the loss of civic-mindedness, and political apathy. Indeed, Der Patriot asserted both the right and the duty of Hamburgers to speak out on any question regarding the welfare of their city-state.” (Aaslestad, Place and Politics).