Leaf Ferdinand
Es wurden insgesamt 75 Einträge zu 'Leaf Ferdinand' gefunden (Stand: 13.03.2012).
Sehen Sie sich die aktuell angebotenen Bücher zu 'Leaf Ferdinand' an.
Leaf, Munro: Ferdinand, 1 CD-Audio 53 Min. Kammermusik für Kinder, EDITION SEEIGEL, April 1999 ISBN: 3980450724
DER STIER FERDINAND Für einen Erzähler und Holzbläser, Streichtrio, Mandoline, Klavier und viel Schlagzeug. Geschichte von Munroe Leaf, Musik von Rolf Liebermann. Der junge Stier Ferdinand sitzt am liebsten unter der alten Korkeiche und schnuppert den Duft der Blumen, während seine Freunde die anderen Stiere wild auf der Weide herumtollen. Warum wird ausgerechnet Ferdinand als Kampfstier ausgewählt Was passiert in der Arena von Madrid Idee und Realisation: Kleeberg/Stoffel.Bei allen Produktionen der Edition SEE-IGEL stammt die Musik nicht aus Archiven, sondern es handelt sich um Einspielungen ausschließlich für diese CD. Oft sind es sogar Ersteinspielungen, d. h. die Musikstücke sind auf keinem anderen Tonträger zu hören.Die Verbindung von Musik und Sprache ist eine eigene Regie-Komposition - solitär und auf höchstem Niveau.Die Produktionen der Edition SEE-IGEL ermöglichen einen emotionalen Zugang zur klassischen Musik. Die Herzen werden berührt und neue Räume öffnen sich.Ausgezeichnet mit der LEOPOLD-Empfehlung vom Verband deutscher Musikschulen und dem Vierteljahrspreis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik.
NEU 1999. 139 mm x 126 mm x 11 mm
[SW: Bestell-Nr. 3-9804507-2-4; Kinder-CDs (Audio)]
Leaf, Munro illustrated by Robert Lawson: The Story of Ferdinand, , London Published by Hamish Hamilton , 1939
, no Dust Wrapper approximately 21 x 18 cm
, unnumbered text on one side and wonderful full page and black and white illustration opposite, illustrated front and rear end papers and covers. Fourth Impression approximately 21 x 18 cm Hardback , slightly darkened on the front and rear covers, some discoloration of cloth, the interior is clean and sound, book in good+ condition , quarter cream cloth with red title, illustrated boards
[SW: Leaf, Munro, The Story of Ferdinand]
[HOUSE OF ORANGE - GENEALOGY]. Stemma serenissimi principis Guillelmi Henrici Dei gratia principis Arausionensis, Nassaviae, &c. In quo illustrium orbis Europaei familiarum, Belgicae praesertim, origines, incrementa, conjunctiones, &c. indicantur. The Hague, Jacobus Scheltus, ca. 1690.
Extremely rare edition of the genealogical tables and family trees of Stadholder/King William III (1650-1702), the principal European Royal Houses and European, especially Dutch high nobility. <B><I>No other complete copy could be traced</I></B>. Apparently the work is divided in two parts. Part 1 contains 19 full-page and 8 double-page genealogical and family trees with references to the numbered tables in part 2. Part 2 has 16 double-page genealogical and family trees, numbered: Tab.Gen., I, I.2, II-V, Suppl.V, V.2, VI-VIII, VIII.2, IX-X, (unnumb.). On the backs of the double-page trees are another 31 full-page trees. <B><I></I></B>The contents of the 27 double-leaves and 5 single-leaves, all mounted on guards:Part 1 (with references to the tables in part 2):- pp. 1-4 (double-leaf): title (verso blank), (p. 3) family tree of the ancestors of William III (verso blank).- pp. 5-8 (double leaf): p. 5: blank, pp. 6-7: genealogical tree from Louis the Pious (Debonnere) and his sons Lotharius, Louis II and Charles the Bald to the Houses of Orange-Nassau, and Coligny Chastillon (last date 1650; = <B>T. G. a</B>: Table Generale, a (recto?)); p. 8 blank.- pp. 9-10 (single leaf): p. 9: family tree of the ancestors of John III Count of Nassau Dillenburg; p. 10: family tree of the ancestors of Adela (Adelheid of Vianden, +1376) and her husband Otto II count of Nassau Dillenburg (1305-1350): 'Maiores Adelae comitis Viandae progenitricis illustrissimae Nassaviorum familiae in Belgica'. - pp. 11-14 (double-leaf): p. 11: blank; pp. 12-13: genealogical tree from Robert II of France till the House of Orange-Nassau: William III and the Frisian branch Jan Willem Friso (b. 1687); (last date 1688; = <B>T. G. b</B>: Table Generale, b (verso?)); p. 8 blank.