P. et Neuchatel, Victor Attinger , 1934, 3ème éd., in-8, br., couv. ill., non rogné, 335 pp., 16 illustrations en noir hors-texte, bibliographie. (DC25)
Reference : 1368173
"Un homme et un Siècle". Eugène de Savoie-Carignan, dit "Le Prince Eugène" (1663-1736), homme de guerre, fils de Eugène-Maurice de Savoie-Carignan, comte de Soissons et d'Olympe Mancini. Ayant un refus de Louis XIV d'obtenir un régiment, il passe à l'âge de vingt ans au service de l'Autriche. Version française de Sven Stelling-Michaud. Collection Histoire. Ex. du S.P.
Librairie HURET
M. Jean-Etienne HURET
9 rue de la Pompe
75116 Paris
France
33 01 40 50 15 40
TELEPHONER avant de venir à la librairie car une grande partie de notre stock est en réserve, il faut 48 heures avant qu'il soit à la librairie. Les ouvrages sont expédiés après réception du règlement (chèque,carte Visa,virement) SAUF PAYPAL. Frais de port variables selon poids à ajouter au prix du livre. Envoi en colissimo (Livres et brochures pour l'étranger pour les livres de moins de 70 €) sauf indication contraire du client.
2 volumes in-12 (89 x 149 mm), pleine basane havane de l'époque, dos à 5 nerfs ornés de caissons cloisonnés et fleuronnés, titre et tomaison dorés, tranches mouchetées rouges, (6), lxx, 444 p. et (4), 500 p. Lyon, Thomas Amaulry, 1718.
Première et unique édition de cette relation de la troisième guerre entre l'Autriche et l'Empire Ottoman, composé, selon la BnF, par l'abbé Anthelme Tricaud de Belmont (1671-1739), historien, membre de l'Académie de Lyon.La guerre vénéto-austro-ottomane (1714 à 1718) opposa l'Empire ottoman à la république de Venise, alliée aux Habsbourg à partir de 1716. Elle s'acheva par une victoire turque et la perte de la Morée (Péloponnèse), principale possession de Venise dans la péninsule grecque. Venise fut, cependant, sauvée d'une plus grande défaite par l'empereur Charles VI qui envoya le prince Eugène de Savoie (1663-1736) en Hongrie à la tête d'une armée de taille modeste mais aguerrie; son intervention fut décisive.Mors supérieur frottés. Quelques accrocs de cuir et petites épidermures éparses.Provenance: "Jacques François de Maussac, Prieur de Laurents" (1683-1747) avec son ex-libris gravé.Bon exemplaire relié à l'époque. Intérieur frais.
Phone number : 33 01 47 07 40 60
's Gravenhaage, Isac van der Kloot, 1729. Large folio. (57 x 34 cm.). Bound uncut (!) in 2 contemp. hcalf. 6 raised bands. Titlelabels with gilt lettering. Wear to spine-ends. A small stamp on foot of title-pages. Title-pages printed in red/black. Engraved titlevignettes. Some engraved vignettes. (6 - incl. half-title),LX,147"(4),358 pp. With in all 90 engraved plates, mostly folded and double-page (or more), including 10 maps, 1 portrait (Eugene), 79 plates (including the 12 famous plates of battlescenes). 5 folded tables. As it is bound uncut the copy is wide-margined, clean and printed on good paper.
First Dutch edition, published the same year as the French ""Histoire Militaire du Prince Eugene de Savoye... etc."", and with the same engravings. This fine and monumental work describes and depicts the wars of Prince Eugene de Savoye, the Duke of Marlborough and the Prince of Nassau, in Italy, Hungary, Germany, The Netherlands and against the Turcs. The 10 engraved maps are engraved by Hubert Iallot, Covens & Mortier, Guillaume de L'Isle etc. The very detailled panoramas of war scenes, include the fine and famous series made by Jan Huchtenberg (Huchtenberg, Pinxit et excudit). Prince Eugene's almost invariable success on the battle-field raised the reputation of the Austrian army to a point which it never reached either before or since his day. War was with him a passion. Always on march, in camps, or on the field of battle during more than fifty years, and under the reigns of three emperors, he had scarcely passed 2 years together without fighting.
