1892 1892. P. Christian: Essais De Michel de Montaigne Tome seconde/Hachette 1892 . état correct
Etat correct
Montaigne Michel de Wach Aurélie Rio Françoise
Reference : 500047874
(2019)
ISBN : 9782091512167
NATHAN 2019 129 pages 12 4x17 6x0 8cm. 2019. Broché. 129 pages.
Très bon état
Montaigne Michel de Wach Aurélie Rio Françoise
Reference : 500058933
(2019)
ISBN : 9782091512167
NATHAN 2019 129 pages 12 4x17 6x0 8cm. 2019. Broché. 129 pages.
Très bon état - livre issu de destockage - pouvant présenter d'infimes traces de stockage - Expédié soigneusement dans emballage adapté
Montaigne Michel de Wach Aurélie Rio Françoise
Reference : 500083695
(2019)
ISBN : 9782091512167
NATHAN 2019 129 pages 12 4x17 6x0 8cm. 2019. Broché. 129 pages.
Très Bon Etat
Félix Alcan 1922 613 pages 1922. 613 pages.
Ferrara, Benedetto Mamarello, 1590. Small 8vo. Later half vellum with gilt title-label to spine. Marbbled paper over boards. A faint damp stain to the last few leaves, otherwise a nice and clean copy. Old ownership-signature to last leaf. Bookplate to inside of front board. Large woodcut device to title-page. Woodcut initials and headpieces at beginning. (8), 170, (5) pp.
The very scarce first edition of the first translation into any language of any part of Montaigne's Essays, namely Naselli's monumental first Italian translation, which came to pave the way for later translations of the work, among them Florio's first English from 1603. Montaigne's magnum opus was published in 1580, and in 1588, the final edition appeared, constituting the definitive text of the work and that on which all later editions were based. With his seminal work, Montaigne not only created a novel genre of writing, he also founded modern scepticism and the revival of ancient scepticism, and he paved the way for the modern philosophy and thought presented by Bacon, Decartes and Newton. ""Unlike anti-intellectuals like Erasmus, Montaigne developed his doubts through reasoning. Unlike his skeptical predecessors who presented mainly a series of reports on the variety of human opinions, Montaigne worked out his complete Pyrrhonism through a sequence of levels of doubt, culminating in some crucial philosophical difficulties... The occurrence of Montaigne's revitalization of the Pyrrhonism of Sextus Empiricus, coming at a time when the intellectual world of the 16th century was collapsing, made the ""nouveau Pyrrhonisme"" of Montaigne not the blind alley that historians like Copleston and Weber have portrayed, but one of the crucial forces in the formation of modern thought... It was also to be the womb of modern thought, in that it led to the attempt either to refute the new Pyrrhonism, or to find a way of living with it."" (Popkin, vol. II, 1960, pp. 54-55). There are many important aspects of Montaigne's groundbreaking work, which has been subject of an uncountable number of scholars throughout centuries. But one aspect which seems to have been forgotten in recent times is one that is emphasized by Naselli's extremely important first ever translation of the work. As the Italian title will reveal, the work was also widely viewed - and intended - as a political council book. Naselli bases his translation on Montaigne's own final edition from 1588 and publishes it merely two years later, including 42 of 94 chapters of the first two books. His translation is the one closest in time to the original appearance of the work and is the only one published in Montaigne's own life-time. It is thus in a unique position to tell us about contemporary views on the work and its use. ""One enormously important prose genre upon which Montaigne draws most heavily consists of political advice books for courtiers and princes that proliferated in great number and with great social and political impact in the late Renaissance. Montaigne's appropriation of the political counsel genre has gone largely unnoticed by contemporary scholars, and bringing it into focus has significant implications for our understanding of the ""Essais""... bringing it to the foreground allows us to challenge more robustly the common conclusion that Montaigne's unique project ""is not a political work.""Many in the first generation of Montaigne's reception appear to have seen the ""Essais"" principally as a contribution to the political contribution to the political counsel literature. For example, Girolamo Naselli's 1590 Italian translation of the ""Essais is titled ""Discorsi morali, politici e military"", while John Florio follows Naselli's lead in the title of his 1603 English translation, ""The Essayes or Morall, politike and militaire discourses"". And when Francis Bacon enthusiastically adopts Montaigne's novel ""Essai""-form for his own ends, he does so as a useful means of giving ""Councels Civill and Morall"", not simply musings personal and poetic."" (Thompson, Montaigne and the Tolerance of Politics, p. 21). As is mentioned on the title-page, this first translation also contains another, long ""questione"". ""In this deliberative discourse, very different in kind from anything a modern reader would associate with ""Essais"", and apparently composed soon after the winter 1576-7 Estates General of Blois, the author argues methodically and resolutely against those at the assembly who in a public ""ragionamento"" demonstrated the employment of foreigners in a republic to be universally undesirable, and who nearly succeeded in having this position passed into law."" (Boutcher: The Scool of Montaigne in Early Modern Europe, vol. 2, p. 136).
