Samadet, chez l'auteur, sans date, in-8 broche, 263 pp. TRES BON ETAT.
Reference : 9829
LE SERPENT QUI PENSE
M. ERIC BIBAULT
06 34 99 23 95
CONDITIONS DE VENTE conformes aux usages de la librairie ancienne et moderne. Retours acceptés après accord préalable. Pas de supplément de frais de port à partir du 2e livre commandé (une même commande). FRAIS DE PORT : FRANCE : à partir de 4 € (tarif ajusté en fonction du poids des livres), de 4 € à 7€ pour les envois en tarif lettre/écopli. Gros livres expédiés en colissimo (tarif en fonction du poids) ou, de préférence, en Mondial Relais (plus économique). FRAIS DE PORT : ETRANGER : en général 4€ (Europe), 5-6 € (autres pays), tarif économique, néanmoins assez rapide, le tarif est ajusté en fonction du poids des ouvrages et de la destination. Expédition par mondial relais pour les colis lourds (Europe). - Expédition rapide après réception du règlement. Paiement par CHEQUE bancaire ou postal (payable en France uniquement), par VIREMENT bancaire ou par PayPal. - Tous nos livres sont contrôlés et nettoyés. Tout défaut est signalé. Retour offert en cas d'erreur de la librairie.
Budapest Archaeolingua 1999
Hardback book. No dust jacket, so as was produced. Proceedings of the International Archaeological Conference 1996, which took place at the 'Matrica' Museum in Százhalombatta (Hungary). In both English and German text, on high gloss paper. 488 pages. Good clean condition, both inside and out. This work is a wide range of papers, with various information and interpretations; its aim to transcend the limits of traditional archaeology.
CONSEIL INTERNATIONAL DU SPORT MILITAIRE - INTERNATIONAL MILITARY SPORTS COUNCIL
Reference : 27955
(1957)
1957 1957; CONSEIL INTERNATIONAL DU SPORT MILITAIRE - INTERNATIONAL MILITARY SPORTS COUNCIL,in4 broché,60p.trés illustré,rare
CISMLe Conseil International du Sport Militaire, en abrege CISM, est une association sportive internationale constituee des Forces Armees des nations admises par son Assemblee Generale. Le CISM est ouvert a toutes les Forces Armees des nations reconnues officiellement par les Nations Unies. Le but fondamental du CISM est de promouvoir l’education physique et les activites sportives entre Forces Armees comme moyen de favoriser la paix dans le monde. La devise du CISM, « L’AMITIE PAR LE SPORT », temoigne de cet ideal. Remise de 20% pour toutes commandes égales ou supérieures à 200 €
High Holborn, for the Council by Edward Truelove, 1871. Small 8vo. Near contemporary quarter cloth with silver lettering to front board. Binding with signs of use, but overall good. One closed marginal tear and title-page with a few brownspots, otherwise very nice and clean. 35 pp.
Exceedingly rare first edition (with the names of Lucraft and Odger still present under ""The General Council"") of one of Marx' most important works, his seminal defense of the Paris Commune and exposition of the struggle of the Communards, written for all proletarians of the world. While living in London, Marx had joined the International Working Men's Association in 1864 - ""a society founded largely by members of Britain's growing trade unions and designed to foster international working class solidarity and mutual assistance. Marx accepted the International's invitation to represent Germany and became the most active member of its governing General Council, which met every Tuesday evening, first at 18 Greek Street in Soho and later in Holborn. In this role, Marx had his first sustained contact with the British working class and wrote some of his most memorable works, notably ""The Civil War in France"". A polemical response to the destruction of the Paris Commune by the French government in 1871, it brought Marx notoriety in London as 'the red terror doctor', a reputation that helped ensure the rejection of his application for British citizenship several years later. Despite his considerable influence within the International, it was never ideologically homogenous... (homas C. Jones: ""Karl Marx' London"").The work was highly controversial, but extremely influential. Even though most of the Council members of the International sanctioned the Address, it caused a rift internally, and some of the English members of the General Council were enraged to be seen to endorse it. Thus, for the second printing of the work, the names of Lucraft and Odger, who had now withdrawn from the Council, were removed from the list of members of ""The General Council"" at the end of the pamphlet. ""[Marx] defended the Commune in a bitterly eloquent pamphlet, ""The Civil War in France"", whose immediate effect was further to identify the International with the Commune, by then in such wide disrepute that some of the English members of the General Council refused to endorse it."" (Saul K. Padover, preface to Vol. II of the Karl Marx Library, pp. XLVII-XLVIII).""Written by Karl Marx as an address to the General Council of the International, with the aim of distributing to workers of all countries a clear understanding of the character and world-wide significance of the heroic struggle of the Communards and their historical experience to learn from. The book was widely circulated by 1872 it was translated into several languages and published throughout