Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, PA, 1985
ISBN 10: 0811721949 ISBN 13: 9780811721943
Anbieter: Voyageur Book Shop, Milwaukee, WI, USA
Soft cover. Zustand: Very Good. First Thus. 448pp. Edge of text block has some stains. Otherwise, clean with almost no wear. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. M7.
Anbieter: Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 16,63
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In den WarenkorbZustand: New. In.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: British Library, Historical Print Editions, 2011
ISBN 10: 1241444765 ISBN 13: 9781241444761
Anbieter: Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 28,95
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In den WarenkorbZustand: New. In.
Sprache: Französisch
Verlag: British Library, Historical Print Editions, 2011
ISBN 10: 124177594X ISBN 13: 9781241775940
Anbieter: Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 22,58
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In den WarenkorbZustand: New. In.
EUR 28,66
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In den WarenkorbZustand: New. A real treasure for students of the art of war, this volume contains five classic works that will remain valuable as long as nations engage in conflict: Sun Tzu s ART OF WAR, the oldest military work in existence Vegetius s MILITARY INSTITUTIONS OF THE RO.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: British Library, Historical Print Editions, 2011
ISBN 10: 1241444765 ISBN 13: 9781241444761
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
EUR 42,83
Anzahl: Mehr als 20 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: New.
Sprache: Französisch
Verlag: British Library, Historical Print Editions, 2011
ISBN 10: 124177594X ISBN 13: 9781241775940
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
EUR 26,68
Anzahl: Mehr als 20 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: New.
Sprache: Französisch
Verlag: British Library, Historical Print Editions, 2011
ISBN 10: 124177594X ISBN 13: 9781241775940
Anbieter: Buchpark, Trebbin, Deutschland
Zustand: Sehr gut. Zustand: Sehr gut | Sprache: Französisch | Produktart: Bücher | Keine Beschreibung verfügbar.
Verlag: [ca 1850-1865], London, 1850
Anbieter: Colin Coleman Music, Stewkley, Vereinigtes Königreich
Noten
EUR 89,45
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbSize: Folio. Polished half leather, with original embossed backstrip laid down.
Anbieter: Druckwaren Antiquariat, Salzwedel, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: GIAQ
Pp., gebundene Ausgabe, SU. Zustand: Sehr gut. 1. Aufl., erw. Neuausg. 335 S., mit s/w Abb. SU leicht berieben, Einband leicht bestossen, ansonsten sehr gut erh. ISBN: 9783458176275 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 1200.
Anbieter: BUCHSERVICE / ANTIQUARIAT Lars Lutzer, Wahlstedt, Deutschland
Softcover. Zustand: gut. 2015. Frank Böckelmann/Horst Ebner: Die Befreiung frißt ihre Kinder - Thomas Kapielski: Kompost II. Aphorismen - Gerd Koenen: Vom Ernst und Schrecken der einen Welt - Günter Maschke: Die Revolution des Völkerrechts 1919 und dessen heutige Selbstzerstörung - François Jullien: Landschaft denken europäisch-chinesisch - Jürgen Paul Schwindt: Die Mitmacher. Zur Pathogenese der neuen deutschen Universität (5) - Sebastian Hennig: Die Hölle hat kein Bild. Dresden, Februar 1945 - Markus Krajewski: Bauformen des Gewissens. Architektur und Medien nach der Stunde null - Napoleon Bonaparte: Geheime Aufzeichnungen - Alexander Schuller: Dea i dino oder Kiez to go - Josef Kraus: Schluß mit der Re-Ideologisierung der Bildungspolitik! - Otto Gross: Orientierung der Geistigen - Otto Gross: Zum Problem Parlamentarismus - Otto Gross: Themen der revolutionären Psychologie - Anton Kuh: Die Lehre des Otto Gross - Siegfried Gerlich: Der monströse Marquis. Zur anthropologischen Revolte de Sades - Takasaki: Als ich aufwachte - Jörg Bernig: Eine Hand auf der Stirn. Zwei Gedichte - Michael Schwezler: Weißraum 77. Gedichte - Rudolf Heinz / Stefan Winter: Todestrieb und Zeitstruktur. Ein Gespräch über Psychoanalyse, Kunst, Ökonomie (1) - Gabriel Ramin Schor: Hey Joe. Kleine paranoisch-kritisch Chronik des Lustbetrugs - Christopher Stark: Exzellenz des Marktes. Die Leuphana Universität Lüneburg In deutscher Sprache. 96 pages.
