1864 Auguste Durand, Paris, 1864. In-8 de XXX-459pp. Avant-propos de la traduction française, Préface de l'auteur, 9 leçons, Appendice, Table analytique, Errata. 1 volume in-8,reliure demi veau glacé,piece de titre maroquin rouge,coiffe sup.accidentée, comprenant 9 leçons Figures dans le texte. (XXX- 459pp.): Phonétique et Etymologie précédé d'une notice sur la vie et les ouvrages de Max Müller.Edition originale;bon état.
F.M. Muller, linguiste, orientaliste et mythologue allemand, (1823/1900), élève des universités de Leipzig et de Berlin, il vint ensuite suivre à Paris le cours de sanskrit d'E. Burnouf. Il passa, en 1846, en Angleterre et se fixa, en 1848, à Oxford où il accepta les fonctions de professeur de langues et littératures modernes. En 1869, on créa pour lui une chaire de grammaire comparée. Parmi ses ouvrages linguistiques, qui ont eu le mérite de vulgariser l'étude scientifique des langues, nous citerons Leçons sur la science des langues, Nouvelles leçons sur la science du langage ---- Notice sur la vie et les ouvrages de M. Max Müller - Phonétique et étymologie (le langage et la raison, l'alphabet physiologique, les changements phonétiques, la loi de Grimm, les principes de l'étymologie) - etc.
Paris, Siloé, 1979.In-4, pleine toile,jacquette illustrée, [8] pages de texte et 50 planches en couleurs contrecollées.,4to, full cloth, [ 8 ] pages of text and 50 plates pasted colors,dust jacket,
bords jacquette leg.effrangée,bon etat
lausanne et Paris Mourer 1795/1803 6 Ensemble de 6 volumes de format in 8°, regroupant les 12 tomes de cette Histoire des Suisses éditée par J. Mourer à Lausanne et à Paris par Bossange, Masson et Besson en l'An III de la République (1795), puis continuée jusqu'en 1803. Vol. I:. Tome Premier; 1795,1 f. (titre avec vignette gravée); 350 pp.; 2ff. de tables. Vol. I. Tome Deuxième,1795, 1f. (page de titre avec un portrait gravé); 358 pp.; 1 f. de tables. Vol. II. Tome Troisième, 1795, 1f. (titre avec un portrait gravé); 368 pp.; 1f. de tables. Vol .II. Tome Quatrième, 1795, 1 f. (titre avec un portrait gravé); 450 pp. dont 4 pp. de tables. Vol. III. Tome Cinquième; 1795,1f. (titre avec un portrait gravé de Guillaume Tell d'Uri); 364 pp. dont 4 pp. de tables. Vol III. Tome Sixième; 1797, 1 f. (Titre avec un portrait gravé); 412 pp. dont 4 pp. de tables.Vol. IV. Tome Septième, 1797, 1f. (titre avec un portrait gravé); 376 pp. dont 2 pp. de tables. Vol. IV; tome Huitième, 1798, 1 f. (titre avec un portrait gravé); 782 pp. dont 4 pp. de tables. Vol. V. Les tomes 9 et 10 ont été inversés à la reliure. Tome Neuvième; 1797,1 f. (titre avec une vignette gravée); 406 pp. dont 4 pp. de tables. Vol. V; Tome Dixième, 1800, et "premier de la continuation"; 378 pp. dont page de titre et tables.Vol. VI. Tome Onzième; 1801, 1 f. (titre); 420 pp. dont tables. Vol. VI; Tome Douzième; 1803,196 pp. dont faux-titre et titre.
Reliure de l'époque en demi basane tabac à coins; dos lisses; pièces de titres noires; tranches mouchetées jaune-paille. Infimes défauts à la reliure ; dos légèrement frottés; quelques repères à l'encre noire en marge; une tache d'encre noire dans le premier volume sans atteinte au texte. Vérifié bien complet. Voir les photographies; exemplaire désirable.
HETZEL BIBLIOTHEQUE DES SUCCES SCOLAIRES-12 edition-s.d.-
IN8 toile ed. dos passé-fers" du Lycée d'ALLAIS"-sur le 1er plat-379p.
1884 DELAGRAVE 1884
IN8 cartonnage dec.ed.leg.passè-ill.ht gravèes/bois de Lix-tranches dorèes-300p.-leg.rousseurs èparses.