Europe and the United States."" (The Karl Marx Archive)Marx concluded ""The Civil War in France"" with these impassioned words, which were to resound with workers all over the world: ""Working men's Paris, with its Commune, will be forever celebrated as the glorious harbinger of a new society. Its martyrs are enshrined in the great heart of the working class. Its exterminators history has already nailed to that eternal pillory from which all the prayers of their priests will not avail to redeem them.""The address, which was delivered on May 30, 1871, two days after the defeat of the Paris Commune, was to have an astounding effect on working men all over the world and on the organization of power of the proletarians. It appeared in three editions in 1871, was almost immediately translated into numerous languages and is now considered one of the most important works that Marx ever wrote. "" ""The Civil War in France"", one of Marx's most important works, was written as an address by the General Council of the International to all Association members in Europe and the United States.From the earliest days of the Paris Commune Marx made a point of collecting and studying all available information about its activities. He made clippings from all available French, English and German newspapers of the time. Newspapers from Paris reached London with great difficulty. Marx had at his disposal only individual issues of Paris newspapers that supported the Commune. He had to use English and French bourgeois newspapers published in London, including ones of Bonapartist leanings, but succeeded in giving an objective picture of the developments in Paris. ...Marx also drew valuable information from the letters of active participants and prominent figures of the Paris Commune, such as Leo Frankel, Eugene Varlin, Auguste Serraillier, Yelisaveta Tornanovskaya, as well as from the letters of Paul Lafargue, Pyotr Lavrov and others.Originally he intended to write an address to the workers of Paris, as he declared at the meeting of the General Council on March 28, 1871. His motion was unanimously approved. The further developments in Paris led him, however, to the conclusion that an appeal should be addressed to proletarians of the world. At the General Council meeting on April 18, Marx suggested to issue ""an address to the International generally about the general tendency of the struggle."" Marx was entrusted with drafting the address. He started his work after April 18 and continued throughout May. Originally he wrote the First and Second drafts of ""The Civil War in France"" as preparatory variants for the work, and then set about making up the final text of the address.He did most of the work on the First and Second drafts and the final version roughly between May 6 and 30. On May 30, 1871, two days after the last barricade had fallen in Paris, the General Council unanimously approved the text of ""The Civil War in France"", which Marx had read out.""The Civil War in France"" was first published in London on about June 13, 1871 in English, as a pamphlet of 35 pages in 1,000 copies. Since the first edition quickly sold out, the second English edition of 2,000 copies was published at a lower price, for sale to workers. In this edition [i.e., MECW], Marx corrected some of the misprints occurring in the first edition, and the section ""Notes"" was supplemented with another document. Changes were made in the list of General Council members who signed the Address: the names of Lucraft and Odger were deleted, as they had expressed disagreement with the Address in the bourgeois press and had withdrawn from the General Council, and the names of the new members of the General Council were added. In August 1871, the third English edition of ""The Civil War in France"" came out, in which Marx eliminated the inaccuracies of the previous editions.In 1871-72, ""The Civil War"" in France was translated into French, German, Russian, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Flemish, Serbo-Croat, Danish and Polish, and published in the periodical press and as separate pamphlets in various European countries and the USA. It was repeatedly published in subsequent years....In 1891, when preparing a jubilee German edition of ""The Civil War in France"" to mark the 20th anniversary of the Paris Commune, Engels once again edited the text of his translation. He also wrote an introduction to this edition, emphasising the historical significance of the experience of the Paris Commune, and its theoretical generalisation by Marx in ""The Civil War in France"", and also giving additional information on the activities of the Communards from among the Blanquists and Proudhonists. Engels included in this edition the First and Second addresses of the General Council of the International Working Men's Association on the Franco-Prussian war, which were published in subsequent editions in different languages also together with ""The Civil War France"". (Notes on the Publication of ""The Civil War in France"" from MECW Volume 22). Only very few copies of the book from 1871 on OCLC are not explicitly stated to be 2nd or 3rd editions, and we have not been able to find a single copy for sale at auctions within the last 50 years.
