Editore: Western Australian Museum Board, Perth, 1967
Da: Adelaide Booksellers, Clarence Gardens, SA, Australia
Prima edizione
EUR 11,26
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSoftcover. Condizione: Very Good. 1st Edition. Octavo Size [approx 15.5 x 22.8cm]. Very Good condition - Card Covers. Colour frontispiece. Small sticker stain to front cover. Robust, professional packaging and tracking provided for all parcels. 90 pages.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Istanbul: Eren Yayincilik, 2007., Istanbul:, 2007
ISBN 10: 9756372397 ISBN 13: 9789756372395
Da: BOSPHORUS BOOKS, Istanbul, Turchia
EUR 25,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSoft cover. Condizione: New. SINGER, AMY - CHRISTOPH K. NEUMANN - NINA ERGIN (Edited by) Feeding people, feeding power: Imarets in the Ottoman Empire. Istanbul: Eren Yayincilik, 2007. Large 8vo., 312 p., ills. Paperback. New ISBN: 9789756372395 CATALOG: Ottoman history KEYWORDS: Ottoman Empire Ottoman religieus system Imarets have long been recognized as one signature institution of the Ottoman Empire. These public kitchens were typically located in mosque complexes or multi-structured complexes, which included some or all of the following buildings: mosque, medrese, mekteb, tomb, caravansaray, sufi tekke (or tekye) , hospital, bath, market, and other structures associated with the social, economic, and cultural life of the population, usually in an urban setting. Studying imarets is yet another way to explore the Ottoman vision of conquest, empire-building, and imperial rule. The imarets were part of the multiple Ottoman provisioning systems supporting the imperial palaces, military campaigns, cities, and the annual hajj caravan to Mecca and Medina. The public kitchens operated in a society where the state and beneficent institutions held a continual and considerable role in contributing to the daily subsistence of all kinds of individuals. Ultimately, the Ottoman sultan's preoccupation with food was in part an outgrowth of his political and military capacities, and his general responsibility to provide for his subjects. Although the precise dynamic of the emergence of imarets as a distinct institutional form is a process that remains to be traced, it was clearly a confluence of historical practices, together with the demands placed on the early Ottoman sultanate, that gave rise to the particular form of the imaret. Evliya Celebi remarked that in all his travels he saw "nothing like our enviable institution." At least one architectural historian claims that no earlier structures have been found that are analogous and certainly none are described in general books on Islamic architecture. The particular Ottoman origin of the imaret as a distinct architectural form is also attested by its presence throughout the Ottoman lands, Anatolia, the Balkans, and the Arab provinces, regions that did not necessarily share institutions in the pre-Ottoman period. Entirely unexplored remains the impact of Byzantine practices of charity on the Ottoman imarets. The daily distribution of cooked meals to large numbers of urban dwellers year-round from a special building designed for that purpose thus appears to have been an Ottoman innovation, at least outside the holy cities of Mecca and Medina, and of Hebron.
Da: Khalkedon Rare Books ABA, ILAB, IOBA, ESA, Istanbul, Turchia
EUR 19,05
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSoft cover. Condizione: New. Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In English. 312 p., b/w and color ills. Feeding people, feeding power: Imarets in the Ottoman Empire. Imarets have long been recognized as one signature institution of the Ottoman Empire. These public kitchens were typically located in mosque complexes or multi-structured complexes, which included some or all of the following buildings: mosque, medrese, mekteb, tomb, caravansaray, sufi tekke (or tekye) , hospital, bath, market, and other structures associated with the social, economic, and cultural life of the population, usually in an urban setting. Studying imarets is yet another way to explore the Ottoman vision of conquest, empire-building, and imperial rule. The imarets were part of the multiple Ottoman provisioning systems supporting the imperial palaces, military campaigns, cities, and the annual hajj caravan to Mecca and Medina. The public kitchens operated in a society where the state and beneficent institutions held a continual and considerable role in contributing to the daily subsistence of all kinds of individuals. Ultimately, the Ottoman sultan's preoccupation with food was in part an outgrowth of his political and military capacities, and his general responsibility to provide for his subjects. Although the precise dynamic of the emergence of imarets as a distinct institutional form is a process that remains to be traced, it was clearly a confluence of historical practices, together with the demands placed on the early Ottoman sultanate, that gave rise to the particular form of the imaret. Evliya Celebi remarked that in all his travels he saw "nothing like our enviable institution." At least one architectural historian claims that no earlier structures have been found that are analogous and certainly none are described in general books on Islamic architecture. The particular Ottoman origin of the imaret as a distinct architectural form is also attested by its presence throughout the Ottoman lands, Anatolia, the Balkans, and the Arab provinces, regions that did not necessarily share institutions in the pre-Ottoman period. Entirely unexplored remains the impact of Byzantine practices of charity on the Ottoman imarets. The daily distribution of cooked meals to large numbers of urban dwellers year-round from a special building designed for that purpose thus appears to have been an Ottoman innovation, at least outside the holy cities of Mecca and Medina, and of Hebron.
