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‎STEWART (Samuel Alexander) & CORRY (Thomas Hughes)‎

‎A Flora of the North-East of Ireland. Including the Phanerogamia, the Cryptogamia Vascularia, and the Musineae.‎

‎First edition, 8vo (190 x 130 mm), a very good ex-library copy, orig. cloth, gilt.‎

‎STEWART (Samuel Alexander) & CORRY (Thomas Hughes)‎

‎A Flora of the North-East of Ireland. Flowering Plants, Vascular Cryptogams and Charophytes.‎

‎Second edition, 8vo (220x 145 mm), lix, 472pp., maps, a very good ex-library copy, orig. cloth.‎

‎DICKIE (G.)‎

‎A Flora of Ulster and Botanist's Guide to the North of Ireland.‎

‎First edition, small 8vo (165 x 105 mm), xix, [1], 176 + 4pp., of publishers' ads, ex-library, orig. pebble patterned cloth, upper joint torn and worn.‎

‎BRUNKER (J. P.)‎

‎Flora of the County Wicklow: Flowering Plants, Higher Cryptogams and Charace?.‎

‎First edition, 8vo (220 x 145 mm), [12], 310pp., folding map at rear, a very good ex-library copy, orig. cloth.‎

‎LATUDE (Henry Masers de)‎

‎Memoirs of Henry Masers de Latude, who was confined during thirty-five years, in the different state prisons of France. Arranged from the original documents, by Monsieur Thierry, advocate, and member of several academies. Published in France in 1790, and now first translated into English, by John William Calcraft.‎

‎First English translation, small 8vo (180 x 110 mm), vi, [2], 364pp., orig. cloth, recased, uncut.‎

‎HAYES-McCOY (G. A.) Editor.‎

‎Ulster and other Irish Maps c. 1600.‎

‎First edition, folio, xv, [1], 36pp., 21 plates (some coloured, some folding), orig. green cloth, gilt. 23 Early Irish manuscript maps are illustrated and fully described in scholarly essays.‎

‎[TAYLOR (Jeremy)]‎

‎A Dissuasive from Popery. To the People of England and Ireland. Together with II. Additional Letters to Persons changed in their Religion. I. The first written to a Gentlewoman newly seduced to the Church of Rome. II. The second to a Person newly converted to the Church of England. By Jeremy Lord Bishop of Down.‎

‎8vo (185 x 115 mm), [24], 277, [3]pp., engraved frontispiece, old inscription on front fly-leaf "ELibris Edwardi Griffith ex dono Johannis Yeldman", double-page engraved plate, 2pp. of advertisements at end, contemporary sprinkled calf, rubbed.‎

‎DODDRIDGE (Philip)‎

‎The Evidences of Christianity Briefly Stated; and the New Testament proved to be Genuine. In Three Discourses.‎

‎First Irish edition, tall 12mo (175 x 110 mm), xii, 84pp., full sheep, rubbed and worn. Provenance: Early ownership stamp of W. Hutchinson. ESTC gives just two locations (Cork University and National Library of Ireland).‎

‎[HUTCHINSON (John Hely)]‎

‎The Commercial Restraints of Ireland considered in a Series of Letters to a Noble Lord. Containing an Historical Account of the Affairs of that Kingdom, so far as they relate to this Subject.‎

‎First edition, xxii, 240pp., library stamp on title and places in the text, early ownership signature on upper blank margin of leaf following the title, 3 folding tables at end (last defective), old water-staining of the tables and last 2 leaves, first and last few leaves chipped at margins, disbound. One of the significant works of it's era advocating free trade for Ireland, written in the form of a sequence of letters to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Lord Buckinghamshire. However, "its doctrines being regarded as seditious it was ordered to be burnt by the common hangman." - DNB. Bradshaw, 2109; Wagner, 348; Kress, B203; Goldsmith, 11826.‎

‎PHILLIPS (Charles)‎

‎The Lament of the Emerald Isle.‎

‎Seventh edition with additions, 8vo, ix, [2], 12-21, [1]pp., title page with funerary border, engraved frontispiece and 2 further engraved portraits, disbound. Written on the occasion of the death of the Princess Charlotte, consort of Leopold, Duke of Saxe Coburg.‎