- pp. 15-16 (single leaf): p. 15: family tree of the ancestors of Elisabeth (ca. 1420), wife of Goudo XVI, count of Lavalli and ancestor of the Dutch stadholder Frederick Hendrick; p. 16: family tree of the ancestors of Edward I, King of England (1239-1307).- pp. 17-18 (single leaf): p. 17: family tree of the ancestors of James V, King of Scotland; p. 18: family tree of Mary, wife of James V, the King of Scotland.- pp. 19-22 (double-leaf): p. 19: blank; pp. 20-21: genealogical tree from Hugues Capet, King of Frence (+ 997) till the House of Orange-Nassau: William III (= <B>T. G. b</B>: Table Generale, b); p. 22 blank.- pp. 23-24 (single leaf): p. 23: family tree of the ancestors of Charles Bourbon, 'Dux Vindocini'); p. 24: family tree of the ancestors of Emperor Ferdinand I of Austria.- pp. 25-28 (double-leaf): p. 25: genealogical tree from Johanna, the mother of Count William III of Holland till the Dukes of Mantua and Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine; pp. 26-27: genealogical tree of the French kings, from Philip II, till Louis, the 'Grand Dauphin'; p. 28: genealogical tree of the Houses of Nuremberg (Hohenzollern) and Kleve, till Frederick William, Elect of Brandenburg who married Louise, the daughter of Frederic Hendrick.- pp. 29-32 (double-leaf): p. 29, 30-32 and 33: three genealogical trees of the Brederode dynasty, a family belonging to the Dutch high nobility, going back to Charles the Great.- pp. 33-36 (double-leaf): p. 33: genealogical tree of the Brederode dynasty; pp. 34-35: genealogical tree of the Dutch counts from Theodoricus VI (Dirk VI), including the related noble families Egmont, Horne, Heucelom, Nassau, etc.; p. 36: genealogical tree from Charles, duke of Lorraine via the houses of Chiny, Grimbergen, Viande, Nassau, Brandenburg, etc., till the children of Frederick Willem, Elect of Brandenburg and Louis the daughter of Frederick Hendrick (last date 1688; = <B>T.E. b</B>.: Table E. b).- pp. 37-40 (double-leaf): p. 37: genealogical tree of the families Lingne, Lannoy, Aremberg, etc., from Beatrix the daughter of Hugo and Adela of Hannover, till Joannes Lignaeus, count of Aremberg (= <B>Tab. IX. 2. b.</B>); pp. 38-39: genealogical tree of the families Leefdaal, the counts of Buren, 's-Herenberg, Culemborg, the margraves of Bergen op Zoom, etc., from Philip, Lord of Hauterive; p. 40: genealogical tree ofthe family Culemborg.- pp. 41-42 (single leaf): p. 41: genealogical tree of the families Egmont, Lanoy, Lalain, Buren, Orange (William of Orange marries Anna van Buren), etc. (= <B>T. G. b.</B>): ; p. 42: family tree of the ancestors of Anna van Buren.- pp. 43-46 (double-leaf): p. 43 blank; pp. 44-45: genealogical tree of the French Kings from Ludwig I of Bavaria till Louis, the 'Grand Dauphin', with underneath a letter written by Louis XIV to the States General dated St. Germain en Laye, 19 January 1680 on the marriage of his son the dauphin with Mary-Ann Christina of Bavaria; p. 46 blank.(part 2)- pp. 47-50 (double- leaf, with quire sign. 'A'): pp. 47-49: printed text 'Hadrianus Valesius, De Belgica provinciae', and 'De Lotharii regno seu Lotharingia, et de utroque ducatu Lotharingiae' (= extract from: Hadrianus Valesius (Adrien de Valois, 1607-1692),<I> Notitiae Galliarum</I> (Paris 1675)?); p. 50: genealogical tree of the French kings from Louis IV till Anna van Buren, wife of William of Orange-Nassau.- pp. 51-54 (double-leaf): p. 51: genealogical tree from Louis the Pious till the counts of Holland, the dukes of Zähringen in Baden and the margraves of Meisen (c. 1300); pp. 52-53: <B>Tab. Generalis</B>: genealogical tree from Charles the Great via the German emperors till emperor Frederick III; p. 54: genealogical tree from king Robert I of France till William Talvas III and Adela daughter of Odo, duke of Burgundy.- pp. 55-58 (double leaf): p. 55: genealogical tree from Pippin till king James I of England (+ 1625); pp. 56-57: <B>Tab. I</B>: genealogical tree from Heribert I (+ 902) tillAnna of Denmark, the wife of James I and William of Orange (till c. 1600); p. 58: genealogical tree from Radulphus I de Codiciaco till other members of the French nobility.