1889 PARIS, Plon, E. Plon & Nourrit & cie - 1889 - In-8°, 225 x 135 mm - Portrait en frontispice - (3) ff.-VII-365 pp.-(1) f., 2 ff. de fac-similés - Epitre dédicatoire au comte de Sonnaz - + PARIS, Plon, E. Plon & Nourrit & cie - 1890 - In-8°, 225 x 135 mm - Portrait en frontispice - (3) ff.-VII-587 pp.-(1) f. - Epitre dédicatoire au baron Manno - 2 volumes IN8 demi maroquin,date en pied,editions originales,mouillures claires sur l’ensemble du tome 1, et en partie sup.au tome 2,texte trés lisible,petit billet manuscrit signé en tete du premier volume. rare condition,les 2 volumes complets.
Charles-Albert de Savoie-Carignan (1798-1849), élevé en France et favorable aux idées libérales, devint roi de Sardaigne en 1831, et oeuvra en faveur de l'unification et de l'indépendance de l'Italie ; battu par les Autrichiens en mars 1849, il abdiqua en faveur de son fils Victor-Emmanuel II, s'expatria au Portugal et mourut la même année. Remise de 20% pour toutes commandes égales ou supérieures à 200 €
Philadelphia, Fraklin Institute, 1835. 8vo. Later full green cloth. Tome-and titlelabels in leather with gilt lettering on spine. In: ""Journal of the Franklin Institute of the State of Pennsylvania... Edited by Thomas P. Jones"", Vol. XV. New series. Engraved frontisp. (2),446 pp., 2 folded engraved plates and 2 folded engraved maps. (Entire volume offered). Henry's announcement: pp. 169-70. A stamp to verso of frontispiece (Library of Congress duplicate stamp).
First printing of this importent paper, the first to describe in detail how the phenomena of Self-Induction was discovered. Henry discovered the induction phenomena - how an electric current in one coil may set up a current in the other through the development of the magnetic field - independently of Faraday, but Faraday was first to publish on electromagnetic induction. Henry's experiments with induction led him to his importent discovery of SELF-INDUCTION, which is the phenomenon in which a change in electric current in a coil produces an induced emf in the coil itself. This phenomenon was also discovered inependently by Faraday, but this time Henry had published first. The basic unit of inductance was to be called ""the Henry"". Relevant to the controversy between Faraday and Henry is the following statement by A D Bache, Secretary of the American Philosophical Society introducing an abstract of Henry in J Franklyn Inst. 1835 pp. 169-70 (H. Norman 1053 and the paper offerd): ""A memoir on this subject has been since submitted to the Society, containing an extension of the subject, the primary fact in relation to which was observed by Professor Henry as early as 1832, and announced by him in the American Journal of Science. Mr. Faraday having recently entered upon a similar train of observations, the immediate publication of the accompanying is important, that the prior claims of our fellow countryman may not be overlooked.""(Spark Museum).Magee ""Source Book in Physics"", p. 515.
New Haven, Hezekiah Howe and A.H. Maltby, 1831. 8vo. Contemp. hcalf. Spine gilt, tome-and titlelabels with gilt lettering. Light wear along edgaes and top of spine. In: ""The American Journal of Science and Arts. Conducted by Benjamin Silliman"", Vol. XIX. Engraved frontispiece. VIII,404 pp., 4 engraved plates (1 handcoloured, brownspotted). Henry's paper: pp. 400-408, one textillustr.
First edition of Henry's importent paper in which he described the function and construction of the Albany-Magnet, probably the most powerfull magnet ever constructed (at the time).From his ""experiments Henry discovered that if a cell of a single pair of electrodes is to be used with a given magnet, the magnet should be wound with several coils of wire in parallel"" on the other hand, if a battery of many cells is to be used, the magnet winding should form a single long wire. Henry was the first person to understand this idea. It later became a fundamental basis for much of electrical technology, and, in particular, made Samuel F. B. Morse's telegraph feasible.Applying this principle (together with the valuable but less easily described practical skill in magnet-making he had acquired in the course of his experiments), Henry, with the assistance of a colleague, Philip Ten Eyck, went on to build a 21-pound ""experimental magnet on a large scale."" With a modest battery, this ""Albany magnet"" supported 750 pounds, making it, Henry claimed, ""probably, therefore, the most powerful magnet ever constructed."" Quickly he wrote a paper describing these experiments and his magnet-winding principle, and sent it off to Benjamin Silliman, Professor of Chemistry and Natural History at Yale College and editor of the American Journal of Science, a widely read and influential publication. Silliman readily accepted what he called Henry's ""highly important & interesting paper"" and published it in the issue of January, 1831 (the paper offered)."" (Roger Sherman).
