Language: English
Published by Self Mounted, Blaine, Anoka County, Minnesota, 1900
Seller: Terrace Horticultural Books, St. Paul, MN, U.S.A.
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
Single sheet (illustrator). Specimen Sinigle frond Collected July 1900 in a swamp. Hone Was A Graduate Of The University of Minnesotra, Botanist and Herbaria Collector of over 500 specimens. The Collection spans Across North America with quantity from Virginia, New England, California, Arizona, Wisconsin, Oregon, British Columbia, Rocky Mountains, and Bermuda; Hone Contributed to Minnesota Botanical studies 1904 Minnesota Helvelliineae and two others in the survey, Hone Collecting plate on this Example Which is expertly preserved as are Examples of her work at Herbaria Across the Country; Installed in 8 mil Heavy Plastic Protective Sleeve.
Language: English
Published by Self Mounted, Bermuda, Walsingham Marsh, 1903
Seller: Terrace Horticultural Books, St. Paul, MN, U.S.A.
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
Single sheet (illustrator). Specimen Frond Collected August 1903 for Hone by P. H. Foss. Collectors often offered specimen to Several coleagues, Hone In this Case. Hone Was A Graduate Of The University of Minnesotra, Botanist and Herbaria Collector of over 500 specimens available at Terrace Horticultural Books. The Collection spans Across North America with quantity from Virginia, New England, California, Arizona, Wisconsin, Oregon, British Columbia, Rocky Mountains, and Bermuda; Hone Contributed to Minnesota Botanical studies 1904 Minnesota Helvelliineae and two others in the survey, Hone Collecting plate on this Example Which is expertly preserved as are Examples of her work at Herbaria Across the Country; Installed in 8 mil Heavy Plastic Protective Sleeve.
Language: English
Published by Self Mounted, Botanic Gardens Harvard University, 1908
Seller: Terrace Horticultural Books, St. Paul, MN, U.S.A.
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
Single Sheet (illustrator). Specimen of Leaves And Flower Collected By Hone July 1908 With Mr. Morris The Gardener Of The Gardens at Harvard. Hone Was A Graduate Of The University of Minnesotra, Botanist and Herbaria Collector of over 500 specimens available at Terrace Horticultural Books spans Across North America with quantity from Virginia, New England, California, Arizona, Wisconsin, Oregon, British Columbia, Rocky Mountains, and Bermuda; Hone Contributed to Minnesota Botanical studies 1904 Minnesota Helvelliineae and two others in the survey, Hone Collecting plate on this Example Which is expertly preserved as are Examples of her work at Herbaria Across the Country; Installed in 8 mil Heavy Plastic Protective Sleeve.
Published by T. Tharcher, College Green, Bristol
Seller: COVENANT HERITAGE LIBRIS, Saint John, NB, Canada
Hardcover. Condition: Good. 14 glazed sepia chromolithographic plates, in 12 panels, on a single sheet folding into Covers (illustrator). No Date Late 1800's. red cloth gilt decor, black spine. S12 1.
Language: English
Published by Pieter De Hondt, Graavenhaage, 1728
Seller: M.POLLAK ANTIQUARIAT Est.1899, ABA, ILAB, Tel-Aviv, Israel
No Binding. Condition: Very Good. A.Houbrake (illustrator). Depiction of the "Agony in the Garden of Gethsemane" ( in the background: Judas Leading the Roman soldiers to Jesus) - Captions in 6 six languages (Greek, Latin, English, French, German and Dutch) relating to Matthew 26:43. ORIGINAL ANTIQUE ETCHING (copper plate) drawn by the Dutch painter A. Houbrake, engraved by F. Blyswyk. . Beautiful and clear imprint of the etching with impressive light and shadow effect ("Nachtbild") . Printed on strong imperial paper with extra large margins (3 sides untrimmed). Margins with hardly visible really minimal age toning here and there, etching absolutely clean. Very few small tears on outer margin. Truely VERY GOOD CONDITION- Single sheet from the prestigious edition of :" Taferelen der voornaamste Geschiedenissen van het oude en nieuwe Testament". Size of the illustrated area: Size of the illustrated area: 21,2 x 34,4 cm / 8,6" x 13,1 " Size of whole sheet: 35 x 52,5cm / 13,7" x 20,6".