Sprache: Französisch
Anbieter: LA FRANCE GALANTE, Saint MARTIN sur LAVEZON, Frankreich
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Assez bon. Paris . Burau de la Sociéré pour la Propagation des BONNES IMAGES / Epernay . Imprimerie . 1838 . Un volume grand in-8 , relié demi cuir , de 15 x 24 cm . 468 pages + 100 planches Hors-Texte lithographiées de Napoleon THOMAS [ 1804 -1879 ] . Des roussueurs éparses , MANQUE le cuir du dos ( photo ) .
Verlag: Date place and publisher not stated. London: R. Ackermann, 1813
Anbieter: Richard M. Ford Ltd, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 178,89
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbOn a piece of good wove paper, roughly 415 x 260 mm. Dimensions of engraving 180 x 220 mm. On aged paper and with the margins of the leaf trimmed. Laid down along the right hand margin runs a strip of blue paper, 30 x 410 mm, which it may be possible for a professional restorer to remove. This edges the border of the print (which is clear and entire) and overlaps a few letters of the text. Neatly coloured in sombre tones. Beneath the print is the title (which ends 'at Leipsic and its environs.'), and beneath the title is an eleven-line section of text, headed 'THE TWO KINGS OF TERROR.', beginning 'THIS Subject, representing the two Tyrants, viz. the Tyrant BONAPARTE and the Tyrant DEATH, sitting together on the Field of Battle'. Death is seated on a cannon, with one foot on a pile of cannonballs and the other on a broken French eagle, facing a dejected Bonaparte, seated on a drum. In the background the massed ranks of the allies, their four flags flying drive the retreating French from the field. The final four-line paragraph reads 'The above description of the subject appeared in the Sun of Saturday, the 6th of November. These pointed comments arose from the picture being transparent, and from a Circle, indicative of the strength and brotherly union of the Allies, which surmounted the same, composed of gas of brilliant brightness.' See Image.
Verlag: c. 1870, Lisboa, 1870
Anbieter: Frame, Madrid, M, Spanien
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
Zustand: ACEPTABLE. Lazaro deseaba saciar su hambre con las migas que caian de la mesa del rico; y los perros venían a lamerle las llagas. Grabado litográfico a color representando la obrade Napoleon Thomas, pintor inglés del siglo XIX, en la que encontramos una escena de la Parábola del Rico Insensato, o del Rico Necio, pertececiente alEvangelio de Lucas12:13-21. [Paris, S. Stampa fils, edit . ] ; [Lisboa, Manuel Costenla . ] ; [Porto, Depozito de Estampas de C. Steffanina . ] . Formato (cm): 47x57.
Verlag: c. 1870, Lisboa, 1870
Anbieter: Frame, Madrid, M, Spanien
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
Zustand: ACEPTABLE. Lazaro deseaba saciar su hambre con las migas que caian de la mesa del rico; y los perros venían a lamerle las llagas. Grabado litográfico a color representando la obrade Napoleon Thomas, pintor inglés del siglo XIX, en la que encontramos una escena de la Parábola del Rico Insensato, o del Rico Necio, pertececiente alEvangelio de Lucas12:13-21. [Paris, S. Stampa fils, edit . ] ; [Lisboa, Manuel Costenla . ] ; [Porto, Depozito de Estampas de C. Steffanina . ] . Formato (cm): 47x57.
