Le Livre de Poche, 1970, 445 pages, in 12 reliure cartonné et toilée rouge, bon état.
Seuil, 1995, 157 pages, grand in 8 broché, très bon état.
1981 virgule, 1981, 151 pages, in 12 broché,bon état général, légèrement insolé et jauni.
1943 / 175 pages. Broché Editions de la nouvelle Revue Critique
Contenant des illustrations de l'auteur. Couverture d'usage avec de petites rousseurs, intérieur frais. UNE VRAIE CURIOSITE !
Paris P.U.F. 2004 1 8° Broché 800 PUF, Paris, 2004. Un volume in 8° broché couverture semi-rigide illustrée de 800 pages. Poids avant emballage 1kg150 gr, frais d'envoi colissimo 950
Ouvrage récent mais épuisé. Remises possibles sur les achats en lot, achetez plusieurs objets à la fois ! Reçoit sur rendez-vous pour consultation des ouvrages.
La Table Ronde, collection Contretemps, 2005, 188 pages, in 8 broché, très bon état.
1963 Que sais-je ? P.U.F, 1963, 118 pages, in 12 broché, format poche, état d'usage, usures et frottements sur les bords des plats, les coins et les tranches, papier légèrement jauni.
1956 La Table Ronde, 1956, in 12 broché, état d'usage, quelques rousseurs, usures et frottements.
Calmann-Lévy, collection Bibliothèque Contemporaine, 1919, 221 pages, in 12 broché, état moyen, papier jauni, mors fendus, dos abimé, pliures, usures et frottements, coins et coiffes frottés.
Calmann-Lévy, 1919, 248 pages, in 12 broché, état moyen, papier jauni, mors fendus, dos abimé, pliures, usures et frottements, coins et coiffes frottés.
Librairie Plon, édition originale, 1924, 248 pages, in 12 broché, mauvais état , texte complet, manque le 2ème plat, papier jauni, mors fendus, dos abimé, pliures, usures et frottements, quelques légères déchirures.
Librairie Armand Colin, 1936, 289 pages, in 12 reliure éditeur cartonnée rouge, dos toilé rouge, bon état général.
Import 2000 218 pages 11x1 6x17 8cm. 2000. pocket_book. 218 pages.
Très bon état - légères marques de lecture et/ou de stockage mais du reste en très bon état- expédié soigneusement depuis la France
Langue anglaise, Harper Collins, 2000, 349 pp., broché, couverture légèrement défraîchie.
Phone number : 0033 (0)1 42 23 30 39
Paris, SAAT-Amikaro, 1992, in-8 broché, 55 pp. TRES BON ETAT.
London, Pitman 1892 87pp., cart.cover, bit used
Couverture souple. Broché. 140 pages.
Livre. Edité par l'auteur, 1953. Envoi de l'auteur.
Aug.Boyer & Cie libraire-éditeur, La Lexicologie des Ecoles, 1885, 252 pages, in 12 reliure éditeur cartonnée, dos toilé, papier jauni, exemplaire insolé, quelques rousseurs, frottements et usures.
, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 2011 Hardcover. XX 564 p., 16 colour ill., 165 x 240 mm, Languages: English, Including an index. Fine copy. ISBN 9782503542539.
Glossing was a scribal practice in use since antiquity, but it was in the Middle Ages that it acquired a wider meaning and a different role, becoming one of the most widespread forms of literacy in the Germanic West, including the British Isles. Most of the essays collected in this volume focus on the late Anglo-Saxon period, that is a well-identified time-frame spanning from the Benedictine Reform to the eleventh century. As recent scholarship has convincingly established, the second half of the tenth century and the beginning of the eleventh saw the blooming of Anglo-Saxon scholarship and a remarkable advance in educational practices. Within this cultural resurgence, glossing undoubtedly played no small role and was particularly vital in centres such as Abingdon, Canterbury, and Winchester. In the contributions to the present volume, the relationship between glosses and the text they accompany is always explored on the basis of their manuscript context. The essays are devoted to both Latin and Old English apparatuses of glosses as well as to specific items of the Old Norse and Old Saxon glossarial production.
, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 2007 Hardcover. XIII 546 p., 2 b/w ill. 4 colour ill., 165 x 240 mm, Languages: English, Including an index. Fine copy. ISBN 9782503525910.
The essays collected in this volume focus on a prominent aspect of Anglo-Saxon culture: educational texts and the Insular manuscripts which have preserved them. The English imported manuscripts and texts from the Continent, whilst a series of foreign masters, from Theodore of Tarsus to Abbo of Fleury, brought with them knowledge of works which were being studied in Continental schools. Although monastic education played a leading role for the entire Anglo-Saxon period, it was in the second half of the tenth and early eleventh centuries that it reached its zenith, with its renewed importance and the presence of energetic masters such as AEthelwold and AElfric. The indebtedness to Continental programs of study is evident at each step, beginning with the Disticha Catonis. Nevertheless, a number of texts initially designed for a Latin-speaking milieu appear to have been abandoned (for instance in the field of grammar) in favour of new teaching tools. Besides texts which were part of the standard curriculum, Anglo-Saxon manuscripts provide abundant evidence of other learning and teaching instruments, in particular those for a specialized class of laymen, the Old English laece, the healer or physician. Medicine occupies a relevant place in the book production of late Anglo-Saxon England and, in this field too, knowledge from very far afield was preserved and reshaped. All these essays, many by leading scholars in the various fields, explore these issues by analysing the actual manuscripts, their layout and contents. They show how miscellaneous collections of treatises in medieval codices had an internal logic, and highlight how crucial manuscripts are to the study of medieval culture.