‎STEELE (William Edward)‎

‎A Handbook of Field Botany, comprising the flowering plants and ferns indigenous to the British Isles arranged according to the Natural System: the Orders, Genera, and Species carefully analyzed, so as to facilitate their discrimination; with a Synoptical Table of the Genera according to the Linn?an Classification; and a glossary of terms.‎

‎First edition, 8vo, [2], xxix, 249, [1]pp., frontispiece showing 73 plates and ferns, orig. green blind-stamped cloth, spine gilt, a nice copy. Provenance: Armorial bookplate of Thomas Martin.‎

‎SIMPSON (William Woolley)‎

‎Observations in reference to the present Mode of effecting Sales of Landed Estates and other property; with some remarks on a recent publication by Mr. Rainy, entitled "A Brief Exposition regarding the Transfer of Real Property;".‎

‎First edition, 8vo, 7, [1]pp., disbound pamphlet. The author was a Land Agent and Auctioneer, and a Member of the Royal Dublin Society. Goldsmiths'-Kress no. 30340.‎

‎NICHOLLS (Sir George)‎

‎A History of the Irish Poor Law, in Connexion with the Condition of the People.‎

‎First edition, 8vo, x, 424pp., ex-library, library half calf.‎

‎NOVEL. [BURNEY (Fanny)]‎

‎Evelina; or, a Young Lady's Entrance into the World. In Two Volumes.‎

‎Fifth edition, 2 vols., 8vo (170 x 105 mm), [4], 282; 288pp., cont. calf, early neat reback, contrasting spine labels, a nice set. Provenance: Neat contemporary ink ownership signature of 'D. W. Maxwell, 1821' to titles; armorial bookplate of Laurence A. Waldron to vol. II; bookplate of 'Marino, Killiney' to rear of vol. I.‎

‎HATCHELL (John)‎

‎A Report of the Arguments and Judgment upon the Demurrer, in the case of Henry Edmund Taffe, against the Right Hon. Wm. Downes, Lord Chief Justice of the King's-Bench, in Ireland, in Trinity, Michaelmas, and Hilary Terms, 1812 & 1813, in the Court of Common Pleas, Ireland.‎

‎First Edition, 8vo, [2], 218pp., pp.199-200 omitted in pagination, i.e. p.198 followed by p.201, with the stamp of Dublin Law Society on title, disbound, uncut and partly unopened. Henry Edmund Taffe had accused the Right Hon.William Downes of trespass with force of arms, in that he made an assault on him in Castle Street, in Dublin, and kept and detained him in prison, without any reasonable or probable course, for a long time, to wit, for the space of four hours. The damages were laid at ?5,000. Rare, JISC locating the BL copy only.‎

‎[FOX (Charles James)]‎

‎The Speech of the Right Honourable Charles James Fox, in the House of Commons, on the Irish resolutions, on Thursday, May 12, 1785. To which is added, an authentic copy of the resolutions, as originally proposed and now altered by Mr. Chancellor Pitt.‎

‎New edition, 8vo, [4], 104pp., with half-title, disbound.‎

‎ANDERSON (R. J.)‎

‎The Morphology of the Omohyoid Muscle. [Offprint from the 'Dublin Journal of Medical Science', August, 1881.]‎

‎Large 8vo, 16pp., one coloured lithographic plate, disbound. Formerly in the library of the Birmingham Medical Institute with a couple of their neat library stamps.‎

‎SULLIVAN (Sir Edward)‎

‎Decorative Bookbinding in Ireland. A Paper Read before Ye Sette of Odd Volumes.‎

‎34,[27]pp., 14 plates (8 coloured), orig. printed wrappers, spine staple a little rusty. Also includes an alphabetical list of Irish binders extracted from: Bookbinders of the United Kingdom, 1780-1840 by Charles Ramsden and Irish Bookbinding, 1600-1800 by Dr. Maurice Craig.‎