Published by [Dufour de Rians], [Cap-Francais], 1796
First Edition Signed
Single sheet, folio (ca. 32 × 19,5 cm). Local printing, combining printed form and manuscript completions in brown ink in secretary hand, signed by Leblanc. (illustrator). Single sheet, folio (ca. 32 × 19,5 cm). Local printing, combining printed form and manuscript completions in brown ink in secretary hand, signed by Leblanc. Rare locally printed directive from Cap-Français, signed by Commissioner Leblanc shortly after his arrival, appointing the director of the colony's principal military hospital during the Haitian Revolution. This rare directive was issued at Cap-Français by Georges-Pierre Leblanc, commissioner of the French Directory, during one of the most turbulent phases of the Haitian Revolution. It appoints Citizen Moreau as directeur en chef de l'hôpital militaire of Cap-Français, instructing him to assume his duties without delay and to work with Citizen Mailliard (Maillard or Maillart), identified as commissaire des guerres, to designate a senior officer responsible for supervising the hospital's nursing staff, subject to the Commission's approval. The document is printed on a locally produced template with manuscript completions, almost certainly the work of Dufour de Rians, the leading printer of Cap-Français from the mid-1770s onward. Dufour was responsible for much of the colony's official output, including proclamations and administrative decrees. (Cabon 1939; Menier 1949) Very few of his Revolutionary-era imprints survive, most having been destroyed during the catastrophic burning of Cap-Français in 1793 and subsequent warfare. This example is especially remarkable for bearing the autograph signature of Commissioner Georges-Pierre Leblanc, whose brief tenure in Saint-Domingue left almost no surviving documents. Leblanc was one of five commissioners dispatched by the Directory in May 1796 to reestablish French control over the colony, joining Léger Félicité Sonthonax, Julien Raimond, Marc-Antoine Alexis Giraud, and Philippe-Rose Roume de Saint-Laurent. His time in Saint-Domingue was brief: arriving on 11 May 1796, he fell seriously ill by early January 1797 and left for France, but died during the return voyage. Because Leblanc remained in the colony for less than a year, signed documents from his administration are exceptionally rare, and this directiveissued only two weeks after his arrivalis among the earliest known examples of his official acts. The identities of the other officials named here are less certain but provide context for the colony's medical administration. A notice in Généalogie et Histoire de la Caraïbe, Bulletin 23 (Janvier 1991), records a Moreau who served as chirurgien-major in Port-au-Prince, arriving in Saint-Domingue in 1748 and returning to France in 1774. During his career, he acted as entrepreneur général des hôpitaux royaux et militaires for the southern and western parts of the colony. By 1796, this individual would have been too old to remain active, but it is possible that the Moreau named in this directive was a younger relative, perhaps a son or nephew, continuing the family's role in colonial hospital administration. The War Commissioner named as Mailliard also appears to have been a key figure in the colony's military structure. A later document dated 23 July 1803 identifies a Maillard as chef de l'état-major de la division du Nord, or chief of staff of the Northern Division (FranceArchives, DE/2012/PA/47/9). While it is not certain that this is the same individual, the connection suggests a career military administrator whose authority spanned the Revolutionary government and the later Napoleonic campaigns. The directive provides a rare surviving example of the practical workings of colonial administration in Saint-Domingue during the Haitian Revolution. Produced locally at Cap-Français, most likely by Dufour de Rians, and signed by Commissioner Leblanc only weeks after his arrival, it reflects the efforts of the Directory to maintain institutional structures in the face of war, epidemic disease, and political unrest. Few such documents survived the destruction of Cap-Français and the upheavals of the following years, making this a scarce witness to the final phase of French rule in the colony. Reference: Cabon, Adolphe. Un Siècle et demi de journalisme en Haïti. Worcester: American Antiquarian Society, 1939. Menier M. A., Debien Gabriel. Journaux de Saint-Domingue. In: Revue d'histoire des colonies, tome 36, n°127-128, troisième et quatrième trimestres 1949. pp. 424-475 . Horizontal fold; light toning and minor edge wear. Otherwise in fine condition.