Jennings. 1988. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. 103 pages. Nombreuses illustrations en couleur et en noir et blanc, dans et hors texte. Texte en anglais.. . . . Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
Turnhout, Brepols, 1998 Hardback, XX 243 p., 7 b/w ill., 160 x 240 mm. ISBN 9782503508047.
The fourteen essays presented in this volume take an historicized approach to constructions of the past, and all of them focus on how and why the present of any period uses the past to promote its own opinions, beliefs, doctrines or views. The fourteen essays presented in this volume contribute substantially to the study of the reinvention of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. They take an historicized approach to constructions of the past, and most address the relatively new field of Medievalism. All of them focus on how and why the present of any period uses the past to promote its own opinions, beliefs, doctrines or views. In particular, the volume demonstrates that reinventions of past eras or figures can be motivated by a nationalistic desire to create cultural 'roots', to discover origins that justify a regime or group's self-identity, to appropriate a cultural icon or neglected author for a particular political agenda, or to reflect on contemporary social issues via a remote time and place. Reworkings or adaptations of earlier culture often tell us more about the age in which they were produced than the one revived or revisited. This volume features five essays that treat medieval subjects; four focus on Tudor and Stuart figures, religion or politics; and five concentrate on nineteenth-century uses of medieval or early modern events, literary conventions, settings and themes. The contributions are as follows: John D. Niles, 'The wasteland of Loegria: Geoffrey of Monmouth's reinvention of the Anglo-Saxon past'; Richard W. Clement, 'Richard Verstegan's reinvention of Anglo-Saxon England: a contribution from the continent'; Anne Savage, 'Pagans and Christians, Anglo-Saxons and Anglo-Saxonists: the changing face of our mythical landscape'; Daniel F. Melia, 'Congruent desires: medieval and modern reconstructions of Irish and Welsh literary artifacts'; Thomas A. Prendergast, 'Politics, prodigality, and the reception of Chaucer's Purse; Kenneth J.E. Graham, 'Defining the "discipline" of Reformation Studies'; Robert L. Entzminger, 'Jonson, the myth of Sidney, and nostalgia for Elizabeth', Renee Pigeon, 'Gloriana goes Hollywood: Elizabeth I on film, 1937-1940'; Paul N. Hart. New.
(London, Richard and John E. Taylor, 1843). 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"" 1843 - Part II. Pp. 303-327 and 2 lithographed plates.
Frst appearance of an importent paper in the history of electricity. ""In 1843 Wheatstone published an experimental verification of Ohm's law, helping to make the law (already well known in Germany) more familiar in England. In connection with the verification he developed new ways of measuring resistances and currents. In particular, he invented the rheostat and popularized the Wheatstone bridge (in the paper offered), originally invented by Samuel Christie.""(DSB).
"WHEWELL, WILLIAM - A PIONEER-WORK ON TIDES WITH THE FIRST COTIDAL WORLD-MAP.
Reference : 42692
(1833)
(London, Richard Taylor, 1833). 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"" 1833 - Part I. Pp. 147-236, a few textillustr.,1 engraved plate and 2 large folded engraved maps (a general, representing the greater part of the world (42x93 cm) and Chart of the British Isles, drawn and engraved by J.& C. Walker.). A small tear to world map. Clean and fine.
First appearance of this classic, pioneering paper on the investigation of tidal phenomena. It is the first in a series of 16 papers Whewell made for the Royal Society. It contains the first printed cotidal world-map.""Whewell took over the subject of mapping cotidal lines from Lubbock with entusiasm....He exercised the pioneer's privilege of coining new words and phrases appropriate to his subject. Many failed to stick, some phrases of Whewell's origin still occasionally used are: 'age of the tides', 'luni-tidal interval', 'semi-menstrual inequality' etc, etc....Whewell's initial cotidal map for the world ocean was presented in his first paper of 1833 (the paper offered). By his own admission, it was entirely preliminary and tentative, what nowadays might be called a ""strawman"", to stimulate discussionm. He later (1836) suggested smll modifications, especially near the coast of North America"" these were incorporated in an 'improved' world map by G.B. Airy in his celebrated tratise on ""Tides and wave"", (Cartwright in ""Tides. A Scientific History"", pp.110-112.)
"WHEWELL, W. - THE FOUNDATION OF MATHEMATICAL CRYSTALLOGRAPHY.
Reference : 46098
(1825)
(London, G. and W. Nicol, 1825). 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"" 1825 - Part I. Pp. 87-130 and 2 engraved plates with many figs. Upper right corner dampstained, mostly on the first page and here only slightly touching a few letters.
First appearance of this importent paper in which Whewell gave crystallography a mathematical foundation.""In a paper read before the Royal Society in 1824, Whewell, according to Herbert Deas, ""laid the foundations of mathematical crystallography."" His system for calculating the angles of planes of crystals assumed that crystals are aggregates of small rhomboids that can be thought to shrink below the level of possible measurement, thus suggesting that crystals are latticelike. In 1825 Whewell visited Mohs in Germany. In 1828, the year in which Whewell became professor of mineralogy, he published a revision of Mohs’s system of mineralogical classification.""(DSB).