- pp. 59-62 (double-leaf): p. 59: genealogical tree from Aldeardis, son of Robert I, duke of Burgundy (+ 1086) till Anna, the wife of Ludwig of Saxony; pp. 60-61: <B>Tab. I. 2</B>: genealogical tree from Robertus Veromanduud till the thr French kings and nobility in c. 1350; p. 62: genealogical tree from Henry of Burgundy (+1112) till emperor Ferdinand I.- pp. 63-66 (double-leaf): p. 63: genealogical tree of the dukes of Flanders and Gelderland (till c. 1500); pp. 64-65: <B>Tab. II</B>: genealogical tree from Gislebertus of Luxembourg till c. 1545; p. 66: genealogical tree of the dukes of Burgundy from Margarita and Philip I till William of Kleve (c. 1545).- pp. 67-70 (double-leaf): p. 67: family tree of the ancestors of William the Good (+ 1337), son of Jan II, counts of Holland; pp. 68-69: <B>Tab. III</B>: genealogical tree from Henry IV, duke of Limbourg till Mary, the daughter of Charles I and wife of stadholder William II (+ 1650); p. 70: family tree of the ancestors of Maria Domina Arkeli, Leerdami etc. & Jan van Egmont.- pp. 71-74 (double-leaf): p. 71: genealogical tree from Walraven III count of Nassau (+1156) till William III & Margarita the daughter of Hendrick, duke of Brunswick; pp. 72-73: <B>Tab. IV</B>: genealogical tree from Valeranus II, duke of Luxembourg (+1226), via Amalia of Solms till William Henry (stadholder/King William III), with ornamental typographical border at the right (lat date: 1675); p. 74: genealogical tree from William of Orange till Henry Casimir of Nassau.- pp. 75-78 (double-leaf): p. 75: family tree of the ancestors of Vaeranus II, duke of Luxembourg with his epitaph; pp. 76-77: <B>Tab. V</B>: genealogical tree from Valeranus II, duke of Luxembourg (+1226), via Mary, his mother and daughter of Charles I till William Henry (stadholder/King William III); p. 78: 'Pars Familiae Alsaticae': genealogical tree be...
Folio (357 x 250mm). Modern half calf with title lettered on gold on spine, marbled boards. With woodcut vignette on title. (117) pp. (5 single and 27 double-leaves mounted on guards).
[SW: Netherlands; House of Orange; Genealogy & Heraldry; Nobility]
Nelson, Horatio, 1st Viscount Nelson,
Nelson, Horatio, 1st Viscount Nelson, British admiral (1758-1805). ALS ("Horatio Nelson" and initials "HN"). Bastia, 18/19 Oct. 1796. 4to. 3 pp. on folded double leaf. On blue paper. Confidential letter to Sir William Hamilton (1730-1803), English ambassador to Naples and husband of Lady Emma, soon to be Nelson's mistress. Still written with his right hand. "My Dear Sir, The Vice Roy [of Corsica, Sir Gilbert Elliott, Nelson's friend] will write You so fully that it would be impertinent was I to say more, than the Joy I feel at the Resolution taken, and that I may claim some Merit with the King of Naples [Ferdinand IV] for my steady support to his interest which in good truth he highly deserves, not a little must be attributed to Sir John Acton [Prime Minister of Naples] & Yourself, and I have full confidence that the Conduct of Naples will continue to be such that We may pride ourselves for our advice. The greatest confidence must be placed in us, and nothing like Jealousy. God knows I only feel for the King of Naples as I am confident the change in his Government would be subversive of the interest of all Europe. We have a narrow minded Party to work ag[ains]t, but I feel above it. I shall only add that I will still endeavour to prove myself the same Active Officer which the World has said I am. With Kindest Respects to Lady Hamilton [...]". The postscript, dated the following day, is written with a different pen: "Oct:r 19:th We have just got the Ad[mira]ls consent & You will receive his dispatches. Galleys must be sent immediately to Elba to be at our disposal, & the Ships should join our fleet as soon as possible they may come safely to Elba & then form the Junction. - Porto Lorjona must also be partly garrisoned by us. We should not answer it to our Country was anything on which depends the safety of our fleet & army be left to chance. I do not think it impossible but I shall soon be sent to Naples, as the ships are ready