Londres, Moses Pitt, 1686. In-folio de (10)-349-(5) pp., veau havane marbré, dos orné à nerfs, pièce de titre en maroquin rouge, tranches rouges (reliure de l'époque).
Édition originale. Première partie seule publiée. L'édition des quatre volumes initialement prévus, fut interrompue en raison notamment des difficultés pour Chardin à obtenir des illustrations gravées satisfaisantes.L'ouvrage est illustré d'un titre-frontispice, d'une vignette allégorique portant le buste du roi d'Angleterre à qui l'ouvrage est dédié, deux autres vignettes d'en-tête, seize planches gravées hors texte dont 12 dépliantes (dont une carte de la Mer Noire) ; lettrines et culs-de-lampe gravés en taille-douce.Jean Chardin (1643-1713), fils d'un riche joaillier protestant, pour satisfaire son goût des voyages, se lia avec un marchand de Lyon et partit avec lui, en 1665, pour la Perse et l'Inde. En Perse, il bénéficia de la protection du sh h ‘Abb s II. Il rentra en France en 1670 et l'année suivante, il publia le Récit du couronnement du roi de Perse Soliman III. Au mois d'août 1671, il se mit à nouveau en route pour la Perse, passant cette fois par Smyrne, Constantinople, la Crimée et le Caucase. Chardin atteignit I fah n au mois de juin 1673, passa quatre ans en Perse, visita de nouveau l'Inde et rentra en France par le cap de Bonne-Espérance en 1677. Pendant son séjour, il apprit la langue et la culture perses et devint plus tard plénipotentiaire de la Compagnie anglaise des Indes auprès des États de Hollande de 1683 à 1712. En 1681, les persécutions contre les protestants le contraignirent à s'installer à Londres où il devint joaillier de la cour et fut fait chevalier par Charles II.Bel exemplaire. Défauts sur la planche du Sépuchre de Abas second. Le portrait manque.Brunet, I, 1802 ; Chadenat 546 ; Atabey, 218 ; Hage Chahine, 909.
Manesse 1963 Textes de Georges Wildenstein. In-4 pleine toile éditeur sous jaquette illustrée. Jaquette en très bon état. 235 pages. Livre neuf. Poids sans emballage : 2000 grammes. Catalogue raisonné complet de l’oeuvre de Chardin 1699-1779 avec étude analytique de l’oeuvre, biographie et chronologie. Un ouvrage de référence par le grand collectionneur Wildenstein.
Catalogue raisonné complet de l’oeuvre de Chardin (1699-1779) avec étude analytique de l’oeuvre, biographie et chronologie. Un ouvrage de référence par le grand collectionneur Wildenstein. Très bon état d’occasion
Le Seuil 1955 1955. Pierre Teilhard De Chardin - Le Phénomène Humain / Editions du seuil 1955
Etat correct
Éditions du Seuil, coll. « Oeuvres de Pierre Teilhard de Chardin » 1955 Édition des années 1950-60 suivant disponibilité dans le stock. In-12 broché 19,5 cm sur 14,5. 347 pages. Rousseurs sur couverture. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
Editions du Seuil, coll. « Oeuvres de Pierre Teilhard de Chardin » 1957 Edition des années 1950-60 suivant disponibilté dans le stock. In-12 broché 19 cm sur 14,5. 391 pages. Dos jauni. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
Éditions du Seuil, coll. « Oeuvres de Pierre Teilhard de Chardin » 1959 Édition des années 1950-60 suivant disponibilité dans le stock. In-12 broché 19,5 cm sur 14,5. 405 pages. Dos insolé. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
Editions du Seuil, coll. « Oeuvres de Pierre Teilhard de Chardin », n° 4 1957 In-12 broché 19,2 cm sur 14,4. 202 pages. Couverture jaunie. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
Éditions du Seuil, coll. « Oeuvres de Pierre Teilhard De Chardin », n° 6 1962 In-12 broché 19,5 cm sur 15,5. 223 pages. Dos jauni. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
Éditions du Seuil, coll. « Oeuvres de Teilhard De Chardin » 1963 In-12 broché 19,5 cm sur 14,5. 429 pages. Dos Bruni. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
Éditions du Seuil, coll. « Oeuvres de Pierre Teilhard de Chardin » 1965 In-12 broché 19,5 cm sur 14,5. 293 pages. Couverture tachée. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
Editions du Seuil, coll. « Oeuvres de Pierre Teilhard de Chardin » 1956 In-12 broché 19 cm sur 14. Frontispice- 375 pages Couverture jaunie,. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
Genff, Widerhold, 1681. Folio (340 x 210 mm). Recently bound in a magnificent pastiche-binding of brown half calf with gilt red leather title-label to elaborately gilt spine. Vellum corners. Title-page with stains. A few marginal repairs, not affecting text. (8), 82 pp.
