"THOMSON, JOHN (+) WILLIAM FLOYD (+) FELICE BEATO (+) HIPPOLYTE ARNOUX.
Reference : 60283
(1872)
1870-1872. Folio-oblong (395 x 320 mm). Original brown half calf, recased - the original cloth (with gilt lettering to the front) has been expertly mounted on to the new boards, and most of the original gilt leather spine has been preserved over a perfectly matching new lovely brown half calf. ""Tordenskjold / 1870 - 1873"" in gilt lettering, partly worn of, to front board. End-papers renewed. 71 albumen print in various sizes and by various photographers (see below) mounted on 59 contemporary white cardboard leaves (measuring 370 x 310 mm), all re-hinged. The album was water-damaged at some point, but has been expertly and neatly retored and appears in overall very good condition with good tones. 1, Oval photo of Tordenskjold (205 x 60mm) 2, Photo of Tordenskjold (190 x 143 mm) 3, Crew aboard Tordenskjold (200 x 14 mm) 4, Crew aboard Tordenskjold (157 x 128 mm) 5, Crew and equipment aboard Tordenskjold (228 x 176 mm) 6, Naval officers about Tordenskjold (167 x 130 mm). 7, 8 small photos of various places on one plate (274 x 190 mm) 8, The harbor of Port Said. By Hippolyte Arnoux (247 x 190mm) 9, Muddigging machines in the channel of Port Said. By Hippolyte Arnoux. (245 x 190mm) 10, Port Said. By Hippolyte Arnoux. 11, Malta (262 x 207 mm) 12, Two photos of Malta (each measuring 134 x 120 mm) 13, Two photos of Gibraltar (Each measuring 148 x 114) 14, Deep Water Bay, Hong Kong (194 x 130 mm). 15, Two photos depicting telegraph-house and ships in Deep Water Bay (each measuring 150 x 112) 16, Boat with people. By Felice Beato, coloured (294 x 235 mm) 17, House next to river. By John Thomson, December 1870 (278 x 225 mm) 17, Seamen’s hospital in Hong Kong. (261 x 190 mm) 18, Hong Kong. (270 x 195 mm) 19, Hong Kong, by Floyd (270 x 192 mm) 20, Hong Kong, by Floyd (240 x 190 mm) 21, Two photos of sites in Hong Kong (each measuring 165 x 127 mm) 22, Five Persians in Hong Kong (215 x 244 mm) 23, Group of women in Hong Kong, (326 x 215 mm) 24, Two photos of Hong Kong harbour, one photo depicting “Cella” (182 x 105" 130 x 98 mm) 25, Villa at Canton. (264 x 190 mm) 26, Pagode in Xuexiu Park, Guangdong. By William Pryor Floyd. (195 x 246 mm) 27, Boats in Canton. William Pryor Floyd,(270 x 223 mm) 28, Pou-Ting-Qua’s Garden, Canton. By John Thomson. (289 x 230 mm) 29, Fields in Canton. (205 x 155 mm) 30, Houses in Canton. (267 x 210 mm) 31, Canton harbor. By John Thomson. (245 x 202 mm) 32, Boat on the Canton river. (274 x 204 mm) 33, Wall around Canton. (260 x 200 mm). 34, Boats in Canton (293 x 225) 35, Telegraphstation in Woosung. (150 x 110 mm) 36, Boats in Foochow. (287 x 232 mm) 37, Temple in Foochow. By John Thomson (190 x 237 mm) 38, Pagode in Foochow. Presumably by John Thomson. (287 x 220 mm). 39, Tomb of Fou Tcheou. By John Thomson. (290 x 225 mm). 40, Temple in Shanghai. (237 x 188 mm). 41, Shanghai. (232 x 176 mm) 42, Chaochow bridge, Kwangtung. By John Thomson. (266 x 204 mm). 43. Panorama of Nagasaki consisting of two photos. (371 x142 mm) 44, Two photos of Nagasaki. Felice Beato. (Each measuring 169 x 119 mm). 45, Two photos from Nagasaki. Presumably by Felice Beato. (Each measuring 165 x 118 mm) 46, Two photos from Nagasaki. Presumably by Felice Beato. (Each measuring 165 x 118 mm) 47, Temple in Nagasaki. Presumably by Felice Beato. (169 x 118 mm). 48, Photo of Japanese woman in kimono. By Felice Beato. (205 x 255 mm). 49, Two photos of officers in house in Yokohama. (162 x 125 mm). 50, The Abbot and Monks of Kushan Monastery. By John Thomson. (287 x 204 mm). 51, Wooden structure, presumably Nagasaki. Presumably by Felice Beato. (270 x 208 mm) 52, Pagode, presumably Nagasaki. Presumably by Felice Beato. (234 x 185 mm) 53, Cityscape with lake, presumably Nagasaki. Presumably by Felice Beato.. (280 x 228 mm). 54, Two photos, cemetery and stairs to temple. By Felice Beato. (Each measuring 168 x 118 mm). 55, People standing outside house, presumably Hong Kong. By John Thomson. (185 x 155 mm) 56, Guangzhou Great Norh Gate, Canton. By John Thomson (245 x 156 mm). 57, Two photos, one of the building of a telegraph station (presumably in Wladivostok) and a view of Wladivostok from the sea (154 x 123 130 x 99 mm). 58, Seascape of two ships. (130 x 140 mm). 59, Ship laying for anchor. (170 x 123 mm)