‎[SWIFT (Jonathan)]‎

‎On Poetry: A Rapsody.‎

‎First edition, folio (327 x 209 mm), [3], 4-28pp., ornament on title and last page, on p.28 under the word 'Finis' there are two lines of errata, some light spotting, later wrappers contained in a red cloth folding case. Sir Walter Scott "was the first of Swift's editors to print a number of extra verses which according to a note in a Ms. transcript among the Orrery Papers at Harvard 'ought to have been inserted.... if it had been safe to print them'." These verses were omitted by the printer on political grounds. No copy of an earlier Dublin edition of this masterly satire is known: this edition (published in London, 31 Dec. 1733), though described as 're-printed', is presumed to be the first. The first recorded Dublin edition was published by Hyde in 1734. Foxon, S888; Rothschild, 2147; Teerink, 741; Hayward, 153; Williams, 639.‎

‎COLGAN (Nathaniel)‎

‎Flora of the County Dublin: Flowering Plants, Higher Cryptograms, and Charace?.‎

‎First edition, 8vo (230 x 150 mm), lxx, 324pp., large coloured folding map at rear, orig. green cloth, bevelled boards, spine gilt, uncut, a fine copy. Provenance: Charles Edgar Salmon (ownership signature on half-title). Simpson, 413.‎

‎[BRODICK (Alan)]‎

‎The Speaker. A Poem Inscrib'd to Alan Brodrick, Esq; Speaker to the Honourable House of Commons, Met at Dublin, November the 25th, 1713. Before his Grace the Duke of Shrewsbury.‎

‎First and only edition, small 4to (205 x 155 mm), 4pp., drop-head title, small piece torn from inner upper blank margin, disbound. Effusive praise of the politician soon to become Lord Chancellor of Ireland. The occasion of the present pamphlet was Brodrick's return to power as Speaker of the Irish House of Commons after being out of office for two years. He was returned at the 1713 election, held under the lord lieutenancy of the Duke of Shrewsbury, and presumably the date in the title of the poem refers to the occasion of his being chosen as speaker, in a contest with a court-sponsored Tory candidate. What was presumably a Tory reply, A Letter to the Author of the Speaker, appeared soon after (Foxon, L154). Foxon, S620; ESTC locating 5 copies in the British Isles (BL, Cambridge, House of Lords, Dublin Honourable Society, National Library of Ireland); one copy in North America (University of Chicago).‎

‎TRIALS.‎

‎A Full and True Relation of Two Very Remarkable Tryals at the Quarter-Sessions of the Peace for the City and Liberty of Westminster held in the Great Hall, on Monday the third of October, and ending the eleventh of the same. The one, for scandalous words, by one Shippon : the other, of a priest in the Gate-house, for spoiling a girl of nine years old. By way of a letter to a friend.‎

‎First edition, folio (295 x 190 mm), 4pp., drop-head title, a well margined copy with just slight signs of a water stain, sewn in recent marbled wrappers, preserved in a custom-made folding cloth case, leather spine label lettered in gilt. Sexual abuse of a nine year old girl by an Irish priest. The second part of the pamphlet contains "a very foul case" of sexual abuse of a nine year girl by an Irish Catholic priest of the name of Dowdel. The girl, named Bishop, swore in court that the previous August she used to visit Dowdel, then a prisoner in the Gate-house where she had first made his acquaintance when her mother was also a prisoner there. According to her testimony: "he used to kiss her, to take her upon his knee, and to give her sugared beer, some time put his tongue into her mouth, and his hands up her coats; that he hurt her once with his finger, which made her cry; and then to please her, gave her two groats: and that a week after he took her in like manner upon his knee, and after he had kissed her a while, he threw her upon his bed (having made his Door fast with a stick) fell upon her, pull'd up her Coats, and hurt her with something..." When the matter came out the girl's father, being drunk, told Dowdel that for forty pounds he could see to it that everything would be hushed up. Dowdel thought forty pounds too much and offered ten. At his trial Dowdel shamelessly confessed his misdemeanour with a frankness which later earned some leniency from the court. He speaks in what appears to be the writer's attempt to imitate his Irish accent. "Being asked if he would challenge any of the jury, he answered like an Irish St. Omer, Me like dem well, they be all honest men. Being asked, if he used to kiss the Girl and set her upon his knee ; he answered Yes my Lor the chile be so pretty and do twenty pretty tings make me laugh a hundred times. Being asked if he ever gave her money, he said, My Lord that be my Charitee, when her Mother bee in Prison, I tooke her to eat half my dinner, and I say this bee pretty Shile, I had love for the Shile and gave her any ting I had : she used to come often for my Charitee. But amongst the rest of his discourse he owned the matter in effect in these words, which happened about entering her body, he said, Me enter her dis far, pointing his finger to the Court." Wing, F 2337.‎