1926 M.P.TREMOIS 1926- pt.IN8 br.95p.-9 ill.ht.
Mme Élisabeth Müller (PSEUDONYME DE LÉONIE BÉDELET) - Marie Edmée
Reference : 25158
(1867)
1867 A. Bédelet (Paris) 1867,in folio pleine percaline rouge,titre sur le 1er plat,: 26 p.,tranches dorées, :frontispice et 9 pl. lithogr.coloriées, sous serpentes ; in-fol.,reliure défraichie,manque au bas du dos;interieur frais,trés rare.Marie Edmée PAU 1845 1871 son existence fut ponctuée de luttes entre ses aspirations professionnelles artistiques , religieuses, intimes, amoureuses difficilement conciliables dans la France du Second Empire.Marie-Edmée Pau (1845-1871) est une dessinatrice originaire de l'Est de la France. Hormis ses illustrations du Journal de Marguerite, elle signe aussi une Histoire de Jeanne d'Arc qui connait un certain succès. Cette artiste catholique nous laisse également ce journal intime, qui couvre ses années d'adolescence jusqu'à sa mort prématurée, à l'âge de 26 ans.
reporoduit avec planches lithographies en noir:https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k6567213j.texteImage
1858 Paris, Firmin Didot 1858. In-8 broché,sans couvertures, IXp + 15 planches cartes dépliantes en couleurs. Peu courant. Bon état.
atlas armenie grece italie turquie Strabonis Strabon latin KARL MULLER ( CAROLUS MULLERUS )
Editions Des 4 Seigneurs / editions De Bellande 1977,IN8 broche,288 p. En bon état, légère usure de la couv.
Leipzig, Kottbus (N.-L.) : Verlag von Paul Kittel, 1888.,IN8 cartonnage ed.,Mit 1 Porträt in Lichtdruck und 14 Holzschnitten. Ausgabe 1.2 Bl., 200 S., 1 Portr., 8 Taf
bon etat,cachets bibliotheque
Paris, Dreyfous, s.d. [1860]. Fort et grand in-8 de de (4) ff., 540 pp. :cartonnage decoré signé Engel,les 2 faces decorées, tranches dorées (reliure de l'éditeur). EDITION ORIGINALE. Elle est ornée de 200 illustrations gravées sur bois, la plupart à pleine page.Interessant ouvrage, inconnu à Grand-Carteret, réunissant une analyse des usages à travers les époques, selon les continents, allant des premiers chrétiens, la France au Moyen-Age, puis dans les provinces françaises, les différents pays européens, musulmans, au Japon, en Amérique etc..
fortes rousseurs;mouillures eparses,cartonnage bon etat
Paris : B. Grasset, 1913,In-16,Broché, 199 p.envoi autographe auteur,Bon état
Paris G. Crès 1931 Un volume in-8 broché de 148 pages, avec 11 hors-texte dont 3 cartes en couleurs, texte très bon état - leger manque au 1er plat couverture,
Paris, Henri Floury, 1924.In-4 broché, 316 pp. 16 illustrations photographiques hors texte,mouillures en marge superieure, leg.defraichi,
Paris G. Crès 1931 Un volume in-8 broché de 148 pages, avec 11 hors-texte dont 3 cartes en couleurs, taches grasses en marge du haut sans atteinte au texte sur l'ensemble du volume;dans l' état - manques au dos couverture,
Genève J.-H. Jeheber, 1922.Edition francaise de S[uzanne] Mærky-Richard.IN8 broche,couverture illustree,294p.
rare,BON ETAT
1888 Paris, Delagrave, collection "Voyages dans tous les Mondes", 1888, in-12 reliure demi chagrin ,dos à caissons dorés- de VI et 316 pages,bon état.
1965 Paris, Fleurus, 1965.Collection Théologiens et Spirituels Contemporains. Un volume broché de format petit in 8° carré de 190 pp.
Dos bruni, sinon bon état.
Paris, Garnier Frères, sans date.(1900?) Pt. in-8°,broché,couverture illustrée, XI-290p. bon exemplaire.
paris Albin Michel/Rock and Folk. 1978 1 Un volume broché de format petit in 8° carré de 192 pp.; nombreuses illustrations en noir dans le texte. Couverture illustrée;
Bel état. Voir photos.
