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Verlag: J.B. Lippincott Company
Anbieter: Powell's Bookstores Chicago, ABAA, Chicago, IL, USA
Zustand: Used - Good. 1926. Cloth with gilt-stamped lettering and decoration. 4to. xi & 308 pp. Illustrated. Frontpiece. Mild shelf wear and moderate scuffing to boards. Front hinge starting. Previous owner's inscription to ffep. Pages are clean and unmarked. Altogether a copy in Good condition.
Verlag: B, 1925
Anbieter: Cambridge Rare Books, Cambridge, GLOUC, Vereinigtes Königreich
HARDCOVER. Zustand: GOOD. 1925. B.T. Batsford Ltd . Hardcover. ACCEPTABLE Dark green boards. Gilt titles. Slight edgewear. End pages discoloured. End page foxing. Some page edges foxed. Boards marked. 10 x 8.
Verlag: B. T. Batsford Ltd., London, 1933
Anbieter: Rooke Books PBFA, Bath, Vereinigtes Königreich
Verbandsmitglied: PBFA
Cloth. Zustand: Good. Unamed (illustrator). A work of British architectural history from the early twentieth century written by A. E. Richardson and H. Donaldson Eberlein. Scarce. A work of British architectural history, charting the smaller English house from the late 17th to the early 19th century. Illustrated with 88 pages of plates, and 20 full page plans, alongside numerous vignettes. A fascinating work of British architectural history, documenting the design of the small houses from 1660 up until 1830. Written by A. E. Richardson, the noted architect of the 20th century and professor at University College London, and H. Donaldson Eberlein, the author of design works such as 'Italian Villas and Gardens'. With the previous owners bookplate to the front pastedown that reads 'R.R.W. Simpson'. In the publisher's original cloth binding. Externally sound, with bumping to the head and tail of the spine, with splits to the cloth, to the head. Dampstaining to the front and rear boards, towards the fore edge, with a mark to the rear board. Previous owners bookplate to the front pastedown, and light spots to the front and rear endpapers. Internally firmly bound. Pages are bright and clean, with the odd spot. Good. book.
Verlag: B. T. Batsford (1925), London, 1925
Anbieter: Hoffman Books, ABAA, IOBA, Columbus, OH, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. 286pp., 11 1/4" x 8 1/2", dark green cloth with gilt stamping to spine. Spine ends and edges are rubbed and scuffed. Contents are clean and bright and fully illustrated. A very attractive copy. A.
Verlag: B, 1925
Anbieter: Cambridge Rare Books, Cambridge, GLOUC, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
Hardback. Zustand: VERY GOOD. 1st Edition. 1925. B. T. Batsford. First. Hard Cover. Book- VG, gilt titles on front board and spine, red boards. 9.5x6.5. 308pp. Colour frontis, many b/w photos and illus. The inn has played a large part in the domestic life of England down the centuries. Always intimately associated with the characteristics of the English people as a centre for social life, it still retains a warm place in their hearts. The story of the tavern, recounted here, is associated with the tale of the road and English warfaring life.
Verlag: William Helburn, Inc.
Anbieter: Powell's Bookstores Chicago, ABAA, Chicago, IL, USA
Zustand: Used - Very Good. 1925. William Helburn/B.T. Batsford, 1925. 4to, 286 pp, VG+ in gilt-stamped green cloth (some discoloration to endpapers). 250 gravure illustrations.
Verlag: B.T. Batsford, (1825)., London:, 1825
Anbieter: Jeff Weber Rare Books, Montreux, VAUD, Schweiz
Erstausgabe
Series: The Old English Life Series. 8vo. xi, 308 pp. Color frontis., numerous illus., appendix, index; slightly foxed title page, stained endpapers possibly from newspaper offset. Decorative gilt-stamped maroon cloth; extremities rubbed, corners bumped, small white circle on spine. Else very good. FIRST BRISISH EDITION. "The inn has played a large part in the domestic life of England down the centuries. Always intimately associated with the characteristics of the English people as a center for social life, it still retains a warm place in their hearts. The story of the tavern therefore is associated with the tale of the road and English wayfaring life. Love of travel is a strong characteristic of the English race, yet it co-exists with a feeling for home comforts and a desire to be reminded of familiar things. Thus it is, from the earliest times, that the inn, in spite of its widened functions, has at each stage of its development retained the piquant element of domesticity. The old inns of England are unlike those of other countries. The majority are genuine survivals; they are records of other times and customs and they have a symbolic value for the ordinary traveler. They are generally simple in character, but many have undergone alterations and changes corresponding with each era of social progress. The inns of each period, especially such as remain intact and unaltered, could be described in any treatise dealing with the recognized phases of house building; collectively they present a subject for a monograph. . . " -From the preface.