Paris, Editions Recherche sur les Civilisations, 1997. 2 vol. br., couv. ill. : un vol. in-4, XIII-209 pp., 67 pp. de textes autographiés, index, bibliographie, et un vol. in-folio horizontal, 56 pl. en noir (dessins, reprod. photogr., plan).
Couv. légèrement poussiéreuses, intérieur très frais, très bon état général - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 11 € -Monde (z B : 18 €) (z C : 31 €)
Le Caire, IFAO, 2004. In-4 broché, couv. ill. en coul., XLI-302 pp, 89 fig. in-t. (dessins, croquis...), 192 reprod.photogr. h.-t., 3 plans dépliants en ff. libres, index.
FIFAO 50 IF 918. Relevés et encrages par Ramez Boutros et Georges Soukiassian. Bonne condition. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 11 € -Monde (z B : 18 €) (z C : 31 €)
Strassburg, Schlesier & Schweikhardt 1909 viii + 187pp., 33cm., Doctoral Dissertation (Inaugural-Dissertation zu Erlangung der Doktorwürde bei der Hohen Philosophischen Fakultät der Kaiser-Wilhelms-Universität zu Strassburg), softcover (small trace of removed label at spine), 2 stamps, handwritten ex-libris of the Belgian scholar in oriental studies A. Van Lantschoot, text is clean and bright, weight: 1.3kg., C112178
Florence, Piatti, 1826 in-4, [6] ff. n. ch. (titre, dédicace), 49 pp., avec deux planches dépliantes (une reproduction du bas-relief gravée au trait ; une inscription), broché sous couverture imprimée. Qqs rousseurs.
Rare. C'est très tôt, vers 1824, que l'antiquaire pisan Ippolito Rosellini (1800-1843) s'intéressa aux découvertes de Champollion ; l'année suivante, il publiait Il Sistema gieroglifico del signor Champollion. Et il rencontra son mentor en août 1825 à Florence, au cours du voyage d'études que le jeune égyptologue effectuait dans les musées de la Péninsule (Turin, Rome et Florence). Ce fut le début d'une collaboration étroite : Champollion obtint du Grand-Duc de Toscane un congé pour permettre sa venue à Paris, puis c'est avec lui qu'il monta l'expédition franco-toscane de 1828-1829 dans l'Egypte et la Nubie ; Rosellini dirigea la partie toscane du voyage.Un seul exemplaire au CCF (BnF). - - VENTE PAR CORRESPONDANCE UNIQUEMENT
Paris, Bibliothèque des Introuvables, 2007. Trois tomes en un grand vol. in-4, rel. pleine toile marine de l'éd., titre aet auteur doré au dos et sur le plat sup., sous un étui cartonné illustré en coul., 430 pp.,169-135-86 pl. en noir et en couleurs, bibliographie, chronologie, carte en coul.
Introduction par Chritian Leblanc et Angelo Sesana. Légendes par Benoît Lurson. Excellente condition. - Frais de port : -France 8,45 € -U.E. 13 € -Monde (z B : 23 €) (z C : 43 €)
Bibliothèque des introuvables 2005 In-4 reliure toile bleue sous étui. 429 pages. Exemplaire numéroté. Très bon état d’occasion.
Très bon état d’occasion
Issy-les Moulineaux White Star 2007 In Quarto Riche iconographie en couleurs .- 280 p. , 2 kg . 200 gr.
Couverture rigide Comme neuf Comme neuf 1ère Édition
Le Caire, IFAO, 1948. In-4, rel. demi-basane brune, dos lisse, titre doré, 29 pp., 12 fig, X pl. en noir in fine.
Très bonne condition. - Frais de port : -France 4,95 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
Le Caire, IFAO, 1955. In-4, rel. demi-basane brune, dos à 5 nerfs, 2 pièces de titre bordeaux, titre et filets dorés, 16 pp., 13 fig. (cartes) in fine, certaines dépl., une grande carte dépl. au frontisp. Texte en anglais.
Très bonne condition. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
Department of Ancien Egyptian, Nubian, and Near Eastern Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 1995. In-4, publisher hardback, dust jacket, XXVI-175 pp., 91 fig., 210 pl.
index I: General - index II. Giza Mastabas - Index III Personal names - Index IV. Egyptian words, phrases, titles and epithets; Bonne condition. Good condition. - Frais de port : -France 9,7 € -U.E. 13 € -Monde (z B : 23 €) (z C : 43 €)
Washington, Joseph J. Binns, (1979). 4to. Orig. full fabrikoid with dustjacket. 239 pp., colourplates, textillustrations.