Exceedingly rare photo-album documenting the Danish vessel Tordenskjold’s mission in laying the very first telegraph cables in East Asia thereby connecting China and Japan to the global telegraph system. The album consists of photos taken aboard the vessel Tordenskjold, of Tordenskjold itself along with its crew, by an unknown photographer, and of photographs of the visited cities and surrounding areas by some of the finest photographers operating in East Asia at the time, such as John Thomson, William Floyd, Felice Beato and, in Egypt, Hippolyte Arnoux - all photographs presumably brought home by William Lund, Captain on board Tordenskjold. The present album depicts a pivotal moment in international relations and communications and does so through some of the earliest photos taken in China, Japan, and of the excavation of the Suez Canal. Submarine telegraph cables were first brought to China by Danish magnate Carl Fredrick Tietgen (1829-1901), a Dane who in 1870 set up the Great Northern China and Japan Extension Company. The company was created to build and operate a telegraph cable linking Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Japan with each other, and on to Vladivostok on Russia's east coast. From Vladivostok, a cable ran along the Trans-Siberian Railway, linking Hong Kong to telegraph networks in Britain, Europe, and America. Tietgen fought off strong, primarily English, competition and eventually won the concession to lay and operate new telegraph cables connecting Russia, China and Japan. It was a grand and risky project Tietgen and his partners were embarking on. Undersea cables would need to be laid in waters that had not been sounded, and cables were to be brought ashore on coasts where the prevailing conditions were not known and it was uncertain whether the respective governments would grant permission. Everything – cables, stations, wire, and apparatus – was to be brought from Europe and had to function as a coherent system. Two chartered English steamships ‘Cella’ and ‘Great Northern’ were to transport and lay the cables, and the propeller-driven Danish frigate ‘Tordenskjold’ was to sound the waters near Nagasaki and Vladivostok and also carry a relative small amount of cables and keep uninvited guests - which the South China Sea had plenty of – away. “As a small nation with negligible military resources, Denmark could provide a useful – politically neutral – centre for telegraph links to major European powers such as Britain, Russia and the emerging new power of Prussia. The Danes were able to utilize the technical know-how which had been accumulated with great difficulty, and occasionally heavy economic losses, in the preceding decades by British and American entrepreneurs. The competition between the Danish and British groups of telegraph entrepreneurs for first access to the Chinese market was preliminarily resolved when the directors of the two companies negotiated a secret agreement in May 1870. The Danish group had acquired an advantage in terms of timing by winning the Russian concession in 1869, and had to cover shorter distances by sea cables from Vladivostok to Nagasaki and Shanghai. But the British group had the advantage of better access to capital and a more extensive technical experience with submarine cable manufacture and operation. The essence of the agreement was that the line between Hong Kong and Shanghai should be established and operated by the Great Northern the companies would share the income for telegrams which passed this section of the line and they would run offices in Hong Kong and Shanghai jointly. The agreement provided the Danes with assured landing rights in Hong Kong and with British diplomatic support for attempts to secure landing rights in China. Permission to bring submarine telegraph cables into Chinese treaty ports was obtained in 