Exceedingly rare first German translation of Chardin’s “Le Couronnement de Soleimaan troisieme” (1671) - his report on the coronation of the new Persian king and what happened during the first years of his reign. Returning to Persia on the way home to Europe, Chardin witnessed the coronation of Suleiman III in 1669. Chardin’s works are considered some of the finest works of early Western scholarship on Iran and the Subcontinent in general, and the present work offered Europe a rare glimpse into the customs of the Royal house of Persia. “Chardin details the ceremonies in [the present work], with a preface that laid out the parallels between the French and Persian monarchies. Chardin portrays a filial bond between the two monarchies. The Persian shah, he declares, calls “Your Majesty [Louis XIV] his brother” due to their shared grandeur. Chardin proclaims, “The Kind of France is the greatest Emperor in Europe as he [the shah] is the most powerful Prince in Asia.” He emphasizes his admiration for Persia and its likeness to France: “Of all the vast Empires of the Orient … there is not one that should not yield to Persia, for the temperature of the air, for genius that is more reasonable than other places and is closest to our own, and for all the excellent and rare things that are found there in abundance.” (Mokhberi, The Persian Mirror) Born in Paris in a Hugenot (Protestant) family, Jean Chardin (1643-1713) undertook his travels to Persia because of his father's position as a jeweler and shareholder in the French East India Company. Chardin set out in 1664, traveling through Turkey, the Black Sea, Georgia and Armenia. Soon after his arrival in Persia he received a commission to create jewelry for Shah Abbas II, who died in 1666 and was succeeded by Shah Safi. After witnessing the latter's coronation [Described here], Chardin went on India and finally returned to Paris in 1670. In 1671, he published an account of the coronation and in the same year set off for Persia again, arriving in Isfahan in 1673 and remaining there for several years, before once more visiting India and returning home in 1677. With the persecution of the Hugenots in France, he moved to England in 1680. ""Travel restarted with 17th-century missionaries, whose medical and pedagogical expertise helped counterbalance Orthodox (or pagan) reservations. Dominican Prefects Dortelli D'Ascoli and Giovanni da Lucca (1630s) extended Giorgio Interiano's description of Circassia (and Abkhazia). Theatine proselytisers targeted Mingrelia/western Georgia (Capuchins the eastern provinces) - the Vatican's Fide Press further contributed by printing the first Georgian books (Chikobava/Vateishvili). Many, including mission-head Don Pietro Avitabile (1626-1638), recounted their experiences. Prefect to Mingrelia, Joseph Marie Zampi, a 23-year denizen from approximately 1645, contributed a third significant source in his description of Mingrelian religious practice. This he handed to Jean Chardin (1643-1713) in 1672. A French traveller who became English(!) ambassador in Holland, Chardin translated and incorporated it as a substantial part of his own description of a sometimes perilous journey through Transcaucasia (1672-3), which reflects Ottoman and Persian influence in western and eastern parts, respectively - a Turkish organized slave-trade flourished from various Mingrelian ports. Linguistically, Zampi revealingly observed that the ecclesiastical language, Georgian, was as difficult for even the Mingrelian priesthood to understand as Latin was for Italian peasants!"" (Speake, The Literature of Travel and Exploration, 1, 199-202). (Brunet I, 1802 – A later French edition). (Graesse II, P. 121).
A Amsterdam, 1735. 4to. 3 cont.full mottled calf. Raised bands, richly gilt backs. Extremities with small traces of use, slight weakening to parts of hinge, top of spine on vol. II with loss of leather ca 1x2 cm. Internally fine on good paper. 2 engr.frontisp. (with portraits), 3 engr.titlevign., 3 large engr. textvignettes. (12),390,(4),359,(4),437 pp. and 78 mostly large folded engraved plates (maps,plans,views etc.). - To this second edition was published a 4th volume which contains the author's previously published work ""Couronnement de Soliman III"" and extracts from the author's manuscript, this supplementary volume is not present here, but the 3 volumes contain the whole travel and all the plates belonging to these 3 volumes.