Troadec Henry-Joseph en religion le P. Gonzalve
Reference : ACC2945
ISBN : B0014OLIMK
(London, Richard and John E. Taylor, 1837). No wrappers. Extracted fron ""Scientific Memoirs, selected from The Transactions of Foreign Academies of Science and Learned Societies. Edited by Richard Taylor."", Vol. I. Pp. 540-547.
Henry's milestone paper announcing his discovery of electrical self-induction. ""Henry independently discovered electro-magnetic induction and in this paper announced his discovery of electric self-induction, one of the prime properies of an electro-magnetic circuit. Henry was an eminent experimenter but was casual in publishing his findings with resulting lack of recognition of his contributions.""(Bern Dibner).Dibner ""Heralds of Sciece"", No.63.It was also printed the same year in ""Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, New Series, Vol. 5"". The paper was later printed in ""Philosophical Magazine"", 1840.""The direction of Henry’s thought became somewhat apparent in his 1835 paper (refers to the papers reading before the American Phil. Soc., febr. 6th, 1835) on the action of a spiral conductor in increasing the intensity of galvanic currents. The paper started out as an affirmation of Henry’s priority in the discovery of self-induction. He then combined induction proper (using Faraday’s findings and his own) with selfinduction to show how these produce a pattern of repulsions yielding an increased effect in spirals. He specifically linked these “magneto-electrical” results to the principles of static induction developed by Cavendish and Poisson. This explanation was then applied to Savary’s report of changes of polarity when magnetic needles were placed at varying distances from a wire in which a current was being transmitted (""Mémoire sur l’aimantation,"" in Annales de chimie et de physique, 34 [1827],. That is, currents appeared periodically in the air surrounding a current-bearing straight wire as a result of the actions of induction and self-induction."" (DSB).Wheeler Gift: 2724-2725a.
Paris, Fortin, Masson et Cie, 1844. 8vo. Contemp. hcalf, raised bands, gilt spine. Light wear along edges. Small stamps on verso of titlepage. In: ""Annales de Chimie et de Physique"", 3e Series - Tome 3. 512 pp. a. 7 folded engraved plates. Small stamp to verso of plates. (The entire volume offered). Henry's papers: pp. 394-436 a. 1 folded engraved plate (showing Henry's experimental apparatus). Internally clean.
First French version of these pioneering papers on electro-magnetic induction in which Henry carried out his program of determining the relationship of static and dynamic electricity.
"HENRY, JOSEPH - THE DISCOVERY OF SELF-INDUCTION - GERMAN VERSION.
Reference : 44147
(1842)
(Leipzig, Johann Ambrosius Barth, 1842). Without wrappers. In ""Annalen der Physik und Chemie. Hrsg. von J.C. Poggendorff"", Ergänzungsband 1, Stück 2. Pp. 193-384 a. 1 folded engraved plate. (The entire issue offered). Henry's paper: pp. 282-312.
First German version of Henry's description of his discovery of self-induction. He missed the credit for the discovery of induction to Faraday, but he had done the key experiment ahead of Faraday, but Faraday was the first to publish. But he is credited for the discovery of self-induction (1832) and Faraday discovered it independently two years later (1834).""In Henry's paper, however, he explained thet the electric current in a coil can induce another current not only in another coil but in itself. The actual current observed in the coil is, then, the combination of the original current and the induced current. This is called self induction.""(Isac Asimov).The issue contains further notable papers Michael Faraday's ""Vierzehnte Reihe von Experimental-Untersuchungen über Elektricität"", 2o-22. (Nos 1667-1748). Pp. 249-281. First German version. In this paper FARADAYamplifies his theory of electrostatic induction by making further use of the analogy with the induction of magnetism. Whittaker describes the paper as having ""THE FUNDAMENTAL EQUATION OF ELECTROSTATICS"", as modified in order to take into account the effect of the specific inductive capacity.""(Whittaker I, pp.187-89).
1998 Ed. Gallimard, la Noire - 1998 - 196 pages - in-8 broché
bon état (plis de lecture au dos).
