Paris Editions A. et J. Picard & Cie 1965 in 4 broché (27x21,5) ouverture illustrée, 130 pages [1], avec 84 planches d'illustrations hors-texte. Très bon état.
P., Picard, 1965, in 4° broché, 130 pages.
Illustré de 84 planches de photographies et de nombreux dessins de l'auteur. PHOTOS sur DEMANDE. ...................... Photos sur demande ..........................
Phone number : 04 77 32 63 69
P. Geuthner, 1950-1953 2 vol. In-4 br., pp 385-690-XXXVII, (I.F.A.B, bibl. archéo. et hist. Tome XLVI et LI.)
Bon état. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 11 € -Monde (z B : 18 €) (z C : 31 €)
TechniP 1970 in8. 1970. Broché. iconographie en noir et blanc
Bon Etat bords frottés intérieur propre rousseur sur tranche
Paris, Editions Technip 1970, 240x180mm, 172pages, broché. Etiquette de cotation au bas du dos de la couverture, cachet de bibliothèque, autrement bon état.
photos n/b, Pour un paiement via PayPal, veuillez nous en faire la demande et nous vous enverrons une facture PayPal
Princeton University Press 1962 in8. 1962. Cartonné. iconographie en noir et blanc
livre en bon état bonne tenue intérieur propre cependant jaquette défraîchie tachée de rousseurs
"LA BONNE PRESSE / REVUE ""BIBLE ET TERRE SAINTE"". 1960. In-4. Cartonné. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 104 pages. Jaquette illustrée en noir et blanc légèrement passé, (petite déchirure sur le second plat). Nombreuses photos et illustrations en noir et blanc dans et hors texte. Initiales au stylo sur la page de garde. Etiquette de code au dos et tampons de bibliothèque.. Avec Jaquette. . . Classification Dewey : 930.1-Archéologie"
Classification Dewey : 930.1-Archéologie
BAR Supplementary, Series 25 (i) et (ii), 1977. 2 vol. in-4 dos carré collé, 529 pp. en continu, nb. fig., cartes et ill. photogr. h.-t., texte en anglais, index.
Part. I : Text - Part II : Catalogues and Bibliography. Thèse de doctorat, défendue en 1975 à Oxford par E. James. "Elle est une véritable somme et comptera désormais dans toutes les bibliographies sur le Haut Moyen Age." (Persée) Plusieurs feuilles sont décollées, bon ex. par ailleurs. - Frais de port : -France 8,45 € -U.E. 13 € -Monde (z B : 23 €) (z C : 43 €)
, British Museum Press, 2023 Hardcover, 240 pages, ENG, 255 x 195 x 25 mm, NEW, illustrated in colour / b/w, very, very interesting!. ISBN 9780714111964.
Luxurious objects are celebrated for their exoticism, rarity and style, but also disparaged as indulgent, extravagant and corrupt. The ancient origins of these attitudes emerged at the boundary between the imperial Persian and democratic Athenian Greek worlds. Luxury was at the center of the royal Persian court and behaviors of ostentatious display rippled through the imperial provinces, whose elite classes emulated luxury objects in lesser materials. But luxury is contrastingly depicted through Athenian eyes - within the philosophical context of early democratic codes and the historical context of the Greco-Persian Wars, which suddenly and spectacularly brought eastern luxuries into the imagination of the Athenian populace for the first time. While Greek writers rejected luxury as eastern, despotic and corrupt, the Athenian elite adopted Persian luxuries in imaginative ways to signal status, distinction and prestige. Under the Macedonian empire of Alexander the Great and its subsequent kingdoms, royal Achaemenid luxury culture would later be adopted and displayed by the Macedonian and local elite across the Greek and Middle Eastern worlds: behaviors of ostentatious display were a means to seek advantage in the new Hellenistic world order. Ultimately, this publication demonstrates how competing political spins woven around 2,500 years ago still continue to shape modern perceptions of luxury today.