Paris, J. Rothschild, 1891. In-8, demi-maroquin rouge de l'époque, dos à nerfs, XII et 176 pp., index. Edition originale de cet ouvrage de référence faisant état des connaissances des nomes de la Basse Egypte avec écriture hiéroglyphique.
Dos taché avec trous de vers, intérieur propre. Exemplaire convenable pour ce rare ouvrage. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
P., Geuthner, 1928. Grd. in-8 br., non coupé, XV-268 pp., nbr. ill. in-t., 8 pl. h.-t., index.
Très bonne condition. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
Bruxelles, Editions Vromant, 1970. 13 x 19, 96 pp., 25 figures, broché, bon état.
Le Caire, IFAO, 1948. In-4, rel. demi-basane brune, dos à 5 nerfs, 2 pièces de titre bordeaux, titre et filets dorés, 84 pp., 14 fig., XVI pl., certaines dépl., dont 3 plans.
Infimes frottements au dos, très bonne condition. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
LE CAIRE. IMPRIMERIE DE L'IFAO. 1948. IN-8 BROCHE DE VI + 84 PAGES, COUVERTURE GRISE, TITRE IMPRIME EN ROUGE ET NOIR. ILLUSTRE DE 14 FIGURES ET DE 16 PLANCHES HORS-TEXTE DONT 2 REPLIEES. (SUPPLEMENT AUX ANNALES DU SERVICE DES ANTIQUITES DE L' EGYPTE. CAHIER NUMERO 12). BEL EXEMPLAIRE.
Bruxelles, Fondation Egyptologique Reine Elisabeh & The Brooklyn Museum, 1974. In-4, 74 pp., 26 fig. in fine en noir (reprod. photogr.). Envoi mansucr. de l'auteur.
Dos un peu insolé, le reste frais, bon ex. - Frais de port : -France 4,95 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
Firenze, Istituto Papirologico G. Vitelli, 2004. In-8 br., couv. rempliée, 289 pp., 15 pl. en couleurs in fine, bibliogr., index. Texte en italien.
Un coin de la couv. inf. corné, bonne cond. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
Paris, Ed. Adam Biro, 1990. In-4, rel. éd. pleine-toile brune sous jaquette ill. en coul. et très bel étui toilé, 159 pp., 158 ill. dont 71 en coul., beaucoup à pleine ou double pp. (reprod. photogr., croquis, dessins, carte, etc...), texte sur 2 colonnes, tableau chronologique, glossaire, index, bibliographie.
"Les Coptes sont célèbres pour leurs tissus exceptionnels. Ce livre fait découvrir l'histoire de ces étoffes, leurs utilisations, les techniques de tissage et l'évolution stylistique des motifs dont les lignes simples et les couleurs contrastées ont séduit plusieurs artistes contemporains" Comme neuf. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 11 € -Monde (z B : 18 €) (z C : 31 €)
Bruxelles, Fondation Reine Elisabeth, 1995 In-8 broché, 77 pp, 8 fig. h.-t., 6 pl. de reprod. photogr. en n/b., extraits de textes hiéroglyphiques, index.
Collection : Rites égyptiens. - VIII - publiées sous la direction de Philippe Derchain. Couv. très lég. poussiéreuse, très bon ex. par ailleurs. - Frais de port : -France 4,95 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
Paris, Ed. Khéops, 2002. In-4 broché, couv. ill., 67 pp., 6 pl., 16 ill. en n/b. in t., texte sur 2 colonnes, index.
Comme neuf. - Frais de port : -France 4,95 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
Le Caire, Impr. de L'Inst. Francais, 1953. Small folio. Fine, solid full cloth. XV,251 pp. and 12 plates.
(Documents de Fouilles de L'Institut Francais...du Caire...Tome XIX).
Le Caire, IFAO, 1947. In-4, rel. pleine percaline rouge, titre doré, 178 pp., 16 fig. in-t., CII pl. hors-t. (très nbses rebprod. photogr.), 3 plans dépl. in fine.
Dos insolé, bon ex. par ailleurs. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 11 € -Monde (z B : 18 €) (z C : 31 €)
Paris, 1802. 8vo. In recent marbled paper wrappers. With very light occassional brownspotting, plates slightly toned. A nice copy. Housed in a cloth clam-shell box with gilt lettering to spine. 47 pp. + 2 plates, 1 of which is folded.