London, Richard and John E.Taylor, 1840-41. 8vo. 2 contemp. hmorocco. Tears to spines. Frontcovers on both volumes loose. Stamp to foot of titlepages. In: ""The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. Conducted by David Brewster et al."". Vol. XVI a. vol. XVIII. VIII,607,(1) pp. a. 5 plates. + VIII,616 pp., 2 plates. (Entire volumes offered). Henry's papers: pp. 200-210, 254-265, 551-562, textillustr. (in vol. XVI) a. pp. 482-514, textillustr. (in vol. XVIII).
First printing in England of this pioneering paper on electro-magnetic induction in which Henry carried out his program of determining the relationship of static and dynamic electricity.The volumes also contains first printings by CHARLES LYELL ""On the Boulder Formation, or drift and associated Freshwater Deposits composing the Mud-cliffs of Eastern Norfolk"". Pp. 345-380, textillustr. (1840), and JOHN W. DRAPER ""An Account of some Experiments made in the South of Virginia, on the height of the Sun"".Pp. 81-84 and his ""On the Electro-motive Power of Heat. Pp. 451-461.On p. 535 we have the first announcement of the first sucessfull photographic portrait taken. Draper’s first reported portraiture was that of his sister, Miss Dorothy Catherine Draper, dressed in white sitting still for a period of 65 seconds.""Professor Draper, of the University of New York, informs us in a note dated March 31st, that he has succeeded during the Winter in procuring portraits by the Daguerreotype, and that they have all the beaty and softness of the most finished mezzotint engraving, and only requirefrom 20 to 45 seconds for execution.""
New Haven, Maltby and Noyes, 1840. Contemp. hcalf. Spine gilt and with gilt lettering. In: The American Journal of Science and Arts. Conducted by Benjamin Silliman"", Vol. 38. VI,(2),416 pp. (Entire volume offered). Henry's paper:pp. 209-243, many textllustrations in woodcut. A few leaves with brownspots.
This is Henry's importent third ""Contribution"" on the dynamic induction experiments, carrying out his program of determining the relationship of static and dynamic electricity. He independently of Faraday discovered electr-magnetic inductuion in 1831. The paper was first printed in ""Transactions of the American Philosophical Society"", 1839.
Plon, 1910, in-12, vii-480 pp, reliure demi-chagrin havane, dos à 5 nerfs soulignés à froid, titres dorés (rel. de l'époque), dos lég. frotté, bon état (ouvrage couronné par l'Académie française)
Souvenirs du marquis Henri-Joseph Costa de Beauregard (1752-1824), général savoyard au service du roi Victor-Amédée III. Il fit contre les Français les campagnes de 1792 à 1798. Membre du conseil de régence, il tenta d'aider les Austro-Russes à expulser les Français du Piémont. — "Il s'agit surtout d'évènements ayant trait à l'occupation de la Savoie par les Français. Le marquis se bat contre eux puis se réfugie tantôt à Lausanne, tantôt au Piémont." (Fierro, 359) — "Ces souvenirs s'arrênt pratiquement à l'avènement de Bonaparte en l'an VIII." (Tulard, 359)
"[LAURENS, HENRY-JOSEPH du? - or CHARLES-CLAUDE-FLORENT du CAMPIGNEULLES? - MIMICING VOLTAIRE]
Reference : 45831
(1767)
Geneve, 1767. Original blue cardboard binding with contemporary handwritten paper title-label to spine. Pencil-numbering to inside of boards. A very nice and clean copy. Woodcut vignette to title-page. With the ex-libris of the notes Danish book collector K.F. Plesner to inside of front board.
Rare first edition of this interesting, anonymously written continuation of Voltaire's Candide, which wraps up the adventures of the hero. ""Turning his back on both Voltarian satire and scepticism, the novelist proposes a moralistic fable - the focal point of which is a rehabilitation of Leibniz's Theory of Optimism. The main body of the novel tells the story of Candide and his new wife, the noble Zénoïde, in their sumptuous Copenhagen townhouse. Before achieving this happy state, however, the couple endures various trials and tribulations reminiscent of the newly minted gothic genre. ""Candide au Dannemarc"" also features a satirical portrait of Jean-Jacques Rousseau."" (Éduard M. Langille, from the introduction to the new edition of ""Candide au Dannemarc"", edited by him). Voltaire's ""Candide"" had inspired a sequel that appeared in 1760, which is attributed to Charles-Claude-Florent de Campigneulles, but which might be by Henri-Joseph du Laurens. The present work is a direct continuation of that sequel (although it ignores the happy ending of the previous work), but evidently from the preface, it is not written by the same author. It has still not been determined who the actual author is.The part on Rousseau (pp. 148-167) in the present work has become quite famous, portraying him satirically as trying to make a living in Copenhagen from copying music while plotting to escape to America. The novel ends with Candide leaving Denmark to be the Danish ambassador in Russia.A secoond edition appeared in 1769.