Brooklyn N.Y., The Brooklyn Museum 1974 xxiv + 215pp. + 13 & 89 bl/w plates, 29cm., publisher's hardcover in grey/blue cloth, text and interior clean and bright, good condition, weight: 1.9kg., C103233
British Museum, 1961 In-4, rel. demi percaline verte de l'éd., 50 pp., 3 fig. in-t., 42 planches en noir in fine (dessins), certaines dépliantes.
Dos frotté et sali, bon ex. par ailleurs. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 11 € -Monde (z B : 18 €) (z C : 31 €)
Washington D.C., 1965 100pp., 28cm., softcover, copy from the library of Jacques Ryckmans, good condition, rare, W90377
Louvain, Institut Orientaliste 1952 xix + 252pp.+ 26 planches hors-texte, 27cm., dans la série "Bibliothèque du Muséon" volume 30, brochure originale, non coupé, très bon état, X73948
Van Gorcum & Comp. N.V 1971 in8. 1971. Broché. illustrations en noir et blanc
Bon état intérieur propre couverture un peu ternie
Guéret, Lecante, 1934, plaquette grand in 8° brochée, 31 pages ; non coupé ; illustrations in-texte et une planche dépliante ; couverture légèrement fanée.
...................... Photos sur demande ..........................
Phone number : 04 77 32 63 69
, Brepols, 2023 Paperback, xvi + 234 p, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:85 b/w, 43 col., 2 tables b/w., 12 maps b/w, 12 maps color, Language(s):English, Italian. ISBN 9782503603445.
Summary In the Late Republican period, Rome underwent monumental changes. Within the city, numerous building projects were undertaken by the wealthy and politically powerful as they jostled for power, while further afield, wars were fought and Rome's authority gradually expanded into new territories. One of the key players in this field was Julius Caesar, who took advantage of the fluid and fast-changing political and military alliances to position himself in the centre of power. During this time, he became the first to design a forum ? the Forum Iulium, now known as Caesar's Forum ? in his family's name. Today, this site, in the very heart of Rome, is home to The Caesar's Forum Project, where excavations have yielded new knowledge about both the long history of Rome, and the broader context of its global history and cultural heritage. Taking this project as its starting point, this volume draws together scholars working both on the excavations, and on Caesar more generally, to shed new light on the often enigmatic figure of Julius Caesar. The chapters gathered here offer insights into remains and sources from both the time of Caesar and from later periods, giving new perspectives not only on his life and death, but also on the central role that he has ever since continued to play in historiography since. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations Introduction 1. Caesar, Rome and Beyond: New and Old Sources Jan Kindberg Jacobsen, Rubina Raja, and Sine Grove Saxkj r Caesar and Rome 2. Sensing Change: Late Republican Architecture in Rome Penelope J. E. Davies 3. Find a Lover in Augustan Rome: How Ovid's Ars amatoria Became a Criticism of Augustus's Moral Politics Eric M. Moormann The Archaeology of Caesar's Military Ventures 4. The Archaeology of Julius Caesar: New Research on the Gallic Wars Nico Roymans and Manuel Fern ndez-G tz 5. Across the Rubicon to Rome: New Elements for the Identification of Caesar's Military Camp Annalisa Pozzi and Christian Tassinari 6. Caesar in Britain: Britain in Rome A. P. Fitzpatrick and Colin Haselgrove New Discoveries 7. Excavating the Forum Iulium: The Danish-Italian Excavations between Longue Dur e Perspectives and High-Definition Narratives Laura di Siena, Jan Kindberg Jacobsen, Gloria Mittica, Giovanni Murro, Claudio Parisi Presicce, Rubina Raja, Sine Grove Saxkj r, and Massimo Vitti 8. The So-Called Aquinum Portrait of Julius Caesar: From its Discovery to Research Development Giuseppe Ceraudo 9. The So-Called 'Caesar' of Aquinum: A Preliminary Analysis Giovanni Murro 10. L'immaginario cesariano tra visioni classicistiche e ideologie nazionalistiche: il caso di un ritratto emerso dalle acque del Rodano Mario Denti New Contributions on Caesar and Historiography 11. Julius Caesar and the Forum Caesaris: World History, Historiography, and Reception Investigated through Danish Biographies of Caesar from the Early Twentieth Century Trine Arlund Hass and Rubina Raja 12. Past Research Perspectives and Narrated Space: The Incident When Caesar Did Not Rise for the Senate, according to Georg Brandes (1918) and Hartvig Frisch (1942) Trine Arlund Hass Index
Bonn, Rudolf Habelt, 2002. In 4 broché, 62 pp. Texte en anglais.