1870 from the Chinese Government (i.e., the office of foreign affairs, known as the Zongli Yamen) by the British Minister in Peking, Thomas Wade. At the same time, the Danish government had dispatched a diplomatic envoy, Chamberlain Julius Sick, at the Great Northern’s expense to China and Japan to obtain the necessary concessions. The cable between Hong Kong and Shanghai was laid in 1870–1871 with the assistance of the frigate Tordenskjold, which the Danish government had generously allocated to the task. The Great Northern had a great deal of technical problems with the cables they had bought from the British manufacturer since the quality of the insulation was not as good as expected. Therefore, the official opening of the line between Shanghai and Hong Kong was delayed until April 1871. During the remainder of that year the company struggled to finish cable sections from Shanghai to Nagasaki, and from Nagasaki to Vladivostok. Communication between Shanghai and Europe via these cables and the Russian Siberian lines was officially inaugurated on 1 January 1872.” (Erik Baark: Wires, Codes and People The Great Northern Telegraph Company in China 1870–90) The album covers and illustrates one on the most fascinating periods in the process of internationalization in the late modern period: The Suez Canal had just opened and ‘Tordenskjold’ was the first Danish ship to sail through it. The submarine cables linked the major hubs in East Asia to the Western world and helped facilitate an unprecedented growth in the region. Overall, the laying of the submarine cable in 1870-71 was a transformative event for East Asia in general. It played a critical role in the area's economic and social development, helping to make it the global commercial center it is today.
P., Librairie internationale A. Lacroix, Verboeckhoven et Cie, 1868-1869 3 vol. in-8°, 390, 400 et 350 pp, traduction de l'anglais par L. Aubert, seule édition française autorisée, reliures demi-chagrin vert, dos à 4 nerfs, titres et caissons dorés, tranches marbrées (rel. de l'époque), dos et plats frottés, bon état
"Le lecteur ne manquera point de reconnaître, je l'espère, que cette histoire du progrès des idées et des opinions est faite à un point de vue qui jusqu'ici a été à peu près entièrement négligé. Il y a deux méthodes pour traiter les questions philosophiques : la méthode littéraire et la méthode scientifique. Lorsque l'on traite un sujet par la première de ces méthodes, beaucoup de choses restent effacées, qui prennent une importance considérable lorsque l'on considère leurs rapports scientifiques. C'est la seconde méthode que j'ai adoptée. Le progrès social est aussi absolument gouverné par les lois naturelles que le développement du corps. La vie de l'individu est une miniature de la vie de la nation. La démonstration de ces propositions forme l'objet spécial de cet ouvrage..." (John William Draper, préface)
Philadelphia T. & J.W. Johnson 1853 In-8, xxiv, [17]-182p.
:: Cohen, Bibliography of Early American Law 3671. :: Reliure de l'époque, basane, dos lisse, pièce de titre rouge, filets à froid encadrant les plats. Coins écrasés, coiffe de tête frottée, rousseurs éparses, petites épidermures. :: Timbre de John McCoy, bookseller, Montreal. Ex-libris manuscrit, 1850. Cachet des Franciscains, Montréal-Est. :: Note manuscrite : Donated by estate of E.G. Bedard to Brother William Bedard. 250,00 $ réduit à :
Longmans, Green & Co. 1943. In-12. Relié. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos abîmé, Quelques rousseurs. 689 pages. Texte sur 2 colonnes. Titres dorés sur le dos et le premier plat. Page de titre jaunie.. . . . Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
3rd edition. Compiled by John Bellows. Revised and enlarged by William Bellows. Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
[PHOTOGRAPHIES]. - ANDREX, CONSTANTINE Eddie, DEVOS Raymond, FERNADEL, MOULOUDJI, John WILLIAM...
Reference : 27615
Paris, s.d. [1950-1965]. Album in-12, oblong contenant plus de 30 dédicaces et signatures sur photographies originales ou cartes postales photographiques. (40).