‎CRUMPE (Samuel)‎

‎An Essay on the Best Means of Providing Employment for the People. To which was Adjudged the Prize Proposed by the Royal Irish Academy for the best Dissertation on that Subject.‎

‎First edition, 8vo (207 x 125 mm), xxxii, 365, [3]pp., without the half-title but with the final errata leaf, cont. calf, neatly rebacked, leather spine label lettered in gilt. "Samuel Crumpe (1766?1796) came to prominence in 1793 with a carefully argued essay on unemployment, entitled An essay on the best means of providing employment for the people. In this he emphasised the importance of agriculture, and attacked low wages as 'a premium to idleness'; he also maintained that people would be lazy when working unless well paid. The essay also echoed popular concerns of the time when Crumpe argued that a prosperous Britain would lead to a prosperous Ireland, and it hinted at the dangers of separation."?(DIB). Provenance: With the printed bequest label of the Right Reverend Doctor F. Moylan, to the Diocese of Cork. McCulloch, p.284; Goldsmiths'-Kress, no. 15519.‎

‎[YOUNG (Arthur)]‎

‎The Farmer's Letters to the People of England: containing the sentiments of a practical husbandman, on various subjects of great Importance: Particularly The Exportation of Corn. The Balance of Agriculture and Manufactures. The present State of Husbandry. The Circumstances attending large and small Farms The present state of the Poor. The Prices of Provisions. The Proceedings of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, &c. The Importance of Timber and Planting. Emigrations to the Colonies. The Means of promoting the Agriculture and Population of Great-Britain, &c. To which are added, Sylv?: or, occasional tracts on husbandry and rural oeconomics.‎

‎Third edition, first Irish, small 8vo (157 x 95 mm), [6], 482pp., cont. calf, lower joints split but holding firm, morocco spine label, lettered in gilt. Provenance: The Lawes Agriculture Library, Rothamsted Research Institute.‎

‎TROTTER (Marcus)‎

‎A Treatise on the First Principles of Astronomy and the use of the Globes.‎

‎First edition, 8vo (190 x 110 mm), viii, [2], 174pp., errata slip tipped in after page 154, engraved frontis., and folding engraved plate to rear (spotted), page 115/116 with closed tear which has been repaired with archival paper, some light browning, rebound in modern calf calf decorated with astronomical symbols to spine, new endpapers, uncut. Provenance: Presentation inscription to inner gutter margin of title, presented to the Linen Library, Belfast by R. R. Bradshaw, 1889. JISC locates a single copy at Newcastle University Libraries.‎

‎[GOUGH (John)]‎

‎A Collection of Narrative Pieces from Ancient and Modern History. With a Short Introduction to Geography. For the Use of the Lower Classes of English Scholars in the School at Prospect Hill.‎

‎First edition, 12mo (160 x 95 mm), iv, [5]-154, [2]pp., cont. calf, a little rubbed, joints starting, red morocco spine lettering piece. John Gough (1720?1791) arithmetician, born and educated at Kendal, Westmorland. After several years spent as a teacher in Pickwick in Wiltshire, he arrived in Ireland in 1750 to take charge of the school at Cork established by his only brother, James Gough (1712?1780). In 1752 he accepted the mastership of the prestigious Friends' school at Dublin, which he held until 1774, and after moved to a similar appointment at Lisburn. He was the author of the Rise and Progress of the People called Quakers, as well as numerous school text books. The verso of the title carries and advert for the "Boarding School at Prospect Hill, near Lisburn." Including a chapter with "Several short stories relative to the Treatment of the Indians in America and the Slave Trade." ESTC locates just the British Library and Trinity College copies; The National Library of Ireland also hold a copy.‎

‎LAW.‎

‎The Several Acts of the Sessions of Parliament Nnith & tenth George IV. Amending the Criminal Law of Ireland.‎