Présentation du papyrus mis au jour en 1962 dans une tombe de la nécropole de Derveni (Macédoine), le plus ancien manuscrit retrouvé en Europe à ce jour. Très bon état. - Frais de port : -France 4,95 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
JANKOWSKI de NIEWMIERZYCKI, LAMARE Didier, PEAN Laurence, BREGEAU Clotilde
Reference : 77920
ISBN : 2908958953
Charenton-le-Pont, Flohic Editions, 1994. 19 x 25, 444 pp., très nombreuses illustrations en couleurs, reliure souple d'édition, bon état.
Otto Harrassowitz - Wiesbaden, (1974). In-8, cartonnage bleu clair, XI-114pp.
Mouillure au dos et sur le contreplat inférieur, papier un peu jauni, bon ex. au demeurant. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
Wiesbaden, Otto Harrassowitz, (1974). In-8 br., XI-114pp.
Bonne condition. - Frais de port : -France 4,95 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
Neumünster in Holstein, Karl Wachholtz 1938 xii + 207pp.with 207 ills. + folding plates and 4 folding maps out-of-text, 28cm., 2nd ed., cart.cover, few foxing, else G, [work of reference on Haithabu], G71216
Neumünster, 1956. 4to. Orig. full cloth. 256 pp., plates and maps.
Karl Wachholtz verlag Neumünster 1956 in12. 1956. Broché.
Bon état de conservation intérieur propre bords un peu frottés
Neumflnst., 1976. 4to. Orig.cloth. 311 pp. Illustr.
Antwerpen , Stockmans, 2021 Softcover, 128 pages, illustrations in color, 26,5 x 22 cm, paperback, English text: The book has an introduction by mathieu and annelies of goodcopy.ink and a work by Rinus van de Velde. 1/250 numberd copies Signed. ISBN 9789464363142.
Between March 2020 and November 2021 Bram Van Meervelde and Jan Lemaire went beachcombing on the banks of the river Schelde. The treasures and trouvailles were compounded in the book Jutten designed by Jean-Michel Meyers. . Why is it two men in boots keep trudging the mud in search of shards of the past? But a year has passed and on it goes, the larking, the scouring, the scavenging. One tea towel after another filled with coins, marbles, pipes. Finds have a strange hold over us. There?s a magic to them that shines on a lot longer than the soon fading glimmer of things we intentionally choose. That purposefulness is probably what kills our enthusiasm after a week or so. Because when we make a choice, there?s too much of ourselves in the object already. We don?t deem a consciously picked item deserving of a tea towel display. The more trash we?ve dug through to get to our treasure, the more it becomes. Hence the mud-crusted trouvailles. We?ve had to make our hands dirty and?like any good romance?half the pleasure lies in the hunt. So we go hunting for crap that?s out of place. Crap that becomes a find, simply because it was lost. A diamond is nothing very special in a jewellery store, but it?s everything when found among discarded fish. Yet maybe the real reason for this endless trawlings for trinkets is another story altogether. Not that of a seventeenth-century mariner tossing a coin into the Scheldt to buy a safe passage, but the belief that we're not the ones that find the perfectly rounded rock, it's the pebble that finds us. For all its muteness, it speaks to us.