ENVOIS AUTOGRAPHES adressés à BETTY " LIEBEEMEUT "... Buxelles Pol BEAM photo avec envoi autographe (11 x 15 cm) - Nanrico PATASSINI photo envoi autographe (10 x 15 cm) - Sophie GRIMALDI carte postale d'après Studio Vauclair, envoi autographe - Un programme : Jacques Helian et son orchestre - Jean VALAIN photo (10,5 x 15 cm) envoi autographe - Ph SAMLEVUB 2 photos envois autographe - John WILLIAM carte envoi autographe - Programme A-b- magazine (1953) Los Rexis Jack Simpson - Claude Marchand - Dick et Dot Remy envois autographes - Julien MAFFRE photographie envoi autographe - Raymond DEVOS photographie (18 x 13 cm) signature autographe - etc. Photos sur demande.
London George Bell and Sons 1884 2 vol. relié 2 vol. in-12, pleine percaline grise de l'éditeur, décor à froid au dos et sur les plats, XII-438 et IX-435 pp. + cat. de l'éditeur, index. Très bon exemplaire de ce classique de l'historien, philosophe et scientifique américain.
Photographie 7,5x4 cm - collée sur carton - vers 1900 -
London: John W. Parker, 1848 in-8,16 pages (Hebrew Primer)+ 51 pages (Maskil Le-Sopher), interfolié. Demi veau, rel. frottée, coiffes et coins usés.
Maskil Le-Sopher. The Principles and Processes of Classical Philology applied to te Analysis of the Hebrew Language (relié avec: Hebrew Primer (London, Macintosh Printer, n.d.). (London: John W. Parker, 1848). [M.C.: judaïca, judaïsme, hébreu, linguistique]
Malher & Cie, Paris 1829 - 1833, In-8 (13x21,5cm), 508pp. et 620pp., relié.
Edition originale française de cet importante étude. Traduction de l'anglais avec notes par MM. Verhulst et A. Quetelet. Le second volume est de 1833. L'important délais d'édition entre le premier et le second volume a permis certaines additions remarquables : Supplément au traité de la lumière par Quetelet, p. 336-602 du tome 2, dans lequel ce dernier expose les récentes recherches en optique. L'illustration comporte 15 planches dépliantes. Le traité de la lumière avait seulement paru sous forme d'articles dans lesPhilosophical transactions, et il s'agit de sa première édition en volume à laquelle Herschel a contribué par ses corrections. Reliures en pleine basane vert olive légèrement postérieures ca 1840. Dos lisse ornés d'arabesques géométriques en long. Plats frappés à froid d'une grande plaque florale, médaillon central sur le plat supérieur du Collège royal d'Orléan avec couronne de laurier. Dos insolés et devenus brun clair avec des traces de décoloration et de frottement. Coins et bordures frottés. Sur le contreplat, étiquette de prix à la date de 1845. Brunissures éparses sauf sur les planches, bien fraîches. Sir William Herschel était un astronome britannique.Herschel a mis en évidence l'existence du rayonnement infrarougeen analysant la lumière du Soleil à l'aide d'un prisme et d'un thermomètre.Il a également trouvé les premières preuves que la lumière et l'infrarouge sont deux aspects d'un même phénomène, nommé aujourd'hui rayonnement électromagnétique. Le terme infrarouge n'est apparu que vers 1880, Herschel employait celui de "Chaleur radiante". - Photos sur www.Edition-originale.com -
REIFF John-William - (Photo de la 2e collection Félix Potin)
Reference : 50816
(1900)
- Photographie 4 x 7, 5 cm. Notice biographique collée au dos.
Photo. Né à Chicago en 1881. Félix Potin, Début XXe. Vers 1900.
REIFF John-William - (Photo de la 2e collection Félix Potin)
Reference : 51723
(1900)
- Photographie 4 x 7, 5 cm. Notice biographique collée au dos.
Photo. Né à Chicago en 1881. Félix Potin, Début XXe. Vers 1900.
REIFF John-William - (Photo de la 2e collection Félix Potin)
Reference : 51967
(1900)
- Photographie 4 x 7, 5 cm. Notice biographique collée au dos.
Photo. Né à Chicago en 1881. Félix Potin, Début XXe. Vers 1900.
(London, Richard Taylor, 1834) 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"" 1834 - Part I. Pp. 123-126 a. pp. 127-141.