‎Small 8vo, [4], [22], 406, [2], 5, [3], [18, index]pp., 'An act to explain and amend an act of the fifty-fifth year of King George the Third' has a separate title page, dated 1830, register and pagination, ownership name cut away from upper blank margin of title page, cont. calf, red leather spine label. JISC locating the British Library copy (imperfect) and Castle Ward copies only.‎

‎MOORE (Thomas)‎

‎Irish Melodies, by Thomas Moore, Esq. With an Appendix, Containing the Original Advertisements, and the Prefatory Letter of Music.‎

‎Third edition, 12mo, xii, 251, [1]pp., illustrs., in the text, Irish binding? cont. green calf, covers decorated in blind and gilt, spine gilt extra, lacks spine label, rubbed.‎

‎SMITH (Goldwin)‎

‎Irish History and Irish Character.‎

‎First edition, 8vo, [4], 197pp., orig. publishers cloth a little faded.‎

‎LELAND (Thomas)‎

‎The History of Ireland from the Invasion of Henry II. With a Preliminary Discourse on the Antient State of that Kingdom.‎

‎3 Vols., 8vo, [4], lvi, 387; [4], 516; [4], 634, [33]pp., with half-titles, bookplate to front paste-down, cont. tree calf, rubbed, hinges cracked, contrasting morocco labels to spine, lettered in gilt.‎

‎RICHARDSON (H. D.)‎

‎Facts Concerning the Natural History, &c. of the Gigantic Irish Deer, (Cervus Giganteus Hibernicus).‎

‎First edition, 54pp., some light worming just touching text, later blue buckram, leather spine label rubbed.‎

‎GETTY (Edmund)‎

‎Notices of Chinese Seals Found in Ireland.‎

‎First edition, 4to (225 x 185 mm), 40pp., tinted lithographic frontispiece, title page slightly browned, 19 plates of seals, orig. publishers green cloth decorated in gilt and blind. Provenance: Contemporary signature of G. Le Hunte.‎

‎ELLIS (William)‎

‎The Modern Husbandman: or, the Practice of Farming: As it is now carried on by the most Accurate Farmers in several Counties of England.‎

‎First Irish edition, 8vo (198 x 125 mm),12 parts bound in 3 vols., (complete) each part with its own title-page, viii, 9-124; viii, 125, [3 adverts]; viii, 9-126, [2 adverts]; viii, 9-132; xii, 147, [1]; viii, 145, [3 adverts]; viii, 112, [1]; vii, [1], 104; viii, 114, [2 adverts]; [2], cxix-cxxiii, [1], 125-244; [2], ccxlv-cclii, [2], 253-368; [2], ccclxxv-ccclxxviii, 379-496pp., with all advert leaves, part II has title and contents leaves misbound, part XII has title bound at rear, small ink stain to several leaves of vol. I which doesn't intrude into the text, cont. full calf, morocco spine labels lettered in gilt, label to vol. III slightly chipped otherwise a very handsome set in a contemporary binding. This is Ellis's most important work, arranged in the form of an agricultural calendar. Each part was issued separately with its own title page, complete set are extremely hard to find. William Ellis (c.1700?1758), agriculturist and writer. After a short period in the brewing industry, Ellis bought Church Farm at Little Gaddesden, near Hemel Hamstead, Hertfordshire, were he combined the practice of farming with his passion for writing on the subject. His writings were far more successful than his farming activities and his early books were very well received and "farmers in all parts of the country asked him to visit and report on their farms. He travelled over the country giving advice and observing different farming methods... Many farmers visited Ellis's farm at Little Gaddesden, but they found that he did not practise what he advocated in print, that his implements were old-fashioned, and that his land was neglected and in bad condition." (ODNB). Provenance: Small neat ink stamp of the Lawes Agricultural Library to the title of the first 2 volumes. Fussell II, p. 7; Perkins 561 (the London edition of 1744); Aslin, p.43.‎

‎YEATS (W. B.), CARLETON (William)‎

‎Stories from Carlton: with an Introduction by W. B. Yeats.‎

‎First edition, first issue, small 8vo, xvii, [3], 302 + 6pp., of adverts, orig. green cloth, stained and worn through to boards in several places, orig. printed spine label rubbed and worn. Wade, 214.‎

