Paris, Magnin, Blanchard, 1859. petit in-8, 342pp. Cartonnage percaline noire de l'éditeur. (Collection Hetzel).
Compilation de bons mots classés par ordre alphabétique de sujet. Copieuse table des matières. P.-J. Martin est un nom fictif employé par plusieurs écrivains, et probablement par Jules Hetzel d'après Quérard. Celui-là avait publié L'Esprit des Femmes et les Femmes d'Esprit sous son pseudonyme de P.-J. Stahl. (Vicaire V, 572). - Exemplaire très frais.
Wittenberg, Gormanni, Bergeri & Schureri, 1623. Folio. In contemporary half calf with five raised bands and gilt lettering and ornamentation to spine. Small paper-label pasted on to top of spine. Wear to extremities, most of gilting on spine worn off. The marbled paper covering the board worn off, showing the wooden boards. Internally with a few occassional underlignings and marginal annotation but generally nice and clean. (12), 263, (13), (4), 321, (11), (4), 254, (10), (2), 219, (41) pp.
Later edition of Chemniz’ collected works. Chemniz had lectured on Melanchthon's 'Loci Communes' from which lectures he compiled his own 'Loci Theologici', a system of theology (the first three parts of the present book). Martin Chemnitz (1522–1586) was a German Lutheran theologian and reformer who played a significant role in the development of Lutheran doctrine during the 16th century. He is often referred to as the ""Second Martin"" after Martin Luther, due to his prominence within the Lutheran tradition. Chemnitz is best known for his extensive work in systematizing Lutheran theology to which this present work is a fine example. He was a key figure in resolving theological controversies that arose after Luther's death and played a crucial role in shaping the direction of the Lutheran Reformation after Luther.
SOLO, SAINT-MARTIN (Catherine), BERTIN (Jean-Martin) et autres auteurs.
Reference : 1366517
Vichy, Aedis, 2004, très fort in-8, cart. ill. éd., signet, 911 pp., très nombreuses illustrations en noir et en couleurs, annexes (XI pp.). (SB34)
Une mine de connaissance sur le dessin de presse en France : dessin d'actualité et politique, caricature, dessin d'humour, de moeurs, croquis d'audience, reportages sportifs...Tout le dessin de presse, en France depuis deux siècles : de Willette à La Noé, de Forain à Jossot, de Léandre à Carrol, de Dubout à Évariste, de Mich à Pellos, de Cabu à Iturria, de Berberousse à Cambon, de Toulouse-Lautrec à Van Dongen; de L'Éclipse à La Charrette, de Nimbus à Attila, des Satire aux Chevaliers de la Gaule...ils sont tous là !
P., Gallimard, 1994-1999, 2 vol. in-8, br., 207 et 210 pp., bibliographie. (S2B77)
Cahiers Roger Martin du Gard, n° 4. Centre international de recherche sur Roger Martin du Gard.Collection Les Cahiers de la NRF.
Ihenae (Jena), Rhodius (Rödinger), 1556. 4to. In contemporary blindstamped pigskin over wooden boards with three raised bands and two clasps. Wear and soiling to extremities. Pigskin partly detached to upper part of boards. Previous two owner's names in contemporary hand to title-page. A few occassional underlignings and marginal annotations in contemporary hand throughout. Small worm-tract affecting last 20 leaves, internally generally fine. (10), 367 pp.
Rare first printing of Martin Luther's early letters from 1507 to 1522, spanning the years from the celebration of his first Mass to his removal to Wartburg Castle after the Diet of Worms. Among them is a notable letter Cardinal Albrecht, Archbishop of Magdeberg and Mainz accompanying a copy of the 95 Theses, composed on the very day (October 31st, 1517) when Luther affixed the Theses to the door of the church in Wittenberg and Luther's first letter to Erasmus, penned on March 28th, 1519. These letters provide a most interesting perspective into Martin Luther's personal and public reflections on crucial aspects of the early days of the Reformation. The collection encompasses correspondence with figures such as Emperor Charles V, Pope Leo X, King Henry VIII, Georg Spalatin, Philip Melanchthon, Frederick, Elector of Saxony, Andreas Karlstadt, Cardinal Tommaso de Vio Cajetan and many others. The present work was edited by Joannes Aurifaber (1519-1575), Luther’s private secretary, who lived with Luther at the time of his death: “Joannes (Vinariensis 1519–1575), was born in the county of Mansfeldt in 1519. He studied at Wittenberg where he heard the lectures of Luther, and afterwards became tutor to Count Mansfeldt. In the war of 1544–45 he accompanied the army as field-preacher, and then lived with Luther as his famulus or private secretary, being present at his death in 1546. In the following year he spent six months in prison with John Frederick, elector of Saxony, who had been captured by the emperor, Charles V. He held for some years the office of court-preacher at Weimar, but owing to theological disputes was compelled to resign this office in 1561. In 1566 he was appointed to the Lutheran church at Erfurt, and there remained till his death in November 1575. Besides taking a share in the first collected or Jena edition of Luther’s works (1556), Aurifaber sought out and published at Eisleben in 1564–1565 several writings not included in that edition. He also published Luther’s Letters (1556, 1565), and Table Talk (1566). This popular work, which has given him most of his fame, is unfortunately but a second or third hand compilation.” (Encyclopedia Britannica). A second volume was published as “Secundus tomus epistolarum” in 1565. Adams L1805 BM STC German, 1455-1600, p. 535
Small 4to. All orig. wrappers in publisher's box, uncut. No 148 of 230 ""sur Velin de Rives"" with and extra suite of the 8 fine etchings by Charles Martin.