First appearance of Lubbock's ""Lunar-Theory""""John Lubbock (1803-65), was an astronomer and mathematician. He made a special study of tides and of the lunar theory and developed a method for calculating the orbits of comets and planets. In mathematics he applied the theory of probability to life insurance problems.""
"DRAPER, (JOHN) WILLIAM. - THE FIRST DAGUERREOTYPE PORTRAIT.
Reference : 46912
(1840)
London, Richard and John Taylor, 1840. Contemp. hcalf. A nic to spine at upper hinge. Hinges weakening (not loose). Gilt lettering to spine ""Philosophical Magazine"" - Vol.XVII. In: ""The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. Conducted by David Brewster et al."". Vol. XVII. A stamp to titlepage and a few other pages. Entire volume offered. VIII,552 pp. Draper'spaper: pp. 217-225.
First printing of the famous paper in which Draper relates how he was able to made the first photographic portrait on a daguerreotype plate, giving an ennormously long exposure. The subject of the portrait, Draper's assistant, powdered his face with flour and sat in front of the camera for a half hour facing the sunlight.Draper stated that it is possible to make portraits in full sunlight, using mirrors as light reflectors. ""But in the reflected sunshine, the eye cannot support the effulgence of the rays. It is therefore necessary to pass them through some blue medium, which shall abstract from them their heat and take away their offensive brilliancy. Ihave used for this purpose blue glass, and also ammoniaco-sulphate of copper, contained in a large trough of plate glass, the interstice being about an inch thick."" (p. 217 in the paper offerd).""Draper first achieved wide celebrity for his pioneering work in photography. As early as 1837, while still in Virginia, he had followed the example of Wedgwood and Davy in making temporary copies of objects by the action of light on sensitized surfaces. When the details of Daguerre’s process for fixing camera images were published in various New York newspapers on 20 September 1839, Draper was ready for the greatest remaining challenge, to take a photographic portrait. A New York mechanic, Alexander S. Wolcott, apparently won the race by 7 October. But if Draper knew of this, he persisted in his own experiments and succeeded in taking a portrait not later than December 1839. His communication to the Philosophical Magazine, dated 31 March 1840, was the first report received in Europe of any photographer’s success in portraiture. The superb likeness of his sister Dorothy Catharine, taken not later than July 1840, with an exposure of sixty-five seconds, seems to be the oldest surviving photographic portrait.""(DSB).The volume contains also Michael Faraday's importent letter to Gay-Lussac on induction in the first English version. ""On Magneto-electric induction."", pp. 281-89 a. pp.356-366. (Originally published in French in ""Annales de Chimie et Physique"" in 1832.
"IRELAND, JOHN - WILLIAM HOGARTH. - FROM THE LIBRARY OF DUDLEY COUTTS MAJORIBANKS.
Reference : 54524
(1791)
(London), J. & J. Boydell, 1791, 1791 a. 1798. Beautifully bound in 3 contemp. straight grained full morocco. On covers 4-double gilt line fillets with 4 large gilt floral cornerpieces. All compartments richly gilt with lines and small floral-like stamps. Titles with gilt lettering. Inside gilt borders. Edges of covers gilt. Edges gilt. All volumes with the printed paperlabel of the bookbinder ""Bound by C. Smith, 108, Strand"". All volumes with the gilt exlibris in leather of Dudley Coutts Majoribanks (1st Baron Tweedmouth). 2 engraved frontispieces. 3 engraved title-pages (vol. 3 with both engraved and printed title-page). (6),CXXII,311"(2),(311-) 607,(4)XXIII,380,(1, errata) pp. and with 136 engravings on plates and engraved vignettes. With the engraved dedication-plate. A clean fine copy, printed on good paper with occassionally a bit of offsettings from the plates. Bindings in near mint condition.
First edition in an exquisite copy.
- Partition de 4 pages.
Partition en anglais. B. Feldman & Co, Vers 1950.
London Privately printed by J.W.N. Birch. Printed by A. Spottiswoode 1837 Première édition. Magnifique reliure en cuir trois quarts de l'époque avec des planches marbrées. Le dos est orné de titres et de motifs dorés. Un peu de frottement sur les bords seulement. Frontispice, quatre pages de lettres en fac-similé. Rousseurs modérées sur les pages de garde et le frontispice, avec un léger assombrissement sur le reste de l'ouvrage. Ex-libris à l'intérieur de la première planche. Un très bel exemplaire de cet ouvrage rare. Des lettres fascinantes qui donnent un aperçu de la vie de la gentry au début du dix-neuvième siècle en Grande-Bretagne. 277 x 208 mm. xvi, 152 pp.
