Language: English
Published by Hodder & Stoughton Ltd, 1993
ISBN 10: 0340585870 ISBN 13: 9780340585870
Seller: booksbesidetheseaside, St Leonards, United Kingdom
First Edition Signed
US$ 15.24
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. From the library of the Count Zbigniew dei Marcovaldi, with his library stamp embossed to the title page and his signature to the half title. Inscribed to him by Longford to the ffep. A nice clean copy in a lightly rubbed and bumped dust jacket. Inscribed by Author(s).
Published by New York: Basic Books, 2018
ISBN 10: 0465094023 ISBN 13: 9780465094028
Seller: BookLovers of Bath, Peasedown St. John, BATH, United Kingdom
First Edition Signed
US$ 31.75
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardback in Dust Wrapper. Condition: Very Good+. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. Condition Notes: A hint of edgewear to the dust wrapper with a tiny nick to the top corner of the lower panel; First edition (first printing). Hardback. Dust wrapper over quarter-bound grey on green boards with gilt titles to the spine; Measures 9½" x 6ĵ" (1.4 kg); pp (xii) 402; Index; Bibliography; Signed by the author, without dedication, on the title page with my provenance as purchased from the author who is local to me. Includes: Black & white photographs (plates); Colour photographs (plates); || The book is on the shelf, ready to be appropriately packed, and posted from the pastoral paradise of Peasedown St. John, Bath, by a real bookseller in a real book shop - with my personal guarantee and beady eye on the Consumer Contracts Regulations. REMEMBER! Buying my copy means the book shop Jack Russells get their supper! My Book #194393 ||.
Published by New York: Basic Books, 2018
ISBN 10: 0465094023 ISBN 13: 9780465094028
Seller: BookLovers of Bath, Peasedown St. John, BATH, United Kingdom
First Edition Signed
US$ 34.51
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardback in Dust Wrapper. Condition: Very Good+. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good+. First edition (first printing). Hardback. Dust wrapper over quarter-bound grey on green boards with gilt titles to the spine; Measures 9½" x 6ĵ" (1.1 kg); pp (xii) 402; Index; Bibliography; Signed by the author, without dedication, on the title page with my provenance as purchased from the author who is local to me. Includes: Black & white photographs (plates); Colour photographs (plates); || The book is on the shelf, ready to be appropriately packed, and posted from the pastoral paradise of Peasedown St. John, Bath, by a real bookseller in a real book shop - with my personal guarantee and beady eye on the Consumer Contracts Regulations. REMEMBER! Buying my copy means the book shop Jack Russells get their supper! My Book #194392 ||.
Seller: Antique Paper Company, ASHFORD, KENT, United Kingdom
Art / Print / Poster Signed
No Binding. Condition: Fine. No Jacket. 1875 Antique Print - INDIA Royal Visit Prince Wales Wodehouse Throne Guest (268) For more info please ask seller a question. Royal Mail 2nd Class - £0.00 Royal Mail 2nd Class Signed For - £4.50 Standard Int'l age - £4.00 Royal Mail International Signed - £8.00 No PICK UP OPTIONSorry, our items are NOT available for pick-up.PAYING VIA PAYPALWe accept on our all our items so you can shop with confidence.Simple choose the option when proceeding through the checkout.
Published by Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1993
Seller: Kay Craddock - Antiquarian Bookseller, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
First Edition Signed
First Edition. Pp. 190(last blank), 24 plates (12 coloured), index; med. 8vo; navy boards, spine lettered in gilt, slight bruise to bottom edge of upper board; dust wrapper; book label of David Levine, Sydney, on upper pastedown, occasional pencilled marginalia (see footnote), top edges of leaves slightly foxed; Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1993. First edition. *Signed by the author on the title page and inscribed by her on the half-title page to the historian A. L. Rowse (known to friends and colleagues as 'Leslie'): 'Leslie - I hope this also will cause some laughs, though not at the Puritans!' The minor pencilled annotations are perhaps in his hand? Signed.