‎THE STUDIO. BOOKPLATES.‎

‎Modern Book-Plates & Their Designers. Special Winter Number 1898-1899.‎

‎First edition, 4to, 78pp., one of 500 copies, 8 full-page plates (some coloured), numerous illustrs., orig upper printed wrapper bound in, cont. half calf, rubbed. With sections on British, French, American, German, Austrian, & Belgian bookplates. Provenance: With the armorial bookplate of Henry J. B. Clements, Killadoon, Ireland.‎

‎SONG SHEET.‎

‎Lines Written on the Barley Corn.‎

‎Single sheet printed on one side only (282 x 115 mm), 30 mm closed tear, woodcut at head of a Barley Corn seller with his stock loaded onto a donkey, first line: "There was three farmers in the north as they were passing by...".‎

‎TEA TO IRELAND.‎

‎An Act to permit the Exportation of Tea to Ireland without Payment of any Duty, under certain Restrictions. [27th June 1801.]‎

‎Folio (304 x 184 mm), 7, [1]pp., disbound.‎

‎[WIGHT (Thomas)]‎

‎A History of the Rise and Progress of the People called Quakers in Ireland, from the year 1653 to 1700. Exhibiting their labours in the gospel, their zeal in the promotion of Christian discipline and sufferings for conscience-sake: together with the characters and spiritual experiences of some of their principal ministers and elders, and other occurrences. First compiled, at the request of their national meeting, by Thomas Wight of Cork. Now revised and enlarged. To which is added, a continuation of the same history to the year of our Lord 1751. With an introduction describing summarily the apostacy of the professors of Christianity from the primitive simplicity and purity through its several stages, and the gradual reformation from thence. And a treatise of the Christian discipline exercised among the said People. By John Rutty.‎

‎New revised edition, 4to (195 x 154 mm), 484, [8]pp., cont. calf, rubbed, hinges cracked, head and foot of spine chipped. An important source on the Quakers which includes, as well, much on the Irish society, local history and genealogy. Provenance: Early ownership ink signature to title page "John Humphreys, City new, Sarum [Salisbury], L/N."‎

‎WALKER (John)‎

‎The Academic Speaker, or, a selection of parliamentary debates, orations, odes, scenes, and speeches, from the best writers. Proper to be read and recited by youth at school. To which are prefixed, elements of gesture...‎

‎12mo, [2], ii,[ 4], xv,[ 1], 268, [8]pp., 4 hand-coloured plates (plate 4 with closed tear to gutter margin), lacks front and back blank endpaper, title page dusty, renewed endpaper stuck to gutter margin of final leaf, modern calf, rubbed, a very good working copy of a rare work.‎

‎IRISH AGRICULTURE.‎

‎A Method of Raising Hops in Red Bogs. Published by Order of the Rt. Hon. the Dublin Society.‎

‎8vo, [2], 15, [1]pp., some light browning to text, recent marbled boards.‎

‎Butler Yeats William‎

‎Tragedie irlandesi versione proemio e note di Carlo Linati‎

‎Contiene le seguenti 4 opere: Lady Cathleen, Visioni di maggio, Sull'acque tenebrose, La Poverella 1 21x14,5 cm., legatura in mezza tela (dorso scollato da un lato), pagg. XLVIII, 131 (8), su carta speciale con ampi margini, in italiano, Bibliografia, inseriti i titli originali delle 4 opere contenute, buone condizioni.‎

‎MOORE Tommaso‎

‎VIAGGI D'UN GENTILUOMO IRLANDESE IN CERCA DI UNA RELIGIONE Con note e Dichiarazioni di Tommaso Moore. Nuova versione italiana dall'originale inglese del canonico Giuseppe Bini‎

‎prefazione 1 24x15.5 cm., XXXI, 404 pp., brossura editoriale, barbe, intonso, timbro, lievi fioriture, piccoli strappi alla brossura, esemplare in buone condizioni, in italiano‎