Berlin, 1842. 4to. Entire volume of ""Abhandlungen""... and ""Mathamatische Abhandlungen""... 1840 present. Contemporary yellow boards with a vellum-like spine. Handwritten title to spine. A bit of wear and soiling to extremities, and corners bent. Internally fine and clean. Stamp to title-page (Dom-Gymnasium Magdeburg, also stamped out). Pp. (187)- 257 + 6 plates, two of which are folded. Text very nice, bright, and clean, plates with a bit of brownspotting. [Entire volume: (6), XVII, (5), 400 pp. + 10 plates, 4 of which are coloured + (4), 137 pp.].
First printing of this foundational work, which established the acceptance, by the modern world, of Aristotle as the founder of biological science. It is due to the present work that modern encyclopaedias will now conclude that ""Aristotle is properly recognized as the originator of the scientific study of life."" (SEP). Apart from its importance to the modern view of Aristotle, the present paper was also central to Müller's construction of a natural system of the fishes. For centuries, the authority of Aristotle in matters of science and biology was unrivalled, but with modern science, the advancement of exact knowledge, and modern man's ability to investigate the smallest of details, Aristotle's scientific and zoological works increasingly came to be viewed as not properly belonging to the exact sciences. Many biologists would claim that his observations were fanciful and incorrect, not constituting any real scientific value. This view completely changed with the publication of the present paper, by the renowned zoologist Müller.In his ""Historia Animalium"", Aristotle had described a phenomenon in a shark, which no modern zoologist believed to be true. Had it been true, our classification among sharks and fish would need to be different, as this fanciful observation would completely alter our view of the shark as such. Müller, in the present treatise, was the first to actually prove Aristotle's observation to be true, thereby altering the modern conception of Aristotle, earning him the respect that he truly deserved as the first scientific biologist and as the originator of the scientific study of life. ""Müller placed the Cyclostomata among the fishes. He was thus led to study the sharks... A further product of this investigation was ""Über den glatten Hai des Aristoteles"" (1842). In ""Historia animalium"", Aristotle had reported that the embryos of the ""so-called smooth shark"" are attached to the uterus of the mother by a placenta, as is the case among mammals. Rondelet had described such a shark in 1555 and Steno had observed one in 1673 off the coast of Tuscany, but it had not been referred to in more recent times. Müller was the first who was able to corroborate the earlier testimony.In conjunction with the study of the shark, Müller constructed a natural system of the fishes based on work as painstaking as it was perceptive."" (DSB).Johannes Peter Müller (1801-58) was one of the most important physiologists and zoologists of the 19th century. He made a vast number of important discoveries, and his unusual and empirical approach to his subjects made him one of the most influential scientists of the century. ""Müller introduced a new era of biological research in Germany and pioneered the use of experimental methods in medicine. He overcame the inclination to natural-philosophical speculation widespread in German universities during his youth, and inculcated respect for careful observation and physiological experimentation. He required of empirical research that it be carried out ""with seriousness of purpose and thoughtfulness, with incorruptible love of truth and perseverance."" Anatomy and physiology, pathological anatomy and histology, embryology and zoology-in all these fields he made numerous fundamental discoveries. Almost all German scientists who achieved fame after the middle of the nineteenth century considered themselves his students or adopted his methods or views. Their remarks reveal his preeminent position in medical and biological research. Helmholtz, one of his most brilliant students, termed Müller a ""man of the first rank"" and stated that his acquaintance with him had ""definitively altered his intellectual standards""."" (DSB).
Argentorati (Strassburg), J.G. Bauer, 1767. 8vo. Nice contemporary half calf with five raised bands and gilt lines to spine. Wear to spine and capitaks and slightly split at hinges, but still tight. A bit of brownspotting throughout. Smukt velbevaret samt. hldrbd. med ophøjede bind, rig rygforgyldning og skindtitel. XVIII, 238, (22) pp. + two folded engraved plates (one being the folded map of Furesøen, Lyngby-og Bagsværd Sø).