US$ 517.83
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basket17 volumes. First US paperback editions, first impressions, inscribed by the author. 8vo. Publisher's pictorial wrappers. One or two spines a little faded but in very good, largely unread condition A selection of Cartland's famous historical romances each with her signed presentation inscription, in pink or red ink, to the inside of the front wrappers, to her neighbour Susie. Some are simply signed, 'with love, Barbara'. These paperback originals are seldom found in such nice condition and are rare inscribed.
Isabella was distraught over the loss of the only heir the two produced, a fact which had huge implications for the Iberian Peninsula; We have never before seen such a referenceWhen Isabella?s half-brother Henry died in 1474, she asserted her claim to the throne of Castille, which was contested by thirteen-year-old Joanna, who was connected to Portuguese royalty. Juana sought the aid of her husband (who was also her uncle), Afonso V of Portugal, to claim the throne. This dispute between rival claimants led to the War of 1475?79. Isabella called on the aid of Aragon, with her husband, the heir apparent, and his father, Juan II of Aragon providing it. Juan II died in 1479, and Ferdinand succeeded to the throne in January 1479. In September 1479, Portugal and the Catholic Monarchs of Aragon and Castile resolved major issues between them through the Treaty of Alc??ovas, including the issue of Isabella?s rights to the crown of Castile. Through close cooperation, the royal couple were successful in securing political power in the Iberian peninsula.The death of Prince John of Asturias in 1497?only nine months after his marriage to Margaret of Austria?was a profound dynastic shock to the House of Trast?mara and to the broader politics of Spain. As the sole surviving son of Ferdinand and Isabella, John had embodied the hope of a unified Castile-Aragon succession and a stable line to carry forward the new imperial ambitions made possible by the Atlantic discoveries. His sudden death at age nineteen threw the succession into uncertainty, redirected the family?s diplomatic strategy, and heightened Castile?s dependence on Habsburg alliance networks; Margaret?s brother, the future Emperor Charles V, would ultimately inherit the composite monarchy through John?s elder sister Joanna. In this sense, John?s passing proved crucial for Spain?s future: it opened the path by which a Habsburg, not a Trast?mara, became king of Spain, linking Iberian interests to Central European dynastic politics and shaping the geopolitical structure of the sixteenth century.Chroniclers are unanimous that Isabella took John?s death with profound and very visible grief, and several note that it affected her health and outlook for the remainder of the decade. Contemporary reports describe her as withdrawing from public life, fasting, and dressing in deep mourning, and even foreign observers remarked on the queen?s desolation.Juana de la Torre was the wife of Pedro de la Torre. She was the ?ama? (wetnurse / servant / housekeeper) of Prince John. She was close to the family and was a correspondent of Christopher Columbus, who tried to reach the Queen's ear through her. She was also the sister of Antonio, who accompanied Columbus on his second voyage.The Royal Hospital of the Alhambra (Hospital Real de la Alhambra) was founded by Ferdinand and Isabella in 1501, during their long post-conquest stay in Granada. It was one of several institutions the Catholic Monarchs created in the city after 1492, alongside the Royal Chapel and the Chancery, as part of a broader program to ?Christianize? and administratively integrate Granada into the Castilian crown.The hospital?s founding charter framed it as both a work of charity and a royal assertion of care for the conquered population. It was intended to serve soldiers, poor residents, and travelers, and it leveraged existing Nasrid palace structures in the Alhambra precinct rather than erecting an entirely new building. In practice it became part of the emerging network of Hospitales Reales?the best known being the large Hospital Real of Granada begun in 1504?through which Isabella in particular articulated her late reign?s blend of piety, welfare, and monarchic statecraft.Document signed by Isabella "Yo la Reyna? [?I the Queen?), Juana del Torre and Gaspar de Gricio, Granada, September 17, 1500, mentioning her son and working to build the new hospital. "Sancho de Paredes, my chamberlain I order you that, from the 387,500 maraved?