, 1883-1934, , sept volumes grand in-4 ; six volumes in-8 ; 2 tirages (1 gélatino-argentique d'époque, une carte de visite albuminée), Brochés, Ensemble très intéressant de rapports détaillant les méthodes et les observations métrologiques de René Benoît, couvrant toute sa carrière du directeur du Bureau International des Poids et Mesures. Envois de l'auteur en couverture de deux ouvrages. Nous joignons deux photographies de ce savant, figure de premier plan du monde scientifique, dont les recherches renvoient aux origines de la métrologie moderne. Sept volumes grand in-4 brochés, couvertures de l'époque : tirés à part des Travaux et Mémoires du Bureau International des Poids et Mesures ou émanant du Comité International des Poids et Mesures, soit : - Mesures de dilatation et comparaison des règles métriques. Tiré à part extrait de la 1ere partie du second tome des Travaux et Mémoires... Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1883. 174 pages (numérotées C.1-C.174), 67 pages d'Observations en annexe (numérotées C.I à C. LXXVII) et 3 planches figurant un comparateur à dilatation. Envoi de l'auteur à M. Pottier en couverture. - Rapport sur la construction, les comparaisons et les autres opérations ayant servi à déterminer les équations des nouveaux prototypes métriques. Tiré à part extrait de la Conférence générale des poids et mesures de septembre 1889. Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1889. 132 pages. Hommage de l'auteur à un membre de l'Institut dont le nom a été gratté. Exemplaire en partie non coupé. - Étude des mètres prototypes [et ] Mètres prototypes et étalons. Deuxième mémoire. Par J.-René Benoît et M. Ch.-Ed. Guillaume. Deux tirés à part extraits des tome X et XI des Travaux et Mémoires... Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1894 et 1895. 44-CCCLXVI et 16-LXXXIII pages. Exemplaires non coupés. - Mètres à bouts ; par J.-René Benoît et M. Ch.-Ed. Guillaume. Tiré à part extrait du tome XII des Travaux et Mémoires... Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1901. 30-LXXIII pages. Exemplaire en partie non coupé. - L'étalonnage des séries de poids. Tiré à part extrait du tome XIII des Travaux et Mémoires... Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1907. 47 pages. Exemplaire non coupé. - Note sur la détermination d'étalons millimétriques et centimétriques en longueur d'onde lumineuse. Par J.-René Benoît. Rédigée et présentée par A. Pérard. Tiré à part extrait du tome XIX des Travaux et Mémoires... (Paris, 1934). Cinq volumes in-8 broché, sous couvertures imprimées de l'époque ou sous couvertures muettes modernes, non coupés : Rapports présentés au Comité International des Poids et Mesures sur la gestion du Bureau International (tirés à part, extraits des Procès verbaux des séances du Comité international) : - Pendant l'exercice 1900-1901. 37 pages. - Pendant l'exercice 1902-1903. 78 pages. - Pendant l'exercice 1903-1904. 65 pages. - Pendant l'exercice 1905-1906. 61 pages. - Pendant l'exercice 1909-1910 et 1910-1911. 53 pages. Benoît et Guillaume. Les nouveaux appareils pour la mesure rapide des bases géodésiques. Cinquième édition. Paris, Gauthier-Villars et fils, 1917. In-8 broché, couverture imprimée de l'éditeur. 285 pages. Ouvrage paru à l'origine dans les annexes des Procès-verbaux des séances du comité international des poids et mesures, session de 1905 (Paris, Gauthier-Villars et fils, 1906). Deux épreuves photographiques (une gélatino-argentique d'époque, une carte de visite albuminée) donnant des portraits de René Benoît: - L'une de 108 x 146 mm, contrecollée sur carton fort [180 x 245 mm] à l'adresse de Paul Darby, "photographe des grands magasins de la Place Clichy" : mention manuscrite au revers donnant l'identité du personnage, Jean-René Benoît, et la date de la prise de vue, décembre 1905. - L'autre de 68 x 103 mm, contrecollée sur carte de visite à l'adresse du photographe F. Cairol, 19 grand' rue des étuves, 4 entrée du Masanne, à Couverture rigide
Bon sept volumes grand in-4 ; six
[Geological International Congress] - Geological Survey of Finland ; Geological International Congress - Congrès Géologique International
Reference : 36227
(1980)
1 vol. 4to. softcover, b&w maps, Geological Survey of Finland , Geological International Congress - Congrès Géologique International, Paris, 1980, 214 pp.
Nice copy