The very rare first edition of Müller’s floral magnum opus, which according to his own statements contains a description of all known plants in Denmark, of which Müller prides himself with having discovered and described no less than 300. Müller participated in the production of the monumental “flora Danica” with its magnificent plates of all Danish plants, but the present work is the only work of botany that he himself published, namely of the flora of the Schulin Estate. “Otto Friedrich Muller (1730-1784) was born in Copenhagen, the son of the court trumpeter, a German man who had moved to Denmark. With a ready and lively intelligence, he received an excellent education admitted to the University of his hometown at the age of 18, according to the custom of the time he initially studied theology (the Danish university had only three courses of study: theology, law, medicine), then moved to law he had excellent skills in various fields, including music. However, he did not graduate, because for economic reasons in 1753 he abandoned his studies to enter the service of the Schulin family as a tutor to the heir of the house, who was orphaned at an early age. He lived with the Schulin for about twenty years, mostly on their Friedrichsdalin estate, near Copenhagen. Beginning in 1758, using Linnaeus' books, he began to study natural sciences as a self-taught student, both out of passion and to teach his pupil. Starting in 1761, he procured a microscope. His first scientific publication was a catalogue of insects from the Schulin estate, Fauna insectorum Fridrichsdalina (1764). Between 1765 and 1767, during a trip to Europe with his pupil, he visited many countries in central and southern Europe and was able to attend scientific circles, making contacts and lasting friendships. A man of the world, well accustomed to courtiers since childhood, through a strategy of targeted promotion (knowledge of eminent scientists, publication of previous works in support of his candidacy) he managed to be admitted into many European scientific societies. A Strasbourg published his only work of botany, a catalogue of the flora of the Schulin estate, Flora Fridrichsdalina (1767). During the journey, thanks to the various meetings, his interests finally shifted from botany to zoology, in particular to the study of invertebrates, of which he became perhaps the greatest expert of his time. In 1771 - his pupil was then 24 years old - he left the Schulin and thanks to Oeder's recommendation he was hired at the State Archives the office was renovated in 1772 after the fall of Struensee and Müller and, although he retained a small pension, he lost his place. His marriage to the wealthy Norwegian widow Anna Catharina Paludan resolved his economic problems once and for all from that moment on, he was able to devote himself full-time to scientific work. An important piece of his research was the Estate of Drobak, on the Gulf of Oslo, owned by his wife, where the scientist spent the summers from 1774 to 1778, focusing in particular on the study of marine micro-fauna. He was assisted by a team that included draughtsmen and engravers (one of the best painters was his younger brother, Christian Friedrich, who, in addition to illustrating some of his brother's works, years later collaborated with Vahl on the third tranche of Flora Danica) and a number of students, recruited in an ingenious way. Every year, Müller made an advertisement in the newspapers to recruit them and paid them for the journey from Copenhagen to Oslo. Beginning in 1771, publications also multiplied, mainly dedicated to different classes of invertebrates, before then little known. In the meantime, Müller had presented to the court the project of a Fauna Danica, to pair with Flora Danica, of which he was appointed curator after Oeder's departure. The countryside in Norway and, later, when arthritis forced him to give it up, the coasts of Denmark, including the islands, allowed him to collect specimens for both works. In 1776 he anticipated the content of his great zoological work with Zoologiæ Danicae Prodromus, which listed, classified and briefly described all the animal species of the kingdom of Denmark-Norway, a work of epochal importance for the innovative classification of invertebrates. Two folio volumes of Fauna Danica followed in 1777 and 1786, with 40 plates (the other two volumes would be completed and published by various curators many years after his death). Between 1776 and 1784 five files of Flora Danica were also released. However, an important work on infusers (small single-celled organisms that develop in plant infusions, belonging to various classes, especially protozoa) remained unfinished (and was completed by O. Fabricius). In 1784, after a decade of intense work, Müller died at the age of fifty.” (D. D. Damkaer, The Copepodologist's Cabinet, A Biographical and Bibliographical History).
, Erftstadt, Lukassen Verlag, 1984, Gebunden, Deckeltitelvergoldung, Ruckentitelvergoldung, Original-Schutzumschlag illustriert koloriert, 31x22cm, 314pp, illustriert s/w. ISBN 3923769040.