I may impress Sir John Acton with the great importance of their sailors. H N. As our Stay in the Mediterranean is a Secret, & not told to Capt[ain] Kelwich, You must tell him to come to Porto Ferraio, his orders are for San Liorenso where we shall not be." Against Nelson's advice, the English fleet was withdrawn from Neapolitan waters and cruised the southern coast of Spain so as to block the Spanish fleet in Cartagena and Cadiz and prevent their uniting with the French fleet in Toulon. Several months after this letter, on 22 July 1797, Nelson was to lose his right arm in the Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife. Upon his return to Naples in 1798, Emma Hamilton and Nelson fell in love - a relationship tolerated by Sir William, who admired the admiral. Emma gave birth to Nelson's daughter Horatia in 1801, and Nelson lived openly near London with Emma, Sir William, and Emma's mother, in a menage a trois that fascinated the public. - Traces of old glue on p. 1; note by a different hand on final page.
Nelson, Horatio, 1st Viscount Nelson, British admiral (1758-1805). ALS ("Horatio Nelson" and initials "HN"). Bastia, 18/19 Oct. 1796. 4to. 3 pp. on folded double leaf. On blue paper. Confidential letter to Sir William Hamilton (1730-1803), English ambassador to Naples and husband of Lady Emma, soon to be Nelson's mistress. Still written with his right hand. "My Dear Sir, The Vice Roy [of Corsica, Sir Gilbert Elliott, Nelson's friend] will write You so fully that it would be impertinent was I to say more, than the Joy I feel at the Resolution taken, and that I may claim some Merit with the King of Naples [Ferdinand IV] for my steady support to his interest which in good truth he highly deserves, not a little must be attributed to Sir John Acton [Prime Minister of Naples] & Yourself, and I have full confidence that the Conduct of Naples will continue to be such that We may pride ourselves for our advice. The greatest confidence must be placed in us, and nothing like Jealousy. God knows I only feel for the King of Naples as I am confident the change in his Government would be subversive of the interest of all Europe. We have a narrow minded Party to work ag[ains]t, but I feel above it. I shall only add that I will still endeavour to prove myself the same Active Officer which the World has said I am. With Kindest Respects to Lady Hamilton [...]". The postscript, dated the following day, is written with a different pen: "Oct:r 19:th We have just got the Ad[mira]ls consent & You will receive his dispatches. Galleys must be sent immediately to Elba to be at our disposal, & the Ships should join our fleet as soon as possible they may come safely to Elba & then form the Junction. - Porto Lorjona must also be partly garrisoned by us. We should not answer it to our Country was anything on which depends the safety of our fleet & army be left to chance. I do not think it impossible but I shall soon be sent to Naples, as the ships are ready I may impress Sir John Acton with the great importance of their sailors. H N. As our Stay in the Mediterranean is a Secret, & not told to Capt[ain] Kelwich, You must tell him to come to Porto Ferraio, his orders are for San Liorenso where we shall not be." Against Nelson's advice, the English fleet was withdrawn from Neapolitan waters and cruised the southern coast of Spain so as to block the Spanish fleet in Cartagena and Cadiz and prevent their uniting with the French fleet in Toulon. Several months after this letter, on 22 July 1797, Nelson was to lose his right arm in the Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife. Upon his return to Naples in 1798, Emma Hamilton and Nelson fell in love - a relationship tolerated by Sir William, who admired the admiral. Emma gave birth to Nelson's daughter Horatia in 1801, and Nelson lived openly near London with Emma, Sir William, and Emma's mother, in a menage a trois that fascinated the public. - Traces of old glue on p. 1; note by a different hand on final page.
[SW: Autograph, Manuskript, Dokument, Autographen. Abbildungen finden Sie auf unserer Webseite www.autographenhandlung.de]