First Edition. Beautifully bound in contemporary three quarters leather with marbled boards. Attractive gilt design and titles to the spine. A touch of rubbing to the edges only. Frontispiece, four pages of facsimile letters. Moderate foxing to the end papers and frontis, with just a little darkening to the rest of the work. Bookplate to the front inside board. A very nice copy of this scarce item. Fascinating letters which offer an insight into the life of the gentry in early nineteenth century Britain. 277 x 208 mm. xvi, 152 pp. .
Germer Baillière , Bibliothèque Scientifique Internationale Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1877 Book condition, Etat : Bon cartonné, éditeur pleine percaline, orné de fers grand In-8 1 vol. - 265 pages
4ème édition Contents, Chapitres : christianisme (prise de pouvoir civil, rapports avec la science) - doctrine d'unité de Dieu (réforme du Midi) - renaissance des sciences dans le midi - nature de l'âme (émanation et absorption) - nature du monde - controverse sur l'âge de la terre - critérium de vérité - gouvernement de l'univers - catholicisme et civilisation moderne - idem pour science - crise prochaine mors intérieur du plat supérieur fragilisé - papier légèrement bruni
Jos.W.Stern 1919
Bon état Format Américain Piano
[Godal ] - - Kellette John William,Kenbrovin Jaan - Stransky Otto
Reference : 27587
(1919)
Brüll Karl 1919
Etat moyen Grand format Piano
University of Illinois Press 1955 in4. 1955. Cartonné.
Bon état de conservation couverture défraîchie intérieur propre
"Rouff "" Collection Patrie "" N°48. 1918. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Agrafes rouillées, Quelques rousseurs. 24 pages, premier plat de couverture illustré en couleurs. Dos frotté. Quelques dessins en noir et blanc, dans et hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 840-Littératures des langues romanes. Littérature française"
Le récit complet illustré. Classification Dewey : 840-Littératures des langues romanes. Littérature française
Germer Baillière , Bibliothèque Scientifique Internationale Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1875 Book condition, Etat : Moyen cartonné, reliure éditeur grand In-8 1 vol. - 265 pages
2ème édition Contents, Chapitres : christianisme (prise de pouvoir civil, rapports avec la science) - doctrine d'unité de Dieu (réforme du Midi) - renaissance des sciences dans le midi - nature de l'âme (émanation et absorption) - nature du monde - controverse sur l'âge de la terre - critérium de vérité - gouvernement de l'univers - catholicisme et civilisation moderne - idem pour science - crise prochaine catalogue de 32 pp - mors légerement abîmé
Germer Baillière , Bibliothèque Scientifique Internationale Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1903 Book condition, Etat : Moyen relié, reliure éditeur grand In-8 1 vol. - 265 pages
11eme édition Contents, Chapitres : christianisme (prise de pouvoir civil, rapports avec la science) - doctrine d'unité de Dieu (réforme du Midi) - renaissance des sciences dans le midi - nature de l'âme (émanation et absorption) - nature du monde - controverse sur l'âge de la terre - critérium de vérité - gouvernement de l'univers - catholicisme et civilisation moderne - idem pour science - crise prochaine notice biographique manuscrite intéressante (demi page) - défraîchi
London. Effingham Wilson. Sans date. Ex donno de 1866. 2 volumes in-8 (148 x 224 mm) plein veau rouge brun, dos à 5 nerfs entièrement ornés, pièces de titre maroquin rouge, de tomaison maroquin vert, encadrement des plats formé de 2 filets dorés avec rouelle en coins et une ligne de pointillés à froid, roulette sur les coupes, gardes et tranches marbrées, XXII, 491 et VIII, 534 pages, portrait en frontispice du tome I, fac-similé dépliant en frontispice du tome II, illustrations dans et hors texte. Ex-libris armoriés, ex donno manuscrit. Mors un peu épidermés, ainsi que les coins et les coupes, sinon très bel exemplaire, presque exempt de rousseurs.