Contents: J. MULLER HOFSTEDE, "Wort un Bild": Fragen zur Signifikanz und Realitat in der hollandischen Malerei des 17. Jahrhunderts. K. PORTEMAN, Nederlandse embleemtheorie van Marcus Antonius Gillis(1566) tot Jacob Cats (1618). H. MIEDEMA, Tekst en afbeelding als bronnen bij historisch onderzoek. J. BECKER, "De Duystere Sin van de Geschilderde Figueren": zum Doppelsin in Ratsel, Emblem und Genrestuck. B. SCHNACKENBURG, Das Bild des bauerlichen Lebens bei Adriaen van Ostade. Th. VIGNEAU-WILBERG, Hofische Minne und Burgermoral in der Graphik um 1500. P.W.M. VAN DER SLUYS, Invloed van emblematiek, hieroglyfiek en deviezenkunst in het werk van Jonker Jan van der Noot. E. McGRATH, Rubens"s "Susanna and the Elders" and moralizing inscriptions on prints. E. DUVERGER, Voruntersuchungen zur Literatur las Inspirationsquelle fur die flamische Bildteppichkunst des 17.Jahrhunderts. Chr. BROWN, Allegory and symbol in the work of Anthony van Dyck. J. MUYLLE, "Pier den Drol". K. van Mander en P. Breughel. Bijdrage tot de literaire receptie van P. Breughels werk ca. 1600. A.J. GELDERBLOM, Een ereplaats voor een versleten jurk: de interpretatie van de titelgravure in Coornherts "Wercken" van 1630. K. RENGER, Verhaltnis von Text und Bild in der Graphik. (Beobachtungen zu Missverhaltnissen). H. VEKEMAN, Taufe in Feuer und Wasser. Jan Luyken und Jacob Bohme. Chr. TUMPEL, Die Rezeption der judischen Altertumer des Flavius Josephus in den hollandischen Historiendarstellungen des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts. A. SMITMANS, Probleme des Bildsinns bei Rembrandt. H.J. RAUPP, "Trucidata Innocentia". Die Verurteilung des Oldenbarnevelt bei Joost van den Vondel und Cornelis Saftleven. A. KEERSMAEKERS, Rederijkers-Rebusblazoenen in de 16- en 17e eeuw. G. UNVERFEHRT, Christliches Exempel und profane Allegorie. Zum Verhaltnis von Wort und Bild in der Graphik der Boschnachfolge. J. MULLER HOFSTEDE, Non Saturatur Oculus Visu. Zur Allegorie des Gesichts" von Peter Paul Rubens und Jan Brueghel D.A. REGISTER. Guter Zustand.
MULLER Klaus E. / RITZ-MULLER Ute ...//... Klaus E. Müller / Ute Ritz-Müller.
Reference : 804
(2000)
Köln (Cologne), Könemann, 2000, 1 volume, in-4, reliure éditeur, 503 p. Très nombreuses illustrations en noir (documents anciens) et en couleur (photographies de Henning Christoph), glossaire, bibliographie et index en fin de volume. Reliure éditeur, pleine toile beige sous jaquette illustrée en couleur.
Très bel exemplaire. ************* Remise 20 % pour toute commande supérieure à 100 €, envoi gratuit en courrier suivi et assurance à partir de 30 € d'achat (France seulement).
P., Baillière, 1840, 2 volumes in 8 reliés en demi-chagrin vert, dos ornés de filets dorés (reliures de l'époque), (accroc à une coiffe, petites auréoles sans gravité dans les marges supérieures des derniers feuillets du tome 2 et dans les marges supérieures des planches, accroc à une coiffe), T.1 : 6pp., 640pp., T.2 (2), 644pp., 4 PLANCHES dépliantes, 80 figures dans le texte
---- PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE ---- Traduction par JOURDAN de la partie consacrée à la physiologie du système nerveux du Traité de physiologie de J. Muller A LAQUELLE IL A AJOUTE ET TRADUIT UN OPUSCULE DE J. MULLER sur la compensation des forces physiques dans l'organe vocal de l'homme (Ueber die compensation der physischen kroeste am menchlichen stimmorgen, Berlin, 1839) ---- "A classical and a standard Work in Neurology". (MacHenry french ed.) ---- "Muller was responsable for a remarkable advance in neurophysiology : confirmation of the Bell-Magendie law by means of a simple experiment performed on the frog. He established experimentally that the first and second branches of the trigeminal nerve are sensory and that the third branch contains, in addition to sensory fibers, motor fibers for the jaw muscles. He also asserted, again on the basis of his own research, that the glossopharyngeal and vagus nerves are of the mixed type. This research led to the first comprehensive scientific conception of the nervous system as a unit. In 1833 Muller studied the phenomena of reflection, by which he meant the involuntary transition - occurring in the spinal cord or brain - of excitation from the centripetally conducting nerves to the centrifugally conducting ones. He also describes coughing, sneezing, hiccuping, vomiting and ejaculation as reflex arcs located along the spinal cord and medulla oblongata, thereby contributing a fundamental new insight into the study of such phenomena. With his reflex theory Muller was able to explain many processes in the human organism and was also able to demonstrate his ideas on animals - an achievement that his era, so fond of experimentation, considered of no less importance.". (DSB IX pp. 570/571) ---- Haymaker pp. 243/247**3822/H3-3824/CART8