Editions Du Chêne - Paris - 2007 - 239 pages - De la Naissance à la mort du soleil - Illustration couleurs - Volume in folio ,cartonnage de l'éditeur sous jaquette - Excellent état .
Reference : Louis2007
Sage comme une image
Jean Paul Tarantola
16 rue Anne Dubourg
63200 Riom
France
04 73 64 05 89
Port à la charge de l'acheteur (sauf indication contraire). Colissimo recommandé pour toute commande supérieure à 30.00 Euros. Envoi à réception du règlement.
Berlin, C. F. Henning, 1751. 8vo. Two parts bound in one contemporary half calf binding with four raised bands and blind stamped ornamentation to spine. Small paper-label pasted on to top of spine. Wear to extremities, boards with scratches and lower part of front hinge with loss of leather. Front free end-paper with four line annotation in contemporary hand. Internally nice and clean. (12), 488, (4), 466, (4) pp.
First edition of one of Voltaire’s greatest historical works, arguably one of the most important political and cultural histories of this era - a monument of eighteenth-century historiography, paving the way not only for modern historiography but also literary history in general. In accordance with other Enlightenment authors and philosophers, Voltaire saw the age of Alexander the Great and Pericles, the age of Caesar and Augustus and the Italian Renaissance as ""great ages"". In the present work he presented the age of Louis XIV as the fourth and greatest. “The Age of Louis XIV was the most thoroughly and conscientiously prepared of Voltaire’s works. He had planned it in 1732, begun it in 1734 put it aside in 1738, resumed it in 1750. For it he read two hundred volumes and reams of unpublished memoires, consulted scores of survivors from le grand Siecle, studied the original papers of protagonists like Louvois and Colbert, secured from the Due de Noailles the manuscripts left by Louis XIV, and found important documents, hitherto unused, in the archives of Louvre.” (Durant, The Age of Voltaire: The Story of Civilization, Volume IX). The period covered in this work spans from the later years of Cardinal Richelieu to the aftermath of Louis XIV's death. Voltaire characterized this era as a pinnacle of artistic and philosophical achievement, contrasting it with what he viewed as a decline during the reign of Louis XV. Voltaire's approach to history diverged from traditional accounts focused on great leaders and events. He aimed to capture the essence of the era like a painter, emphasizing broader historical and cultural movements over specific individuals or battles. He valued developments such as artistic progress, the decline of medieval superstitions and the end of sorcery and witch trials as significant markers of advancement.
Cologne, Pierre Marteau, 1693. 12mo. In contemopirary floral painted wrappers. With a bit of loss of paper to front wrappers. Title-page with underlignings in red, otherwise internally nice and clean. 216 pp.
Uncommon first edition of this work on François-Henri de Montmorency, Duke of Luxembourg (a key French military commander during the reign of Louis XIV) and Louis XIV himself.Provenance: Valdemar's Castle, Denmark. Brunet II, 1065.
2009, Gourcuff Gradenigo. In-8 a l'italienne, broché, 157pp. Nombreuses illustrations en couleurs et n&b.
Excellent exemplaire comme neuf.
Paris, Mariette et Delfspine, 1707. Small 8vo. Contemp. halfcalf. Richly gilt spine. A small nick at top of spine. A small paperlabel pasted on lower compartment. Stamp on title-page. (20),470 pp. Clean and fine.
Paris, Treuttel et Würtz, 1806. Bound in 6 contemp. hcalf. Gilt spines. Titlelabels with gilt lettering. Wear to top of spines, on 2 vols.with loss of a bit of leather. A tear to one hinge at lowercompartment. Stamp on titlepages. Engraved portrait as frontispiece. Ca. 3000 pp. and 24 folded facsimiles. Internally clean, printed on good paper.
First edition.