Verlag: T. Fisher Unwin, Lonon, 1906
Anbieter: James Cummins Bookseller, ABAA, New York, NY, USA
Second edition. Second edition. Extra-Illustrated with hand-colored frontispece of Napoleon, and aprox. 75 other portraits and plates. 2 vols. Bound in three quarter crimson morocco and cloth sides, t.e.g. gilt spines, by Ernest Hertzberg & Sons, Chicago. Bookplates of Hannay, Arthur and Foster Extra-Illustrated with hand-colored frontispece of Napoleon, and aprox. 75 other portraits and plates. 2 vols.
Verlag: Lyon: Bernasconi frères, Editeurs , 19th Century
Anbieter: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, USA
Kunst / Grafik / Poster
Zustand: Good. Lithograph. 55 x 69 cm. Light stains. Rare.No references on internet or in the French museums.Le 20 avril 1792, suite à la fuite manquée de Varennes, la jeune monarchie constitutionnelle française entre en guerre avec l'Europe dynastique. L'Autriche arrive, les révolutionnaires français se rassemblent ; et à Strasbourg, le maire Philippe-Frédéric de Dietrich songe à une manière de manifester son soutien à Nicolas Luckner, alors commandant de l'armée du Rhin et donc appelé à repousser la coalition ennemie.rouget-de-lisle-3Rouget de Lisle, illustration tardive de 1889Le baron de Dietrich demande alors à un jeune officier du génie, en poste à la garnison de Strasbourg, de composer un chant patriotique : il s'agit de Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle, rencontré dans une loge maçonnique, et auteur d'un Hymne à la Liberté qui avait été chanté l'année précédente à l'occasion de la fête de la Constitution. Rouget de Lisle prend très à c?ur la demande du baron, puisqu'il s'y attelle immédiatement et achève l'hymne dans la nuit du 25 au 26 avril.Ainsi naît l'Hymne de guerre dédié au maréchal Bavarois de Luckner, que Dietrich, enthousiasmé, chante dès le lendemain dans son salon. Il est accompagné par sa femme au clavecin, et par Rouget de Lisle au violon. On distribue par feuillets le nouvel hymne, bientôt rebaptisé Chant de l'armée du Rhin, et le 22 juillet, les troupes qui se rassemblent à Marseille en attendant d'être expédiées au front l'entonnent massivement. Ainsi, l'hymne devient le Chant des volontaires marseillais puis, tout simplement, la Marseillaise. Le 14 juillet 1795, la composition est dépouillée de son statut de chant révolutionnaire pour revêtir celui d'hymne national.
Anbieter: Fahrenheit 451 Antiquarian Booksellers, Nieuwerbrug, Niederlande
handcoloured lithograph by Kaeppelin (Paris), published by Rittner & Goupil (Paris), ca. 47 x 39 cm., under deluxe passepartout. = Decorative costume print.
Erste deutsche Ausgabe dieses antinapoleonischen Pamphletes. - Fromm VI, 26450; Hayn/Gotendorf V, 328; Holzmann/Bohatta II, 31 (für Bergk). - Einband beschabt u. bestoßen, Rücken zum Teil aufgeplatzt. Insgesamt unfrisches Exemplar, etwas gebräunt, fleckig u. gegen Ende mulchig, mit kleineren Randläsuren, fehlt 1 Blatt (S. 223/224).
