Verlag: Mariette, Paris, 1738
Sprache: Deutsch
EUR 845,00
Währung umrechnenAnzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: Gut. 2 Blatt, XXXVIII S., 5 Blatt, 408 Seiten, 2 , 20 Blatt, Millard I, 14, Fowler 33, Ornamentstichkatalog Bln. 2388. - Dritte Ausgabe bei Mariette, die erste war 1691 erschienen. Mehrfach aufgelegter Architekturklassiker. - Stellenweise gebräunt, etwas fleckig bzw. fingerfleckig. - Mit gestochenen Titel, 80 (58 doppelblattgroß oder gefaltet) Kupfertafeln und 84 (82 blattgroß) Textkupfern. ---- Third Mariette edition, with new added plates. First published by Langlois in 1691. Some browning, thumbing and spotting in places. Contemporary calf, spine gilt, worn, tears to joint. deu MIG-35-02A|Lager 15|6296AB Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 444 29 x 22 cm. Leder der Zeit mit Rückenvergoldung, bestoßen, Gelenke eingerissen.
Verlag: Jean Mariette, Paris, 1691
Anbieter: Rooke Books PBFA, Bath, Vereinigtes Königreich
Verbandsmitglied: PBFA
EUR 1.354,81
Währung umrechnenAnzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbLeather. Zustand: Good Only. Not Stated (illustrator). The seventeenth century architect Augustin-Charles d'Aviler's richly illustrated architectural study, published in the same year as the first edition. In the original French.With the illustrated first part but lacks the unillustrated volume of definitions that follows.A very scarce copy of Augustin-Charles d'Aviler's beautifully illustrated architectural work. With this volume published in the same year as the first edition, by a different publisher, but retaining the first edition publisher to the engraved title page.Illustrated with thirty-one folding and double page plates, and eighty-three plates, including an engraved title page. Collated, complete.With the armorial bookplate 'Beauchamp' to the front pastedown.A beautifully engraved study of late seventeenth century French architecture, with an alphabetical order of architectural terms, and descriptions of beautiful buildings. Rebacked, in a full calf binding, with original boards restored, and endpapers renewed. Front board detached. Rear joint starting to head and tail, with board holding firm. Armorial bookplate to front pastedown. Internally, firmly bound. Inscription to head of title page. Pages generally clean and bright, with tide marks to tail of a significant number of leaves at centre of text block. Good Only. book.
Anbieter: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Dänemark
EUR 1.034,62
Währung umrechnenAnzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbParis, Nicolas Langlois, 1699. 4to. Uniformly bound in two contemporary full calf bindings with five raised bands and richly gilt spines. Edges of boards gilt. Traces from old paper-label on both spines. Light wear to extremities. Head of spine on vol. 1 chipped. Ex-libris pasted on to pasted down front end-papers. Previous owner's name to title-page in both volumes. A few occassional brownspots in vol. 2, otherwise internally nice and clean. (10), XII, (68), 355 pp. + 31 folded doublepage plates, not in the collation and 84 full page engraved plates, included in the collation and 1 frontispicece (a total of 116 plates)" (6), 259 pp. + frontispiece. Third edition of Daviler?s beautifully illustrated architectural work which significantly contributed to architectural education and theory and helped to standardize architectural education and practice in France. It provided detailed explanations and illustrations of classical architectural orders as defined by Renaissance architect Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola. It "was the best work of its kind yet issued and soon superseded F. Blondel's Cours d'architecture" (Fowler). It ?was the standard work for architects (?) This book included a life of Vignola, a description of buildings by him and by Michelangelo, and a dictionary of architectural terms. Daviler also gave practical advice for the design and construction of buildings. His book contained plans and elevations of a typical house and designs of all architectural details such as door-ways, entrances, and windows, including even the design of gardens.? (Macmillan Encyclopedia of Architects, Vol. I, p. 504).