Rare second edition of Chardin's travels, regarded as being one of the finest works of early Western scholarship on Persia and the Near East in general. ""Thought to have been read by writers such as Montesquieu and Rousseau, Chardin's account stands apart from those of other travellers to the region (Caucasus) at this time through its awareness of cultural difference and relativity and in its desire to place accuracy above romanticism."" (Speake, The Literature of Travel and Exploration, 1).Chardin set out from Paris for Persia and India. He reached Ispahan 1673, spent four years in Persia, visited India and returned by the Good Hope in 1677. The first volume contains the trip from Paris to Isfahan, the second contains a particular description of Isfahan and the relation of the author's two voyages, from Ispahan to Bander-Abassi, the third contains a general description of the Persian empire and the particular descriptions of the sciences and arts which are in use therein, of political, military, and civil government.Born in Paris in a Hugenot (Protestant) family, Jean Chardin (1643-1713) undertook his travels to Persia because of his father's position as a jeweler and shareholder in the French East India Company. The younger Chardin set out in 1664, traveling through Turkey, the Black Sea, Georgia and Armenia. Soon after his arrival in Persia, he received a commission to create jewelry for Shah Abbas II, who died in 1666 and was succeeded by Shah Safi. After witnessing the latter's coronation, Chardin went on India and finally returned to Paris in 1670. In 1671, he published an account of the coronation and in the same year set off for Persia again, arriving in Isfahan in 1673 and remaining there for several years, before once more visiting India and returning home in 1677. With the persecution of the Hugenots in France, he moved to England in 1680""Travel restarted with 17th-century missionaries, whose medical and pedagogical expertise helped counterbalance Orthodox (or pagan) reservations. Dominican Prefects Dortelli D'Ascoli and Giovanni da Lucca (1630s) extended Giorgio Interiano's description of Circassia (and Abkhazia). Theatine proselytisers targeted Mingrelia/western Georgia (Capuchins the eastern provinces) - the Vatican's Fide Press further contributed by printing the first Georgian books (Chikobava/Vateishvili). Many, including mission-head Don Pietro Avitabile (1626-1638), recounted their experiences. Prefect to Mingrelia, Joseph Marie Zampi, a 23-year denizen from approximately 1645, contributed a third significant source in his description of Mingrelian religious practice. This he handed to Jean Chardin (1643-1713) in 1672. A French traveller who became English(!) ambassador in Holland, Chardin translated and incorporated it as a substantial part of his own description of a sometimes perilous journey through Transcaucasia (1672-3), which reflects Ottoman and Persian influence in western and eastern parts, respectively - a Turkish organized slave-trade flourished from various Mingrelian ports. Linguistically, Zampi revealingly observed that the ecclesiastical language, Georgian, was as difficult for even the Mingrelian priesthood to understand as Latin was for Italian peasants!"" (Speake, The Literature of Travel and Exploration, 1, 199-202).Brunet 1802Graesse II, P. 121
Timbal Nicole Teilhard de Chardin Pierre
Reference : 100060675
(2010)
ISBN : 2840243830
Editions des Béatitudes 2010 160 pages 14x21x1cm. 2010. Broché. 160 pages.
Très bon état - L'ouvrage qui n'a jamais été lu peut présenter de légères traces de stockage mais est du reste en très bon état. envoi rapide et soigné dans un emballage adapté depuis France
1962 1962. L'Énergie humaine - Oeuvres de Teilhard de Chardin/ 1962
Très bon état
De l'Homme 1963 1963. Bel état voir photo. Pages non coupées
Seuil 1966 1966. 1966. Livre en bon état d'usage. Livre relié couverture cartonnée sous jaquette
Editions du Seuil 1960 Edition des années 1960-70 suivant disponibilté. In-12 cartonnage éditeur bleu. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
Grasset 1961 Édition de 1961- In-8 broché, 403pp, en assez bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
Seuil 1966 In-16 cartonné. 94pp. sous Rhodoïd, bon état d’occasion.
D Bon état d’occasion
Grasset 1957 In-8 broché 19,5 cm sur 14,5. 193 pages. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
H. Piazza, sd (1907) 1907 In-folio, cartonnage éditeur beige, tête dorée, non rogné XI- 108- 106 pp. Frontispice en couleurs, une vignette portrait sur le titre, 44 reproductions en héliogravure dans le texte et hors texte, en noir, sanguine, couleurs ou camaïeu, sous serpentes légendées. Bel exemplaire.
254 numéros décrits et liste des graveurs. Tiré à 500 exemplaires num., celui-ci sur vélin. Bon état d’occasion
Aux éditions du Seuil, Paris 1966 In-8 broché 20 cm. 252 pages. Bon état d’occasion.
Textes choisis et ordonnés par J.-P. Demoulin Bon état d’occasion
France Loisirs 1990 In-8 21 cm sur 13,5. 343 pages. Cartonnage éditeur avec sa jaquette. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion
Editions du Seuil 1962 In-12 cartonnage éditeur bleu avec rhodoid. 20 cm sur 14,5. 223 pages. Bon état d’occasion.
Bon état d’occasion