London, Vintage, 1998 Paperback, 504pp., 13x19.5cm., good cond. ISBN 0099768011.
1962 Oxford University Press - 1962 - In-8, cartonnage toilé vert sous jaquette de l'éditeur - 455 pages - Nombreuses illustrations en N&B hors texte - Ouvrage en anglais - Envoi de l'auteur (dédicace) à Jean et Aline Raynal en première page de garde
Bon état - Jaquette légèrement défraichie (Menus frottements, infimes tâches) - Dos de la jaquette légèrement insolé
Spurbooks Ltd 1978 160 pages 13 4x2 2x21 2cm. 1978. Broché. 160 pages.
couverture défraîchie intérieur propre dos ridé intérieur propre
London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1996 Pictorial paperback, oblong: 245 x 190mm., 160pp., profound colour illustration. ISBN 0297833812.
Covers the area of lush pastureland and gentle, rolling hills that stretches from Shrewsbury in the north to Gloucester in the south, and from the Welsh borders in the west to around Stratford-upon-Avon in the east. Good condition.
, London, Leonard Hill, 1957, Bound, cloth with silverimprint on front and spine, photo - frontispice, 190 x 250mm., 218pp., b/w documentation and LXIX b/w picture - plates.
Book was written in collaboration with Johannes Schreiner. First edition. Good condition.
Lnd., N.Y., Routledge, 2002.
3 vols: X,284;X,367;XII,367 p. Hardb. 24 cm (Including dustjackets, in slipcase) (Heavy book, may require extra shipping costs)
2. Aufl. Braunschweig, George Westermann, 1892. Gr.-8°. (1) Bl., XX, 538 S. Mit 24 Abb. auf Tafeln (dv. 1 als Frontispiz), 91 Abb. im Text sowie 1 Karte und 1 gef. Tafel. Halblederband der Zeit .
Gutes Exemplar. Leichte Gebrauchsspuren. Besitzereintrag auf dem Vortitel.
Deuxième Edition. Paris, Hachette, 1875. Gr.-8°. (1) Bl., (4), IV, 431, (1) S. Mit 108 gest. Abb. (dv. 16 ganzs.) und 6 Karten. Halblederband der Zeit mit Rückenvergoldung.
Zweite französische Ausgabe. – Sehr gut erhaltenes Exemplar.
"(WIBERG, MARTIN) - THE WIBERG CALCULATING MACHINE PRESENTED.
Reference : 59088
(1863)
(Paris, Mallet-Bachelier), 1863. 4to. No wrappers. In: ""Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences"", Tome 56, No 8. Pp. (317-) 364. (Entire issue offered). The paper: pp. 330-339.
First apperance of this detailled report and examination by the French mathematiciens Mathieu, Chasles and Delaunay of the calculating machine invented by Martin Wiberg as an improvement on the Scheutz machine. The machine could produce tables of logarithms.
Weimar, Carl Ludolf Hoffmann, 1777. Small 8vo. A bit later marbled boards. Spine gone. (22),437,(3) pp. Light toning to text and some scattered brownspots.
Scarce first edition of Wiegleb's most importent work and one of the most importent historical criticism of the alchymistic theories of transmutations. ""Wiegleb’s critical attitude in assessing scientific questions earned him high esteem in learned circles. After several years of work he published Historisch-kritische Untersuchung der Alchemie (1777), which went through a second edition. In this work he stated: ""The best accounts from the period when the name alchemy is encountered, . . . are examined, and it is thereby demonstrated that they are, taken together, incapable of confirming the reality of alchemy. Then, the strongest proof is adduced to show that the entire imaginary art of alchemy is impossible according to all known, certain natural laws of human art: thus [it is shown] that it has never truly been practiced by anyone."" Wiegleb carefully examined famous reports of the transformation of metals and pointed out their deficiencies: in a short time his work became widely known. His motto was ""To doubt is the beginning of knowledge,"" so it is all the more as tonishing that Wiegleb was a convinced proponent of Stal’s phlogiston theory throughout his life."" (DSB).Ferguson II, 546. - Duveen, 620.
Leipzig, Johann Ambrosius Barth, 1863. Conemp. hcalf. 5 raised bands, gilt spine and gilt lettering to spine. A few scratches to spine. A small nich to middle of spine.Small stamp on verso of first -and general- titlepage. In: ""Annalen der Physik und Chemie. Hrsg. von J.C. Poggendorff"", Vierte Reihe Bd. 28, (=Poggendorff Bd. 118). Entire volume offered. X,644 pp. and 8 engraved plates. Wiener's paper: pp. 79-94.