The very rare first printing of the first published attempt at reading the Rosetta stone, constituting the very first step towards deciphering the Egyptian hieroglyphs. With the plates contained in this first scientific publication on the Rosetta Stone, the work also contains the first published printing of any part of the text of the Rosetta Stone. Silvestre de Sacy was a professor at the Special School of Oriental Languages in Paris, where he became the most influential teacher of Jean-François Champollion. His attempts at deciphering the Rosetta Stone proved at the end to be unsuccessful, but his proposal that the Stone's hieroglyphic cartouches might be written in an alphabet proved important, and with the present publication he laid the foundation for the correct deciphering by Champollion 20 years later. ""The first scholarly publication on the Rosetta Stone was de Sacy's, pamphlet: Lettre au Citoyen Chaptal . . . au sujet de l'inscription Égyptienne du monument trouvé à Rosette (Paris, 1802). In this brief work illustrated with one transcription of a portion of the stone, the orientalist and linguist Sacy, a teacher of Champollion, made some progress in identifying proper names in the demotic inscription."" (Jeremy Norman: History of Information). The Rosetta Stone, which dates back to 196 B.C was found in 1799 by French Troops and was immediately brought to England, where it has been ever since. The stone was (and is) of the utmost importance to the understanding of the Egyptian language, the principles of which were totally unknown up until this point. Because the hieroglyphic inscription on the stone is accompanied by a Greek and a Demotic one with the same contents (the commemoration of Ptolemy V's accession to the Egyptian throne), scholars would eventually be able to decipher the ancient language that had been a mystery for more than a millennium. ""When military engineers discovered the Rosetta Stone in July 1799 while rebuilding an old fort in the Nile Delta, the officer in charge quickly recognised the importance of its three parallel inscriptions and sent the Stone to the savants in Cairo.That October, Napoleon himself, recently returned from Egypt, told the National Institute in Paris: ""There appears no doubt that the column which bears the hieroglyphs contains the same inscription as the other two. Thus, here is a means of acquiring certain information of this, until now, unintelligible language.From the moment of discovery, it was clear that the bottom inscription on the Rosetta Stone was written in the Greek alphabet and the top one - unfortunately the most damaged - was in Egyptian hieroglyphs with visible cartouches. Sandwiched between them was a script about which little was known.It plainly did not resemble the Greek script, nor did it appear to resemble the hieroglyphic script above it, not least because it lacked cartouches. Today we know this script as 'demotic', a cursive form of ancient Egyptian writing, as opposed to the separate signs of hieroglyphic.The first step was to translate the Greek inscription. This turned out to be a legal decree issued at Memphis, the principal city of ancient Egypt, by a council of priests assembled on the anniversary of the coronation of Ptolemy V Epiphanes, on 27 March 196 BC. The Greek names Ptolemy, Alexander and Alexandria, among others, occurred in the inscription.de Sacy deserves credit for a useful suggestion in 1811: that the Greek names inside hieroglyphic cartouches, which he assumed must be those of rulers like Ptolemy, Alexander and so on, might be written in an alphabet, as they almost certainly were in the demotic inscription.The same technique, he knew, was used to write foreign names in the Chinese script, which was also thought (wrongly) to have no intrinsic phonetic component."" (BBC Science Focus Magazine, 2020). ""Solid attempts to decipher hieroglyphs started with the discovery of Rosetta Stone. Before being captured by the Arabs, Egypt had a native language called Coptic. There was formerly a Coptic alphabet until the 2nd century AD. However, it was replaced by Greek letters, resulting in the creation of Old and New Coptic. Therefore, the alphabet of Old Coptic became obscured over time. In 1643, long before the discovery of Rosetta Stone, Athanasius Kircher, a reputed scholar and polymath of his time, argued that the Coptic inscription represents the same language as hieroglyphs (Lee & Merrill, 1989,p . 20). Based on this argument, scholars assumed that it would be possible to decipher the hieroglyphics by deciphering the Old Coptic script. The study of the relationship between Old Coptic and the hieroglyphs was first carried out by Silvestre de Sacy, a French nobleman and scholar. He was also a mentor of the three scholars who were the successors of his research. Sacy tried to decipher the Rosetta Stone by comparing the symbols and locations of names through mathematical analysis. However, he reached a dead end after some progress and passed the study to the Swedish diplomat and scholar, Johan David Åkerblad. As an expert on New Coptic, he managed to compare its alphabet with Old Coptic, identifying some of the phonetic values and words. However, since he could not understand that Old Coptic was not entirely alphabetic, his progress was halted."" (Denic Aktunz: A Warfare of Greediness over the Rosetta Stone: Deciphering Hieroglyphics).
Nimes, Lacour (Collection Rediviva), 1996, in 8° broché, 23 pages ; couverture illustrée (très légèrement fanée).
Réimpression de l'édition de Paris, 1872. PHOTOS sur DEMANDE. ...................... Photos sur demande ..........................
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