Language: English
Published by self-publsihed, printed by The Science Press Printing Company, Michigan, 1939
Seller: JP MOUNTAIN BOOKS, PORTLAND, OR, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. First Edition. 1939 FIRST EDITION. INSCRIBED and SIGNED by both authors dated 1939 on the blank FFEP. Original sienna cloth with silver lettering front cover and spine. A few tiny marks covers but generally clean, light bump lower front corner, other than the authors' inscription and signatures there are no owner marks or writing on any pages, no foxing, solid binding. The book measures 261mm tall x 180mm and has 190 pages. PHOTOS ARE OF ACTUAL BOOK BEING OFFERED. Signed by Author(s).
Published by Privately Issued, 1939
Seller: Rain Dog Books, Bloomington, IL, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. First Edition. 8vo . Signed and inscribed by Stella Osborn . We specialize in fine books in collectible condition. Orders are professionally packaged and shipped promptly. M34.
Published by Church Missions Publishing, 1911
Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good+. No Jacket. Inscribed and signed with the initials H.L.B. in 1911. In blue cloth with light rubbing. Signed by Author(s).
Language: English
Published by Michigan, 1939
Seller: NWJbooks, Lancaster, PA, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. No Jacket. 1st Edition. Signed by both authors on the first free end paper and dated April 30, 1939. Gilt lettering on brown cloth covered boards. 4to, 190pp. Edge nick on the back cover. Signed by Author(s).
Seller: John K King Used & Rare Books, Detroit, MI, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Michigan (1939). 10 x 7", cloth, 190 w/index, spine sunned, covers rubbed, corners bumped else ok. FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED & SIGNED BY THE AUTHORS. Former Governor of Michigan.
We can recall nothing similar having reached the market?From the collection of Dr. Otto O. Fisher, who bought primarily in the 1930s and 1940s, so this not been offered for sale in nearly a centuryThe Hundred Years? War was one of the most notable conflicts of the Middle Ages. For 116 years, interrupted by several truces, five generations of kings from two rival dynasties - the English House of Plantagenet and the French House of Valois - fought for the throne of the largest kingdom in Western Europe - France. The war?s effect on European history was lasting. Both sides produced innovations in military technology, and tactics, such as professional standing armies and artillery, that permanently changed warfare in Europe; chivalry, which had reached its height during the conflict, subsequently declined. Stronger national identities took root in both countries, which became more centralized and gradually rose as global powers that expanded into the New World.In the 1430s-50s, the English clung to their dwindling possessions, while French King Charles VII of the Valois dynasty slowly chipped away at them, one piece at a time. By 1440, the French had driven the English completely from the valley of the Loire, and the English retained only Normandy in the north and Gascony in the south. The Truce of Tours in 1444 gave the French a much-needed respite, during which time Charles completed some necessary military reforms and prepared for the final grinding campaigns in a conflict that had begun more than a century earlier?well before anyone?s living memory.Soon, the war started up again. Under the weak kingship of Henry VI, England seemed powerless to stop the French offensive of 1449 to recapture Normandy. The last major battle occurred in April 1450. With no other significant English forces in Normandy, the whole region quickly fell to the victorious French. Caen was captured in June and Cherbourg, the last English-held fortress in Normandy, fell in August.Among the commanders on the French side were the Count of Armagnac and his son, the Viscount, both named John.Autograph document signed, "Jehan [John] D'Armagnac," October 18, 1450, receiving 2000 livres, a significant sum, originally bestowed by the French King to Estienne Petit, the treasurer to King Charles VII in the region, the "last march," as the document notes, for the purpose of attacking the English in April 1450 and after. "I, Jehan d'Armagnac, Vicomte de Lomagne, swear that I have received from Mr. Etienne Petit, treasurer and collector of Languedoc, the sum of 2,000 livres that Mons. the King, by distribution of his finances for Languedoc, of 170,000 livres awarded to the said Seigneur a Montpelier in the month of March last, gave to furnish for us our expenses and to compensate for our efforts, done in the surveying and conquest of Normandy."Jehan V was the last in the line of powerful Armagnac rulers. He fell out of favor with Charles, who dispatched "John the Bourbon" to capture him but John fled to Spain. He was granted a return by Louis XI, but soon revolted against him as well. Armagnac was part of the league that called itself "Bien public" or "public good" and threatened Paris at the head of 6,000 mounted men. In 1469, Louis responded, under the pretense that John was treating with ambassadors from England, and sent an army under Antoine de Chabannes to rout him. John fled to Spain, only to reappear in 1471 in the train of the king's rebellious brother, the duc de Guyenne. John was stabbed to death in the 1470s without eligible male heir.