James Monroe and Robert Livingston receive the Treaty signed by Napoleon, notification of French ratification, and instructions from the French: Deliver this "to the President of the United States without delay to do what must be done" and secure American ratification?This doubled the size of the United States and is one of the most significant moments in American history; In 2019, this document was saved from a fire at the Karpeles Manuscript Library and survivedThis document, central to the Louisiana Purchase, is among the most important we have ever carried?https://vimeo.com/1180578110?share=copy&fl=sv&fe=ci?Hear more on Inspired by History:?The Louisiana Purchase stands as one of the most transformative acts in American history, instantly doubling the size of the young republic and securing U.S. control of the Mississippi River and the vital port of New Orleans. Negotiated at a moment of shifting global power?amid Napoleon?s imperial ambitions, the threat of imminent renewed war with Great Britain, and the collapse of French plans in the Caribbean?the agreement reshaped the geopolitical balance of North America and set the United States on a path toward continental expansion and emergence as a major world power.As the United States had spread across the Appalachians, the Mississippi River became an increasingly important conduit for the produce of America?s West (which at that time referred to the land between the Appalachians and the Mississippi). Since 1762, Spain had owned the territory of Louisiana, which included 828,000 square miles. The territory made up all or part of fifteen modern U.S. states between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains. The Pinckney Treaty of 1795 had resolved friction between Spain and the United States over the right to navigate the Mississippi and the right for Americans to transfer their goods to ocean-going vessels at New Orleans. With the Pinckney treaty in place and the weak Spanish empire in control of Louisiana, American statesmen felt comfortable that the United States? westward expansion would not be restricted in the future.This situation was threatened by Napoleon Bonaparte?s plans to revive the French empire in the New World. He planned to recapture the valuable sugar colony of Haiti from a slave rebellion, and then use Louisiana as the granary for his empire. France acquired Louisiana from Spain in 1800 and took possession in 1802, sending a large French army to St. Domingue and preparing to send another to New Orleans. Americans became very apprehensive about having the more-powerful French in control of the Mississippi and New Orleans. President Thomas Jefferson noted, ?There is on the globe one single spot, the possessor of which is our natural and habitual enemy. It is New Orleans.? He determined to do something to change this situation.In addition to making military preparations for a conflict in the Mississippi Valley, in April 1803 Jefferson sent former Minister to France James Monroe to join present Minister to France, Robert Livingston, to try to purchase New Orleans and West Florida for as much as $10 million. Failing that, they were to attempt to create a military alliance with England. Meanwhile, the French Army in St. Domingue was being decimated by yellow fever, and war between France and England was on the horizon. Napoleon decided to give up his plans for Louisiana, and offered a surprised Monroe and Livingston the entire territory of Louisiana - all 828,000 square miles of it - for $15 million. That was three cents per acre. Although buying all of Louisiana far exceeded their instructions from President Jefferson, Monroe and Livingston saw the golden opportunity and agreed. The treaty was signed on April 30, 1803.The treaty itself actually consisted of three linked agreements: the Treaty of Cession, by which France transferred the Louisiana territory to the United States and guaranteed rights of property, religion, and eventual citizenship to its inhabitants; a first convention establishing that the United States would pay 60 million francs (about $11.25 million) to France through government bonds as the purchase price; and a second convention by which the United States assumed 20 million francs (about $3.75 million) in claims owed to American citizens for prior French seizures and commercial losses. Together, these three instruments formed the full legal structure of the purchase, bringing the total cost to 80 million francs, or roughly $15 million.The French ratification of the Louisiana treaty and conventions was dated May 22nd and signed by Bonaparte, Foreign Minister Talleyrand, Minister of the Treasury Barb? de Marbois, and Hugues Bernard Maret, who, as the secretary of state, was responsible for promulgating laws and decrees. It was delivered to the representatives of the United States, Robert R. Livingston and James Monroe, who here sign to acknowledge receipt of the treaty to be sent to President Thomas Jefferson "without delay."Historic manuscript DS signed "Jas. Monroe," "Rob. R. Livingston," and "Barb? Marbois," in French, Paris, May 23, 1803, being the monumental document recording France's sale to the US of Louisiana, just approved by Napoleon Bonaparte and the French government."Today, May 23, 1803, we Barb?-Marbois, Minister of the Public Treasury named by the French People as Minister Plenipotentiary, and Robert R. Livingston, Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States of America, and James Monroe, Minister Plenipotentiary and envoy extraordinaire of the said States, at a meeting in one of the rooms of the Hotel du Public Treasury in Paris, Citizen Barb?-Marbois transmitted to us, Robert Livingston and James Monroe: 1. The treaty concluded and signed by us on 10 Floreal an 11 (30 April 1803) and the two conventions concluded and signed by us on the same date. Said treaty and conventions in three separate instruments, written on vellum parchment and bearing the grand seal of the French Republic im.
