Published by Berche et Tralin, Paris, 1880, 1880
Signed
Un volume in-12°, demi-reliure cuir de couleur verte, dos à 5 nerfs,avec titre en lettres dorées.316 pages. L'éditeur, ou l'auteur (puisque l'ouvrage n'est pas signé), précise dans son avant propos qu'il s'est inspiré de plusieurs auteurs: le Grec Nicétas, le Maréchal de Champagne, Villehardouin, le moine Gunther et, à l'époque moderne, Michaud, Lebeau, Hurter et Heeren. Présence de rousseurs (n'empêchant pas la lecture) et de soulignages rouges sur les 3 premières pages. Cela dit, exemplaire bien compact et bien relié. ETAT SATISFAISANT .
Published by Non précisé, 1981
Signed
Couverture souple. Condition: bon. RO40246644: 1981. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. Paginé de 58 à 83 pages. Annotations au dos du 1er plat. Long envoi manuscrit de l'auteur en 1re page. . . . Classification Dewey : 97.2-Dédicace, envoi.
Published by Paris, Jean de Bordeaux, 1570., 1570
Seller: Antiquariat INLIBRIS Gilhofer Nfg. GmbH, Vienna, A, Austria
Signed
8vo. (24) pp. Coloured paper wrappers. Rare copy of the 12-leaf variant (instead of 8 leaves) of the 1569 Capitulations between Charles IX of France and Sultan Selim II, in Domenico Oliveri's translation. Negotiated by Guillaume de Grandchamp de Grantrie, French ambassador to the Sublime Porte from 1566 to 1570, it allowed the Kingdom of France to recover ships and goods previously confiscated by the Ottoman Empire in order to recover a large debt owed by Charles IX to the Portuguese Sephardi diplomat, banker, and politician in Ottoman service Joseph Nasi (1524-79). - France had a long history of diplomatic relations with the Sublime Porte, the first Capitulations dating back to 1517, when the new Ottoman rulers of Egypt upheld a treaty between France and the Mamluk Sultanate from 1500. In 1535, Suleiman the Magnificent signed Capitulations concerning the trade of French goods in the Ottoman Empire and granting extraterritorial legal rights to the French consuls that allowed them to exercise jurisdiction over disputes arising with French merchants instead of the local Islamic Sharia courts. This was followed by the long-lasting Franco-Ottoman Alliance forged by Francis I and Suleiman the Magnificent in 1536 that was unprecedented in Europe. - With a minor stain over several pages. Well preserved. - Baudrier IV, 86. Atkinson 187. Göllner 1277. OCLC 761347596. Cf. Brunet, Anonymes, 14. Picot 2460.
donnée à Paris, le 29 Juillet 1791. Paris, Imprimerie de Mallard, 1791, in-4 de 14 pp., en ff., cousu à l'époque. Avec la signature autographe de Martelli Chautard.