First printing of this importent paper in the development of the atomic theory.The cause of the Brownian movement was ascribed by C. Wiener in 1863 to bombardment of the suspended particles by the molecules of the liquid. This was confirmed by Svedberg in 1906"" he found that the length of the path described agrees with that calculated from the kinetic theory by Einstein (1905) and Smoluchowski (1906).The volume contains further notable papers: G. KIRCHHOFF ""Zur Geschichte der Spectral-Analyse und der Analyse der Sonnenatmosphäre"". Pp. 94-111.L. LORENZ: ""Ueber die Theorie des Lichts"". Pp. 111-145. - Lorenz is well known for his theory of the electromagnetic nature of light, which he, independently of Maxwell, published in 1867.
"WIEN, WILLY. (WILHELM). - DETERMINING THE MASS AND VELOCITY OF CANAL RAYS.
Reference : 43653
(1898)
Berlin, J.A. Barth, 1898, 1901 Without wrappers. In ""Annalen der Physik und Chemie. Hrsg. von G. Wiedemann."", Neue Folge, Bd. 65, No. 7. (Entire issues offered). Pp. 241-480. . And Vierte Folge, Bd. 5. Pp. 241-488, textillustr. Wien's paper pp. 440-452, textillustrations and pp. 421-435, textillustrations. Clean and fine. The second issue punched in inner margin after cords., no loss of text.
First appearance of Wien's importent paper in which he shows that the cathode rays are particles, that their velocity is about a third to that of light and he establish the ratio between the mass and the charge.In the paper are ""described the experiments by which Wien determined the properties of the canal rays. The firstpart of the paper conatins a description of observations on the cathode rays, made with a Lenard Tube, in which the cathode rays passed through an aluminium window into an extension of the tube where as high a rarefaction as possible was maintained. The magnetic and electrostatic deflexions of a narrow cathode stream were observed and Wien concludes that it is proved by his investigation that the cathode rays which pass through the windoww carry with them strong negative charges.""(Magie ""Souce Book in Physics"", p. 597 ff.).Wien was awarded the 1911 Nobel Prize for physics for his discoveries regarding laws governing the radiation of heat.
Wiepke Loos, Marijn Schapelhouman, Rijksmuseum (Netherlands), R. J. A. te Rijdt
Reference : 026212
(2002)
ISBN : 9789040087066
2002 Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Hardcover As New
Relié, jaquette: Comme Neuf, 30 x 26 cm, 271 pages, Néerlandais, Illustrations, état: Comme Neuf [Cette description peut avoir été traduite par une IA.]
Parkstone international. 2004. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Coins frottés, Coiffe en pied abîmée, Intérieur frais. 95 pages, jaquette conservée, nombreuses photos et illustrations en noir et blanc et en couleur hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 633.7-Plantes alcaloïdes (tabac, thé, cacao, café, pavot)
Classification Dewey : 633.7-Plantes alcaloïdes (tabac, thé, cacao, café, pavot)
Kessinger Publishing LLC 2026 48 pages 14 986x0 762x22 86cm. 2026. Broché. 48 pages.
Comme neuf fac simile de l'édition de 1908
Guy Chambelland "Poésie-Club", 1970. In-12 broché (19 x 12,3 cm), 111 pages. Présentation et traduction de Daniel Mauroc. Texte en anglais avec traduction française en regard. Petit ex-libris. Excellent état, très bel exemplaire.
P., Editions de l'Odéon, 1951. In-4 en feuilles (33 x 24 cm), couverture rempliée et titrée en rouge. Sans le double emboîtage. 116 pages, illustré de 18 burins originaux dont 7 hors-texte, par TAVY NOTTON. Texte bilingue, en anglais et en français. Tirage limité à 180 exemplaires numérotés, celui-ci le n° 163 sur vélin de Rives.
VASSEUR 2026 10 6x1x14 8cm. 2026. Broché.
Très bon état
VASSEUR 2026 10 6x1x14 8cm. 2026. Broché.
Très bon état
, Arnoldsche Art Publishers, 2016 Size: 305 mm x 240 mm. Pages: 352. Illustrations: 250 colour. Hardback with dustjacket. ISBN 9783897904651.
The fascinating history of gemstones in art and jewellery Gemstones have always been, since time immemorial, heavily charged with meaning and have even been regarded as magical objects. For that reason they have also been an art medium since the early modern age and have shaped as art symbols - in the form of the crystal - both Romanticism and Modernism, for example in the works of Caspar David Friedrich, Lyonel Feininger and many more. In the latter half of the twentieth century, not only have such artists as Bernd Munsteiner, Ute Eitzenhofer and Bernhard Schobinger rediscovered the gemstone; through the Hochschule fur Edelstein und Schmuck Trier/Idar-Oberstein and other similar specialist institutions it is also undergoing a revival in today's art production - right up to Damien Hirst. Text in English and German.