Au bureau du journal. 6 décembre 1862. In-Folio. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 16 pages environ illustrées de nombreuses gravures en noir et blanc - Paginées de 370 à 384. . . . Classification Dewey : 70.4417-L'illustration / Figaro salon
SOMMAIRE : Revue politique de la semaine. — Courrier de Paris. — Vase d’argent de -César. — Causerie dramatique. — La clef des champs. — Inauguration du boulevard du Prince-Eugène. — Gilda, nouvelle (suite). — A travers l’Exposition de Londres. — Los borrachos, tableau célèbre de Vélasquez. — Bulletin bibliographique. — Revue financière.Gravures : S. A. I. le duc de Leuchtenberg-Romanoff. — S. A. R. le prince Alfred. — Le prince Grégoire Ypsilanti. — M. Kalergis, ministre de Grèce en France. — Réunion électorale à Athènes. — Vase en j argent ayant appartenu à César. — inauguration de la statue du Dr Esquirol dans rétablissement de Charenton. — Fontaine décorative de la place du Trône. — Statue du prince Eugène Beauharnais. — Arc décoratif élevé à l’entrée du boulevard du Prince-Eugène.— Décoration de la place du Trône pour la cérémonie d’inauguration du boulevard.— Exposition de Londres : Vitrail de MM. Laurent Gsell, à Paris; — papiers peints de M. F. Desfossé. — Monument funèbre du lieutenant Bellot, dans le cimetière de Rochefort. — Los borrachos, tableau de Vélasquez. — Tempête du 27 novembre sur les côtes de Barcelone. — La Terre avant le déluge .’Mammouth; —période triasique.— Rébus. Classification Dewey : 70.4417-L'illustration / Figaro salon
A la Haye, chez Isaac van der Klott, 1729-47. Large folio. (54 x 35 cm.). 3 uniform contemporary full mottled calf. Spine with 9 compartments, divided by 8 raised bands. Compartments richly gilt. Titlelabels with gilt lettering. Light wear to top of spine on volume I. Small stamp on title-pages. LXI,132 II,336(6),357,(1) pp. 3 engraved titlevignettes, 10 half-page engraved headpieces and 101 fine engraved plates (10 maps, 12 battle-scenes 77 plans and views, 2 portrait-plates (one as frontispiece in Vol. III) mostly double-page (also triple-page or more). 6 tables, some folding. Internally fine and clean, printed on good paper. Wide-margined.
First edition. Simultaneouly published in French and Dutch. This fine and monumental work describes and depicts the wars of Prince Eugene de Savoye, the Duke of Marlborough and the Prince of Nassau, in Italy, Hungary, Germany, The Netherlands and against the Turcs. The engraved maps are engraved by Hubert Iallot, Covens & Mortier, Guillaume de L'Isle etc. The very detailled panoramas of war scenes, include the fine and famous series made by Jan Huchtenburg (Huchtenburg, Pinxit et excudit). Prince Eugene's almost invariable success on the battle-field raised the reputation of the Austrian army to a point which it never reached either before or since his day. War was with him a passion. Always on march, in camps, or on the field of battle during more than fifty years, and under the reigns of three emperors, he had scarcely passed 2 years together without fighting.Graesse II:445. Brunet II:881. Cohen-Ricci 337. There is no standard collation of this work (varies between 90 and 102 plates).
A la Haye, chez Isaac van der Klott, 1729-47. Large folio. (54 x 35 cm.). 3 uniform contemporary full mottled calf. Compartments richly gilt. Tome- and titlelabels with gilt lettering. Some wear to top of spine and some cracking to leather along joints on volume I-II. Corners a bit bumped. Small stamp on title-pages. LXI,132 II,336(6),357,(1) pp. 3 engraved titlevignettes, 10 half-page engraved headpieces and 95 fine engraved plates (7 maps, 13 battle-scenes 73 plans and views, 2 portrait-plates (one as frontispiece in Vol. III)) mostly double-page (also triple-page or more). 8 tables, some folding. Internally fine and clean, printed on good paper. Wide-margined.
First edition. Simultaneouly published in French and Dutch. This fine and monumental work describes and depicts the wars of Prince Eugene de Savoye, the Duke of Marlborough and the Prince of Nassau, in Italy, Hungary, Germany, The Netherlands and against the Turcs. The engraved maps are engraved by Hubert Iallot, Covens & Mortier, Guillaume de L'Isle etc. The very detailled panoramas of war scenes, include the fine and famous series made by Jan Huchtenburg (Huchtenburg, Pinxit et excudit). Prince Eugene's almost invariable success on the battle-field raised the reputation of the Austrian army to a point which it never reached either before or since his day. War was with him a passion. Always on march, in camps, or on the field of battle during more than fifty years, and under the reigns of three emperors, he had scarcely passed 2 years together without fighting.Graesse II:445. Brunet II:881. Cohen-Ricci 337. There is no standard collation of this work (varies between 90 and 102 plates).