Zürich, Meyer und Zeller, 1844. 8vo. Contemp. hcalf. Richly gilt spine. Spine with tears along upper and lower hinges, spine ends worn. Covers still firm. VIII,469,(1) pp. and 8 lithographed plates, some folded). A faint stamp to titlepage and a stamp to page VII. Text clean, plates with some scattered brownspots. A few old annotations.
Lyon, Université de Lyon II, Centre d'études gidiennes, 1975-1981, 5 vol. in-8, toile grise, pièce de titre rouge (CN15)
Études et travaux réalisés sous la direction de Claude Martin.Généralités, table des sommaires, index des auteurs :- 1919-1925 (1975), 128 pp.- 1925-1934 (1976), 225 pp.- 1935-1940 (1977), 150 pp.- 1940-1943 (1975), 44 pp.- De 1908 à 1943, index des collaborateurs, 1981, 152 pp.Ex-libris Pascal Mercier, nombreuses annotations.
Clermont-Ferrand, Juliot, 1902. petit in-4 (19 x 25 cm), XIXpp.- 253 pages -1f. - 1 illustration hors-texte. Broché, couverture repliée, étui de carton crème.
Édition originale. Le Registre des délibérations de la Société des Amis de la Constitution d'Artonne en Auvergne, près de Riom. Vue de l'église d'Artonne. Liste des membres de la Société des Amis de la Constitution fondée en la ville d'Artonne... ; registres ; documents divers. Tiré à 752 exemplaires sur vergé. - Un des deux exemplaires de tête sur Hollande Van Gelder, très frais, non coupé.
Photoglyptie. 231 x 184 mm, contrecollée sur cnrton fort légendé. (GO40A)
Photo extraite de la Galerie contemporaine des illustrations françaises v.1890. Joint la notice par Gaston Schéfer, 4 pp. Pâle mouillure dans la marge inférieure, sans atteinte à la photo.
Avignon, Bibliothèque municipale, 1988, in-12, en ff. (DE12)
Catalogue bibliographique. 118 numéros avec notices rédigées par Gérard Martin à partir de l'exposition Guillevic et ses artistes (Bibliothèque municipale d'Avignon, 1988 pour les ouvrages publiés jusqu'en 1988 et avec l'aide de Lucie Albertini pour les ouvrages publiés en 1996 et à paraître).
Revue Europe. N° 413 et 414, sept. et oct. 1963. (SC33 à C35)
Correspondance (1909-1946) de Jean-Richard Bloch et Roger Martin du Gard.
P., Éd. Universitaires, 1958, in-12, br., 125 pp., portrait-frontispice, bibliographie. (S2B35)
Long envoi de l'auteur : "Pour Monsieur Marc Blancpain, en souvenir de ma conférence bruxelloise "sous les auspices de l'Alliance Française", en souvenir de mes deux années d'enseignement en Grande-Bretagne, et en témoignage de reconnaissance pour les marques d'amitié qu'il veut bien me donner, très sincèrement et très cordialement..."Collection Classiques du XXème siècle.
P., Omnibus, 1998, fort in-8, br., couv. ill., 1382 pp., sommaire, musique notée, illustrations in-texte. (L196)
1100 chansons du Moyen Âge à 1919 réunies par Martin Pénet, avec la collaboration de Claire Gausse.
P., L.U.F. et Fribourg, Egloff, 1946, pet. in-8, br., couv. à rabats, non rogné, 260 pp., notice biographique, bibliographie. (DF25)
Claude de Saint-Martin (1743-1803). Choix de textes et introduction André Tanner. Collection Le Cri de la France, dirigée par Pierre Courthion. .