‎Stawell Ball Robert (Sir)‎

‎Star-Land being talks with young people about the wonders of the Heavens‎

‎Stawell, Royal Astronomer of Ireland, Author of " The story of the Heavens" - Illustrated - Thirteenth Thousand 1 18,5x12 cm., legatura in piena tela, titoli in oro al piatto e al dorso, pagg. XII, 376 (16), 92 figure nel testo, alcune a piena pagina, in antiporta tavola in nero "A Juvenile Lecture at the Royal Institution", protetta da velina, in lingua inglese, piccola scollatura all'interno del piatto anteriore, ma bell'esemplare, interessante e raro. Timbro di Libreria di Aberdeen. Firma di appartenenza‎

‎Department of Agriculture and Technical Instruction for Ireland‎

‎Ireland: Industrial and Agricultural Handbook for The Irish Pavilion, Glasgow International Exhibition, 1901‎

‎1 24.7x16.5 cm., [10], 290 pp., 208 ill. f.t. di cui alcune ripiegate a colori, legatura edit. in tela verde e oro, titoli in rosso e nero al piatto ant., prima edizione, normali segni d'uso alla legatura, una tavola geologica dell'Irlanda strappi con pesanti mancanze, per il resto buon esemplare, in inglese Contiene 283 articoli di vari contributori. Ci vollero due anni, dal 1899 al 1901, per preparare sia i terreni che gli edifici per ospitare l'Esposizione Internazionale a Glasgow, sulle rive del fiume Kelvin.‎

‎STOELTIE BARBARA & RENÉ‎

‎Living in Ireland. Vivir en Irlanda. Vivere in Irlanda. Viver na Irlanda‎

‎4° carton. edit. sovrac. figur. pp. 200, molte belle fotogr. a colori. Testo in spagnolo, italiano e portoghese.‎

‎De Chavannes De La Giraudière MM. H. et Huillard-Bréholles‎

‎L'Irlande son origine, son histoire et sa situation présente. Nouvelle édition.‎

‎<p>21 cm, bella rilegatura coeva in piena pelle, fregi a secco ai piatti incorniciati in oro, titolo e fregi impressi in oro al dorso, tagli marmorizzati, risguardie con carte marmorizzata, p. 399. Con 4 belle tavole incise a piena pagina, una delle quali all'antiporta raffigurante San Patrizio. Minimi segni del tempo al dorso, interni ottimi. Testo in francese.</p>‎

‎Olivetti Adriano (direttore)‎

‎Comunità. Rivista mensile di attualità e cultura fondata da Adriano Olivetti. Anno XII, n. 61, luglio 1958‎

‎<p>24 cm, brossura illustrata, p. 108, xxxii numerose illustrazioni nel testo. Scritti di: M. Calandrei, E. Fermi, S. De Santis, G. Dorfles, U. Vagnai, S. Carcano, E. A. Gutkind, I. Weiss ed altri. Timbro privato all'indice</p>‎

‎Fenn, H. (pinx.t); Hinshelwood, R. (sculp.t).‎

‎Rocks at Ross (near Kilkee, Ireland).‎

‎<p>Incisione su acciaio, impronta 27 x 19 cm su foglio 31,5 x 23,5. Scorcio di mare in tempesta che si scaglia sulle rocce di Ross Whitam Beach (Irlanda). Tratto da "Picturesque Europe" 1875-1879. Assai ben conservata.</p>‎

‎H. Fenn (prinx.t); R. Hinshelwood (sculp.t).‎

‎The Bent Cliff (West Coast of Ireland).‎

‎<p>Incisione su acciao, impronta 27 x 19 cm, su foglio 31,5 x 23,5 cm. Un imponente scoglio si erge alto lungo la costiera occidentale irlandese. L'immagine è animata da uno stormo di uccelli marini che volano attorno alla roccia. Tratto da "Picturesque Europe" 1875-1876. Esemplare molto ben conservato. </p>‎

‎BOYLAN Patrick Canon (ed.)‎

‎Dublin - The book of the Congress 1932 (XXXI International Eucharistic Congress). Vol.1 [out of 2]‎

‎volume 1 (out of 2): 227pp.+ illustrations out-of-text (some of which in colour), bound in cloth (orig.illustrated softcovers preserved), 26cm., few stamps, good condition, R75912‎

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