Montaigne (Michel de) - Paul Faure, ed. - Comte de Saint-Aulaire, préface
Reference : 86195
(1948)
Editions Bordas , Les Grands Maitres Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1948 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée rempliée à rabats éditeur blanche, illustrée d'une vignette en gravure grand In-8 1 vol. - 337 pages
3 cartes hors-texte en fin d'ouvrage et 8 planches hors-texte en noir et blanc (complet) 1ere édition dans cette collection, 1948 Contents, Chapitres : Préface, xxix, Texte, 308 pages - Le Journal de voyage en Italie est un récit de voyage de Montaigne en 1580 et 1581. - Le passage de Montaigne dans l'est de la France a été jugé insignifiant par Meusnier de Querlon (1702-1780), premier éditeur du Journal de voyage. La part exacte de ce qui revient au secrétaire de Montaigne, ou de Montaigne lui-même qui l'aurait dicté, reste discutée, mais le secrétaire tiendra la plume jusqu'à Rome. Pour Pierre Michel, cette partie reste un document de valeur historique et un témoignage psychologique de qualité. Montaigne quitte son château, le château de Montaigne, le 22 juin 1580, en compagnie de son frère cadet, de son beau-frère, de son secrétaire et de domestiques. Il participe au siège de la Fère, tenue par les Protestants, puis va à Beaumont sur Oise où d'autres gentilshommes le rejoignent. Le 5 septembre, Montaigne et sa troupe font d'une seule traite, le trajet allant de Beaumont à Meaux. La topographie de Meaux est décrite ainsi que la boucle de la Marne et le canal Cornillon, abbayes et monastères environnants. Le 8 septembre, les voyageurs sont à Épernay, d'où ils repartent le 9 pour Châlons, puis Bar le Duc. Contrairement à Meaux, le Journal ne dit rien de la ville de Châlons et de ses monuments, et très peu de Bar le Duc. Dans le courant septembre, il est à Épinal et traverse à la fin du mois le sud de l'Alsace de Bussang à Bâle. Le 29 septembre, il est à Mulhouse, désignée comme ville suisse du canton de Bâle. Le Journal contient une description détaillée de la ville et plusieurs entretiens de Montaigne avec des notables locaux. Ce passage de Montaigne est cité par tous les ouvrages traitant de l'histoire de Mulhouse. etc... etc... (source : Wikipedia). Montaigne se rend ensuite à Munich, puis à Rome et bains Della Villa avant de retourner chez lui. couverture très propre, à peine jaunie sur le haut du plat supérieur sans gravité, intérieur propre, papier un peu jauni, petite tache sur la tranche n'affectant pas l'intérieur, cela reste un bon exemplaire, bien complet des 11 planches hors-texte (8 illustrations et 3 cartes)
Le Livre de Poche 1993 607 pages in12. 1993. Broché. 607 pages.
Très bon état
Le Livre de Poche 1993 607 pages in12. 1993. Broché. 607 pages.
Etat correct