Turnhout, Brepols, 2007 Paperback, LVIII+278 p., 150 x 230 mm. ISBN 9780888442925.
Peter Lombard's major work, the four books of the Sentences, was written in the mid twelfth century, and as early as the 1160s, the text was glossed and commented on in the schools. There is hardly a theologian of note throughout the rest of the Middle Ages who did not write a commentary on the Sentences. Yet in spite of its importance in Western intellectual history and its capacity to excite many generations of students and teachers, the Sentences has received little attention in more recent times. Indeed, it has been called 'one of the least read of the world's great books'. This volume makes available for the first time in English a full translation of Book 1 of the Sentences. It consists of forty-eight Distinctions, the bulk of which deal with God in his transcendence and with the mystery of the Trinity. The person of God the Father is the topic in Distinction iv, that of God the Son in v-ix, that of God the Holy Spirit in x-xviii. Distinctions xix-xxxiv are deeply concerned with the language that can be used in describing the Trinity and the relations among the divine persons. The remaining distinctions deal with the divine attributes as they become manifest in God's action towards creatures. An important concern is the preservation of God's sovereign freedom and the avoidance of any confusion regarding the absolute transcendence of God, despite his graceful self-disclosure in creation and revelation. The volume contains an introduction to Peter and to the Sentences and its first book, a list of the major chapter headings, and a bibliography. Languages : English, Latin.
Turnhout, Brepols, 2008 Paperback, XLVI+236 p., 150 x 230 mm. ISBN 9780888442932.
Peter Lombard's major work, the four books of the Sentences, was written in the mid twelfth century, and as early as the 1160s, the text was glossed and commented on in the schools. There is hardly a theologian of note throughout the rest of the Middle Ages who did not write a commentary on the Sentences. Yet in spite of its importance in Western intellectual history and its capacity to excite many generations of students and teachers, the Sentences has received little attention in more recent times. Indeed, it has been called 'one of the least read of the world's great books'. This volume makes available for the first time in English a full translation of Book 1 of the Sentences. It consists of forty-eight Distinctions, the bulk of which deal with God in his transcendence and with the mystery of the Trinity. The person of God the Father is the topic in Distinction iv, that of God the Son in v-ix, that of God the Holy Spirit in x-xviii. Distinctions xix-xxxiv are deeply concerned with the language that can be used in describing the Trinity and the relations among the divine persons. The remaining distinctions deal with the divine attributes as they become manifest in God's action towards creatures. An important concern is the preservation of God's sovereign freedom and the avoidance of any confusion regarding the absolute transcendence of God, despite his graceful self-disclosure in creation and revelation. The volume contains an introduction to Peter and to the Sentences and its first book, a list of the major chapter headings, and a bibliography. Languages : English, Latin.
Turnhout, Brepols, 2011 Paperback, approx. LXXV+304 pages ., 150 x 230 mm.Languages : English, Latin. ISBN 9780888442963.
This volume contains the final volume of Lombard's major work, described as "one of the least read of the world's great books", which treats the sacraments of the Church. Peter Lombard's major work, the four books of the Sentences, was written in the mid-twelfth century and, as early as the 1160s, the text was glossed and commented on in the schools. There is hardly a theologian of note throughout the rest of the Middle Ages who did not write a commentary on the Sentences. Yet in spite of its importance in Western intellectual history and its capacity to excite generations of students and teachers, the Sentences has received little attention in recent times. Indeed, it has been called 'one of the least read of the world's great books'. Book 3 closed with a reflection on the relative inadequacy of the Old Law, because what it commanded could not be done well or easily in the absence of grace. While the sacraments of the Old Law were only signs, the sacraments of the Church are also the principal instruments of that grace now freely available to Christians. These sacraments are the main subject of Book 4, taking up forty-two of its fifty Distinctions: Baptism is treated in Distinctions 2-6, confirmation in 7, the Eucharist in 8-13, penance in 14-22, extreme unction in 23, sacred orders in 24 and 25, and marriage in 26-42. The Book concludes with eight Distinctions on the last things ' the resurrection of the body, purgation, hell, the last judgement, and eternity.
1751 reliure plein veau brun marbré (binding full calfskin) in-douze (duodecimo), dos 5 nerfs (spine with raised bands) - entre-nerfs à fleuron avec des petits fers isolés en remplissage et des feuillages exécutés aux filets courbes aux angles dans un encadrement à double filet - pièce de titre sur fond grenat avec filet or (label of title with gilt line), coiffes supérieure inférieure légèrement défraîchies (head and tail of the spine faded), roulettes sur les coupes (fillets on the cuts), tranches rouges (red edges), marque-page en tissu (bookmark in tissue), texte à manchette (marginal note), illustrations : orné de bandeaux - lettrines et de culs-de-lampe (and illuminated of headpieces and dropped initials and of tailpieces), XXIV+344 pages avec Approbation & Privilège du Roi, 1751 à Paris Chez la Veuve Estienne et Fils,
bon état malgré le petit défaut signalé (very good condition in spite of the small defect indicated)
Chez La Veuve Estienne & Fils Paris 1751 In-12 ( 170 X 100 mm ) de ( 1 ) f. blanc, faux-titre, titre, XXIV pages de préface, 340 pages, ( 4 ) pages d'approbation, privilège et errata, ( 1 ) f. blanc veau fauve marbré, dos cinq nerfs ornés de caissons et fleurons dorés, pièce de titre maroquin noisette, tranches brique ( reliure de l'époque ). EDITION ORIGINALE. Coiffes et coins usés, bon exemplaire, solide.