Utrecht, Neaulme, 1738. 8vo. Uniformly bound in three nice contemporary Cambridge-style mirror bindings with five raised bands and richly gilt spines. All edges coloured in red. A few scratches to boards. Internally fine and clean, a nice set. 324 pp. 332 pp. (2), 274, 45 pp.
Beautiful copy Jean-Martin de La Colonie's memoire, a detailed account of his experiences during the War of the Spanish Succession.
S.l., La Seule France, 1948. plaquette in-12, 39pp.-1f. Brochée.
Contre l'ouvrage de J.-M. Carré : "Les écrivains français et le mirage allemand". Tiré à 625 exemplaires.
Ligugé, Aubin, 1913. plaquette in-8, 33pp.-1f. Brochée.
La Ricamarie (Loire), Georges Martin, juin 1975, gr. in-8, br., couv. ill., 309 pp., tableaux généalogiques, index, bibliographie. (DG8)
Couv. défraîchie, pliures couv. et aux premières pages.
P., Gallimard, 1948 et 1958, 2 forts vol. in-8, br., non rogné, 733 et 676 pp., portrait-frontispice, notes, index des noms. (DE16)
- Tome 1. 1589-1600 - Tome 2. 1601-1609Texte intégral présenté et annoté par Louis-Raymond Lefèvre et André Martin.Collection Mémoires du passé pour servir au temps présent.
P., Sequana, 1941, 70 pp. (DT14C)
Envoi à Jacques Chardonne. État moyen. Maurice Martin du Gard (1896-1970) est le fondateur et directeur (de 1923-1936) de la revue Nouvelles littéraires. Écrivain et journaliste, il est notamment connu pour son livre Les Mémorables, portrait du Tout -Paris des années 1920-1930.
P., Gallimard, 1946, pet. in-8, toile verte et jaquette ill. éd., IX-370 pp. (SC15D)
Récit composé de textes choisis dans Les Thibault de Roger Martin du Gard, par Marcel Lallemand, avec la collaboration de l'auteur. Illustrations en noir in-texte de Gal. Jaquette brunie.
P., NRF, 1er décembre 1958, in-8, br., 213 pp (paginé de 963 à 1176), 7 photos et un fac-similé h.-t. (S2B77)
Numéro spécial - n° 72 - de la revue La Nouvelle Revue Française. Textes inédits : L'Homme, l'ami, le conseiller - De "Jean Barois" aux "Thibault". L'Archiviste, le témoin, le romancier. Pliure à la première couv. un peu défraîchie.
P., La Nouvelle Revue Française, 1er décembre 1958. (GK28D)
Ex. sur vélin pur fil. État de neuf, non coupé.
London, Nicholas Okes, 1622. Folio. In contemporary full calf with five raised bands to spine. Boards with triple blind rule to boarders. Traces from paper-label to upper compartment of spine. Title-page soiled and with waterstain throughout, primarily affecting first and last leaves. (XXXVI), 68, 99-362 pp.
First and only edition, posthumously published, of this important work in which Fotherby refuted atheism. Fotherby's approach involves using natural reasoning and secular authorities rather than relying solely on Scripture and Church Fathers, as was common, to convince skeptics of Christian truths. He understood the limitations of appealing only to divine revelation and therefore added arguments with references from classical literature and early modern travel accounts, aiming to persuade through credible sources rather than religious dogmatic authority. “Fotherby, Martin (1549?–1619), bishop of Salisbury, son of Maurice Fotherby, a resident at Grimsby, Lincolnshire, was born about 1549. He entered at Cambridge, and eventually became a fellow of Trinity. He became prebendary and archdeacon of Canterbury in 1596, and in 1615 was presented to the deanery. He had married some years before his first promotion for on 9 Sept. 1609 Lady Cooke wrote to Lord Salisbury asking him to promote the marriage of her eldest daughter with the archdeacon's eldest son, to which Fotherby objected, and in the following year, after the marriage had taken place, begged for a knighthood at the creation of the Prince of Wales for her son-in-law, because her daughter's worth and birth had been much disgraced by the match. Three years afterwards, being chaplain to James I, he was appointed to the bishopric of Salisbury. He was consecrated by Abbot, assisted by the bishops of London, Coventry, and Lincoln, 19 April 1618, and protested at his consecration that he had given nothing for his promotion. He died 29 March 1619, aged 70, and was buried in Allhallows Church, Lombard Street. In the epitaph on his tomb he is described in very high-flown terms of praise. He left an imperfect work against atheism, which was published after his death in 1622 in folio, under the title ‘Atheomastix: clearing foure Truthes against Atheists and Infidels.’ Four sermons were published together in 1608 in quarto, having been written in 1604. Copies of both these works are in the British Museum.” (DNB) Not in Lowndes.