hardcover. Condition: Good.
Seller: Book Gallery // Mike Riley, Phoenix, AZ, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Hardcover. 1971. George Shumway. Facsimile edition. 51 pages. Limited Edition. 1 of 400 copies. Very Good Plus edition. ; 51 pages.
Language: English
Published by George Shumway, York, 1971
ISBN 10: 0873870220 ISBN 13: 9780873870221
Seller: PsychoBabel & Skoob Books, Didcot, United Kingdom
US$ 58.89
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. Limited. Hardcover without dust jacket. Green tweed cloth hardcover, gilt titles to spine, pp [1 - 4] 5 - 51. Illustrated with the engravings from the 1625 original, this is the 1971 limited edition. Only 400 copies printed. Very good condition, light tanning of endpapers, no other notable flaws. AD. Used.
Language: English
Published by George Shumway Pub, York, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., 1971
ISBN 10: 0873870220 ISBN 13: 9780873870221
Seller: M & M Books, ATHENS, GA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good +. No Jacket. 1971 Paper Ed.
Language: English
Published by George Schumway, Publisher (York, Pennsylvania, 1971), 1971
ISBN 10: 0873870220 ISBN 13: 9780873870221
By the New Invention: Briefly shewing some famous Exploits atchieved by our British Bowmen. With several Portraitures proper for the Pike and Bow. 8.75" x 5.5", brown tweed cloth hardcover, gilt titles to spine, pp [1 - 4] 5 - 51, illustrated by the engravings from the original , fine condition, no dustwrapper 1971 limited edition facsimile of 400 copies of the 1625 original.
Published by (The Scolar Press: Menston, Yorkshire, UK) nd
Seller: John K King Used & Rare Books, Detroit, MI, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Front cover plus 6 full page illus., 7.25 x 5.75", string-tied pict self-wraps, unpaginated, covers a bit rubbed and lightly soiled, spine a bit toned, extremities lightly bumped and worn, old "Withdrawn" inkstamp on front cover; an interesting but modern, undated reprint of the 1625 edition. SCARCE.
Published by George Shumway, York, Pa., 1970
Seller: Canaday's Book Barn, Carlisle, PA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good+. Facsimile Edition of the Original 1625 Printing; Tight, Clean, Unmarked Copy; Covers w/ Very Light Shelfwear; Attractive Copy! ! !
Published by London, Miles Flesher, W. Jones, 1625, 1630, 1625
Seller: Sokol Books Ltd. ABA ILAB, London, United Kingdom
First Edition
US$ 9,352.18
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. FIRST EDITION. Two works in one. 4to. 20 unnumbered leaves. A-E . 1 large folding sheet. Roman letter some Italic. Full page woodcut to title, 6 full-page woodcuts of bowmen and pikemen, with printed folding leaf at end, Obiections against the vse of the Bow with the Pike: And the Answers thereunto with large woodcut headpiece, (one tear restored with loss of letters, other unrestored without loss) historiated woodcut initials, woodcut headpieces and typographical ornaments, gilt leather armorial bookplate label of Henry Huth (1815-1878) and his son Alfred Henry Huth (1850-1910). Light age yellowing, rare very minor marginal spot, small hole restored in lower blank margin of last leaf. A fine copy, in handsome nineteenth-century, straight grained morocco, covers bordered with a gilt rule, title gilt in long on spine, edges and inner dentelles gilt, a.e.g. A very good copy, with the rare folding sheet Obiections against the vse of the bovv vvith the pike: and the answers thereunto , of this beautifully illustrated and most interesting work. Neade s double-armed man carried a hybrid pike-cum-bow which he proposed would be a more efficient weapon than the pike on its own. A year before the publication of this work, Neade presented the manuscript to Charles I, who commanded that the author should exhibit his new weapon in St James s Park, in his presence; which was done. Neade, petitioned the king to make the use of his new invention compulsory, and he and his son were shortly after authorised by proclamation to instruct all those who are fit to exercise arms in the use of the weapon: especially the chiefe officers and all others of our Trayned-bands. The author commences with a short history of the occasions on which the bow has been successfully employed in battle, and attempts to refute the objections which had been made against it. His opinion of gunpowder, may be gathered from the following passage: Amongst all which, Bartholdus Swart, the Franciscan Fryer, with his most devillish Invention of Gunpowder, is the most damnable, and from hell itself invented. He gives the range of an arrow at from 18 to 20 score yards, and says that six of them could be discharged in the time it took to load and fire one musket. The chief advantage of his combination of bow and Pike was that pikemen, by using their bows, would be able to take part in the preliminary actions of a battle, where before they have been lookers-on only. When the enemy had approached to within about six score yards, the bow was to be fastened to the pike and the ranks closed. If attacked by cavalry, the first five or six ranks were to charge pikes, whilst those in the rear were to continue discharging the arrows. The bow was fastened to the pike at the place where the latter is shouldered. Cockle. Despite the earlier royal encouragement, Neade s invention was not taken up, the bow having by this time been ousted from the battlefield by the musket. Neade, describing himself and his son as instructors in archery to the king, complained to the king in 1637 that, despite several demonstrations of his weapon, he had exhausted his entire estate of £600 to no avail, and that through the bad example of the City of London, archery was now generally neglected. There was no official response to these pleas and, apart from some references to his book, nothing further is known of Neade or his son. DNB. A fine copy, well bound. 1) Cockle 106. ESTC S113129. STC 18416. 2) ESTC S113336. STC 18416.3. Not in Cockle.