Paris, Calmann-Lévy 1911 In-8 23 x 14 cm. Broché, couverture jaune, auteur & titre en noir sur le dos et le premier plat, 581 pp., notes an bas de page, appendices, index alphabétique, table. Ex-libris autographe. Dos bruni avec plis de lecture.
Jean-Pierre, “baron” de Batz, (1754-1822), était financier, député à l’Assemblée constituante et contre-révolutionnaire. Plus célèbre dans la littérature romanesque que dans l’histoire, sa vie rocambolesque, ses actions au service de Louis XVI et en particulier sa tentative supposée de faire évader le roi sur le chemin de l’échafaud, inspireront plusieurs romanciers populaires. Bon état d’occasion
GALLIMARD LA NOIRE. 1998. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Coins frottés, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 196 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 810-Littérature américaine
Daniel Lemoine (Traduction) Classification Dewey : 810-Littérature américaine
IMP. DESTOUT A.. 1909. In-8. Broché. Bon état, 1er plat abîmé, Dos satisfaisant, Non coupé. 68 pages. Déchirure sur le 1er plat.. . . . Classification Dewey : 616.86-Drogue, alcolisme, toxicomanie
Univerté de Bordeaux, Faculté de Médecine et de Pharmacie. Classification Dewey : 616.86-Drogue, alcolisme, toxicomanie
EDITION DU PAPYRUS. VERS 1988. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 141 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 300-SCIENCES SOCIALES
Classification Dewey : 300-SCIENCES SOCIALES
Paris. Vve Edouard Vert. 1881. In-12 (108 x 157mm) dos chagrin violet brun à 5 nerfs, titre, filets et fleurons or, plats et gardes marbrés, VIII, 352 pages, portrait en frontispice. Ex-libris et cachet de Dranem. Papier lgt bruni sinon bel exemplaire. Rare.
BEAUX ARTS.,CHANSON.,BEAUX ARTS.,SPECTACLE.,BEAUX ARTS.,CHANSON.,LITTERATURE.,LITTERATURE XIX°,LIVRES ANCIENS.,LIVRES XIX°.
.: Paris, Maurice Dreyfous, 1881, 2 vols format in-8°, [1] frontispice + viii pp + 224 pp. [2] (4) pp nn + pp 225-464 pp + carte dépliante + 5 gravures (plans) + 2 lettres fac-similées (complet). Avec l'ex-libris imprimé du Vicomte de Jean, Bibliothèque du Chateau d'Issou. Relié en demi-maroquin brun, plats et pages de garde en papier marbré, titre doré sur le dos à 5 nerfs. Dos uniformement passés, Imprimé sur papier épais, Qq pages avec des rousseurs, sinon exemplaire très convenable de l'édition originale. Dupleix (1697 - 1763) fût gouverneur de Pondichéry et commandant général des Etablissements français de l'Inde. (La Compagnie des Indes)...
Aoste, Société Editrice Valdotaine (Imprimerie Catholique), 1929, in-8 rel. cart. 1/2 toile marron (17,5 x 25,5), VI-457 p., E.O., une carte dépl., reliure récente, couverture conservée, dos muet, bon état.
L'auteur a largement puisé dans l'"Histoire de l'Eglise d'Aoste", de Mgr Duc. Table alphabétique très complète in-fine. Voir le sommaire sur photos jointes.
"SAVARY, F. (FELIX). - INSPIRING JOSEPH HENRY'S ELECTRICAL RESEARCHES.
Reference : 47845
(1827)
Paris, Chez Crochard, 1827. Contemp. hcloth. Gilt lettering to spine. In: ""Annales de Chimie et de Physique, Par MM. Gay-Lussac et Arago."", Series 2, Tome 34. 448 pp. a. 1 folded engraved plate. (Entire volume offered). Scattered brownspots.Savary'spaper: pp. 5-57 and pp. 220-221.
