Verlag: SARASWATI PR, 2012
ISBN 10: 1286966213 ISBN 13: 9781286966211
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Zustand: New.
Verlag: Pierre Gosse & Daniel Pinet/ Amsterdam, Marc. Michel Rey für den Verfasser, Den Haag, 1762
Anbieter: AixLibris Antiquariat Klaus Schymiczek, Aachen, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: BOEV
1. Druck. 4°, XXII S., 1 Bl., 40, 384 S., S. 553-616 (ohne die S. 385-552). Pappband d. Zeit mit handschriftl. Rückenschild. Sprache: Französisch, Mit gest. Frontispiz und 1 gest. Kopfvignette, aber ohne die 18 Kupfertafeln. Einband bestoßen sowie etwas berieben, stockfleckig und lichtrandig; kleine Bezugsfehlstellen an den Kanten; Vorsätze herausgetrennt; stockfleckig (einige Seiten stärker); 4 Bll. (S. 553-559) mit ergänztem Eckabriss (kein Textverlust); Titel etwas geknittert; kl. Stempel auf dem Titel. unbeschnittenes, breitrandiges Exemplar. Leider unvollständiges Exemplar von Lyonets bedeutender Arbeit zur Anatomie der Raupen. Garrison/Morton (5. ed.), 305:"Lyonet's great monograph on the goat moth caterpillar remains today among the greatest examples of anatomical examination."/ Poggendorff I, 1524.
Verlag: Paris, (s.n., vers 1832)., 1832
Anbieter: Daniel Thierstein, Biel, Schweiz
4°. 136 S., 10 gestochene Tafeln. Pappband um 1950 mit schwarzgeprägtem Rückentitel. Separatdruck mit eigener Pagination aus den "Mémoires du Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle, t. 20". - Erschien vollständig 1832 unter dem Titel "Recherches sur l'anatomie et les métamorphoses de différentes espèces d'insectes". (Vergleiche Nissen 2619). Posthum erschienen. - Die Tafeln mit eigener Nummerierung entsprechen den Tafeln 35-44. - Papierbezug im Rückengelenk etwas angerissen. Erstes Blatt fleckig und im Rand gebräunt. Stempel auf erstem Blatt und einigen Tafeln verso. Sprache: französisch.
Verlag: Den Haag, de Hondt, Rey u.a., 1760
Anbieter: Antiquariat Braun, Gengenbach, Deutschland
Zustand: Gut. 26 x 20 cm. XXII (2), 587 Seiten, 2 Bll., 18 gefaltete Kupfertafeln. *Nissen, ZBI 2618; Horn/Sch. 14273; vgl. Garrison/M. (5th ed.) 305: "L's great monograph on the goat moth caterpillar remains today among the greatest examples of anatomical examination". - "Traité anatomique is devoted wholly to the anatomy of the caterpillar (.) and the plates, drawn and engraved by Lyonet, portray the muscles, nerves, bronchia, heart, viscera, silk vessels, and the internal parts of the head with astonishing precision". (DSB). - Erste Ausgabe (bereits 1762 erschien eine größere zweite Auflage). - Der vielseitig gebildete Autor Pierre Lyonet (1707-89), Zeichner, Maler und Kupferstecher widmete sich auch der Entomologie und schuf aufgrund mikroskopischer Studien diese 18 aufsehenerregenden Tafeln. Sie zeigen die Raupe des Seidenspinners und ihre Teile in außergewöhnlich feiner und detaillierter Wiedergabe. - Brreitrandig. Zwei handschriftliche Besitzvermerke und ein Blindstempel mit Wappen. Sprache: Französisch Gewicht in Gramm: 2000 Lederband der Zeit mit reicher Rückenvergoldung (etwas beschabt, Außengelenke angeplatzt).