?I beg you to have them copied for me as diligently as possible.I desire that the departure of Mr. Jay (Peter Augustus) be deferred until next Wednesday??The French ratification of the Louisiana Purchase treaty and conventions was dated May 22nd and signed by Bonaparte, Foreign Minister Talleyrand, Minister of the Treasury Barb? de Marbois, and Hugues Bernard Maret, who, as the secretary of state, was responsible for promulgating laws and decrees. It was delivered to the representatives of the United States, Robert R. Livingston and James Monroe, who acknowledged receipt of the paperwork to be sent to President Thomas Jefferson "without delay."It is interesting to note that Barb? de Marbois, who played a key role in negotiating the Louisiana Purchase Treaty and delivered the signed ratification, was former ambassador to the United States who had lived in the U.S. for years, spoke English, and married an American. He was well connected in the U.S. and was elected a Foreign Honorary Member to both the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (John Hancock and John Adams were also members), and the American Philosophical Society (Thomas Jefferson was also a member, and the two dealt extensively). He was a logical choice to negotiate the treaty.Five days after delivery of the signed, ratified treaty, Marbois contacted the U.S. ministers to ask for the return of copies of the treaty or even the treaty itself so that official copies could be made.Letter signed by Marbois, on French Public Treasury letterhead, Paris, May 28, 1803, to "the Ministers of the United States?, in which he asks Livingston and Monroe to either send him copies of the First Consul's ratifications or else lend their own official copy to his office so that additional record copies could be made from it. He requested further that Peter Augustus Jay, the son of John Jay, who was assigned to carry the treaty back to President Jefferson, delay his voyage by a few days, to give time for Talleyrand to prepare official instructions for Louis A. Pichon, the French minister in Washington, D.C. "I am in need of the ratifications given by the First Consul to the Treaty and the two conventions. I beg you to have them copied for me as diligently as possible or to have sent to me the acts themselves so that I might have them copied. I desire that the departure of Mr. Jay (Peter Augustus) be deferred until next Wednesday and if you might also notify Talleyrand, he will thereby request you to deliver the packages to Mr. Pichon."On June 2, Livingston sheds some light on the request. "You know that the ratifications have been delivered & that we were to send them directly to you, we have accordingly applied for a passport for Mr Jay the bearer. To our note on this subject we received no answer. I called this day on Mr Talleyrand to accelerate it; he was at St Cloud I called on the Minister of the Treasury. They have been these two days past in Council and principally basting Mr. Marbois on the subject of the Treaty for it seems that the Consul is less pleased with it since the ratification than before and I [am] persuaded that if he could conveniently get off he would."Livingston further explains that Napoleon felt it was not proper that Marbois delivered the ratifications, that it ought to have been Pichon, and that Marbois, in a fit to try to appease the Consul, was throwing in objections and slowing the process of allowing Jay to leave with the Treaty.Jay's trip was indeed postponed, resulting in not merely in the brief delay requested by Marbois, but additional delays mainly resulting from the fact that war had again broken out between Great Britain and France, and Jay?s ship was repeatedly stopped by British frigates. Jefferson did not see the treaty and conventions until early July. Jefferson was then in a quandary. He had always advocated strict adherence to the letter of the Constitution, yet there was no provision empowering him to purchase territory. Given the public support for the purchase and the obvious value of Louisiana to the future growth of the United States, however, Jefferson decided to ignore the legalistic interpretation of the Constitution and forgo the passage of a Constitutional amendment to validate the purchase. This decision contributed to the principle of implied powers of the federal government.Because the treaty stipulated that the American ratification must be concluded by October 30th, Jefferson hurriedly convened a special session of Congress on October 17th. The United States Senate consented to ratification of the treaty with a vote of 24 to 7 on October 20th. On the following day, October 21, 1803, the Senate authorized Jefferson to take possession of the territory and establish a temporary military government.