First printing of Savary's importent paper, the phenomena investigated here helped Joseph Henry to discover sel-induction, and it was Savary who was the first to describe in this paper his hypothesis of the oscillatory nature of the discharge of a Leyden jar connected to an inductor. In his Mémoire, he documented the experiments which helped lead to his conclusion of the oscillatory discharge of the Leyden jar, which Joseph Henry expanded upon fifteen years later in America while working on his experiments in induction.""Savary inferred that a charged Leyden jar would discharge in a damped oscillatory manner. This inference was based on observations of magnetization of short thin steel needles. Here needles were placed at varying distances near (and perpendicular) to a 2-meter-long wire loop used to discharge the Leyden jar. Magnetization of the needles would reverse direction (up to three times) as a function of distance from the wire in the loop. (Needles were placed close to the wire starting from a fraction of a mm to about 1 cm away.) Joseph Henry was stimulated by Savary's observation. Henry repeated Savary's work starting in 1835 and then extended it to magnetizing steel needles in a secondary circuit. Henry published his findings in 1842. Henry placed a steel needle in a spiral in a secondary circuit and removed the secondary circuit to a distance of 30 feet. The magnetizing of a steel needle at this distance is evidence of high frequency transmission and detection. We are working to determine the general range of frequencies of oscillation in Henry's study, but it appears to be near 6 MHz. At 6 MHz the wavelength of the radiation is 50 meters (150 feet), so Henry's observation of magnetization at a distance of 30 feet corresponds to the near field. This remote magnetization is evidence of high-frequency induction rather than radio transmission as is sometimes suggested."" (Princeton.edu)The volume contains other notable papers by Gay-Lussac, Mosander, Boussingault et al. and CLAUDE NAVIER'S importent paper ""Sur le Mouvement d'un fluide élastique qui s'écoule hors d'un réservoir ou gazomètre"", pp. 400-407.
Henry-Paul Deyvaux-Gasier, dit Henry-Paul GASSIER - Joseph KESSEL - Georges SUAREZ
Reference : 87294
(1924)
Gallimard | Paris 1924 | 12 x 19 cm | broché
Edition originale sur papier courant, fausse mention de sixième édition que Joseph Kessel a biffée et remplacée de ses initiales sur le premier plat. Ouvrage illustré de dessins d'Henry-Paul Gassier. Dos passé et insolé comme généralement. Précieux envoi autographe signé de Joseph Kessel à son ami Henri Béraud : "A mon très cher Béraud son fidèle Joseph Kessel." Provenance : de la bibliothèque rétaise d'Henri Béraud. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
COLLECTIF WILD Roger - ( Collectif ) Marcelle Auclair, Jean Babelon, G. Charensol, Juan Leal, Henry de Montherlant, Peyré Joseph, A. Lafront (Paco Tolosa),
Reference : 21836
(1951)
1951 Editions du Tambourinaire, Paris 1951, 23x28cm, broché. - Edition originale. Contributions de H. de Montherlant, G. Charensol, J. Peyré, P. Tolosa. Ouvrage orné d'illustrations originales ht gravées sur bois en couleur de Roger Wild. Bel exemplaire.
bon etat,exemplaire numeroté 1934/2500. Remise de 20% pour toutes commandes égales ou supérieures à 200 €
1980 Dix photographies en noir et blanc, de formats divers.
RARE ENSEMBLE DE PHOTOGRAPHIES prises par la photographe Denise BELLON (1902-1999) durant le voyage en Espagne qu'elle effectua début 1953 en compagnie de Joseph et Caroline DELTEIL, Henry MILLER et sa femme Eve, la soeur de celle-ci, Louise, et son mari le peintre israélien Bezalel Schatz. Henry Miller a décrit les péripéties de ce voyage dans un ouvrage qui ne sera publié qu'en 2012 intitulé "Mejores no Hay !", illustré de photographies de Denise Bellon. Trois photographies comportent au verso le tampon encré «Photo Denise Bellon / Tous droits réservés / Cliché n°» et trois autres photographies comportent au verso des mentions manuscrites de la main de Joseph Delteil: «Eve et Miller / Tuilerie / mai 53» - «Delteil et Miller» et «Moisson en Andalousie / mai 53». BEL ET RARE ENSEMBLE. PICTURES AND MORE DETAILS ON REQUEST.
Phone number : 06 21 78 12 79