Verlag: Pierre Gosse Jr. & Daniel Pinet à la Haye et Marc Michel Rey à Amsterdam Second edition. 4to, 1762
Anbieter: Patrick Pollak Rare Books ABA ILAB, SOUTH BRENT, DEVON, Vereinigtes Königreich
pp. xxii, (ii) Table. 1 plate un-numbered; 40. 8 plates numbered I-VIII; 616. 10 plates numbered IX-XVIII. All plates except the first un-numbered plate are folding. Modern quarter morocco, some plates a bit dusty at the edges, four misfolded with the fore-edge margins exceeding the width of the text, overall a very good copy, with an inscription - 'G. W. Le Fevre from Miss Ansted March 5th. 1822' and the later inscription from Sir George Le Fevre to THOMAS BELL [see NOTES below]. *GARRISON-MORTON #305 - 'Lyonet's great monograph on the goat moth caterpillar remains today among the greatest examples of anatomical examination.' Following the Introduction, Lyonet has written a detailed description of his microscope and apparatus used in dissection and examination, accompanied by a plate of his microscope and accessories. For a brief discussion of Lyonet's use of Musschenbroek's design of an adjustable arm with ball-and-socket joints carrying the lenses, see BRADBURY Evolution of the Microscope, pp.85-86. An example of Lyonet's microscope is figured in the BILLING'S COLLECTION, p.156, fig.293. See also CLAY & COURT History of the Microscope, pp.59-60. PROVENANCE : SIR GEORGE LEFEVRE [1798-1846] was born at Berkhampstead, Hertfordshire. After apprenticeship to a local practitioner of medicine in Shropshire, he studied medicine at the university of Edinburgh, and at Guy's and St. Thomas's Hospitals in London, and graduated M.D. at the university of Aberdeen, 4 August 1819. He was vulnerable to pulmonary disease, and on the advice of Pelham Warren decided to go abroad. After vain attempts to obtain an Indian appointment, he went to Pau with a patient, Thomas Douglas, 5th Earl of Selkirk, who died there of phthisis. Lefevre then returned to England and tried to get into practice. He was admitted a licentiate of the College of Physicians of London 1 April 1822. Having failed in a candidature as physician to a dispensary, he decided to go abroad again, and, through the influence of Benjamin Travers, became physician to a Polish nobleman, with whom he travelled for nine years, five in France and the rest in Austria, Poland, and Russia. He finally left the post at Odessa and went to St. Petersburg, where he began in private practice, and became physician to the British Embassy. In 1831 he was appointed to the charge of a district during the cholera epidemic. In 1832 Lefevre was in England for a short time, but returned to Russia, and was shortly knighted by patent as a reward for his services to the embassy. He settled in London in 1842, and was admitted a fellow of the College of Physicians, 30 September. He resided in Brook Street, Grosvenor Square, and in 1845 delivered the Lumleian lectures at the College of Physicians. He suffered from depression, and on 12 February 1846 committed suicide by swallowing prussic acid, at the house of his friend Dr. Nathaniel Grant in Thayer Street, Manchester Square. Lefevre published, in London, Observations on the Nature and Treatment of the Cholera Morbus now prevailing epidemically in St. Petersburg. Experience led him to oppose the indiscriminate use of calomel and opium in the treatment of cholera, to favour the use of purgatives, and to avoid that of astringents. In 1843 he published The Life of a Travelling Physician in 3 vols. It is an account of his travels, and is mainly known for its description of social life in Poland and at the English factory at St. Petersburg. It was published without his name, but was acknowledged later. In the same year he published Advantages of Thermal Comfort (enlarged edition 1844). It is a short treatise on the temperature of rooms, clothing, and bedmaking, suggested by his Russian experience of a severe climate. In 1844 he published An Apology for the Nerves, or their Influence and Importance in Health and Disease, a collection of medical notes including one on plica polonica. SEE Wikipaedia. MISS ANSTED could have been of the Ansted family of which the geologist, DAVID ANSTED [1814-1880] was a member. THOMAS BELL (11 October 1792 13 March 1880) FRS, FGS, FZS, Secretary of the Royal Society, zoologist, surgeon and writer, born in Poole, Dorset, England. His library was dispersed at a 2-day sale 30-31 July 1880, by Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge. The above title was LOT 599 in that sale.