Da: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Regno Unito
EUR 431,46
Quantità: 2 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Brand New. 2nd edition. 800 pages. 9.20x6.30x1.80 inches. In Stock.
EUR 41,73
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: New. Editors: Ergin, Nina; Neumann, Christoph; Singer, Amy Translator: 312 pages.
Editore: Pergamon Press, Oxford, 1961
Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Very good+. First Edition. Volumes I, III, and VI only. In German and English. Volume I: Logic, Theory of Sets and Quantum Mechanics. 1, Portrait. X, 654 p. Hardbound, very good+, stamp on title page.Volume III: Rings of Operators. 1 Portrait. IX, 574 p. Hardbound, very good+, stamp on title page.Volume VI: Theory of Games, 1 portrait, X, 538 pp. Astrophysics, Hydrodynamics and Meteorology.
Editore: Princeton University Press 1950-1959, Princeton, New Jersey, 1950
Da: Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, U.S.A.
Prima edizione Copia autografata
First edition of each work in this ground-breaking four volume work on game theory. Octavo, 4 volumes, original orange wrappers. Volume one is signed by contributors John von Neumann and John Nash on the title page. Contains the article by the Nobel Prize-winning economist entitled, "A Simple Three Person Poker Game." Volume II is signed by contributors Kenneth J. Arrow and John Milnor. Volume III is signed by contributors W.H. Fleming and Philip Wolfe on the title page. Volume IV is signed by contributors Robert J. Aumann and Martin Shubik. In near fine condition with some rubbing and wear. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box. An exceptional set, most rare and desirable signed by von Neumann and other contributors. Volume I contains: G.W. Brown & John Von Neumann, âSolutions of Games by Differential Equationsâ (pp. 73-79); John Nash & Lloyd Shapleyâs important paper: âA Simple Three-person Poker Gameâ (105-16), and other papers by Hermann, Weyle, Gale, Dresher, Kuhn, McKinsey, et al. Volume II contains: Lloyd Shapleyâs âA Value for n-Person Gamesâ (pp. 307-17): A âremarkable 1953 paper⦠There he proposed that it might be possible to evaluate, in a numerical way, the âvalueâ of playing a game. The particular function he derived for this purpose, which has come to be called the Shapley value, has been the focus of sustained interest among students of cooperative game theory ever sinceâ (Alvin Roth, who shared the 2012 Nobel Prize with Shapley, Chapter 1: âIntroduction to the Shapley Value,â in Roth, The Shapley Value: Essays in Honor of Lloyd S. Shapley, Cambridge University Press, 1988). Also contains Von Neumannâs âA Certain Zero-Sum Two-Person Game Equivalent to the Optimal Assignment Problemâ (pp. 5-12) and D.B. Gillies, J.P. Mayberry, & Von Neumann, âTwo Variants of Pokerâ (pp. 13-50). The latter is the supplement to Von Neumann and Morgensternâs Theory of Games and Economic Behavior promised in the footnote on p. 196 of the second edition. Volume III contributors include Gale, Karlin, Kemeny, Oxtoby, Scarf, Shapley, et al. Volume IV contributors include Nobel Laureates Harsanyi, Aumann, and Shapley, as well as Kalisch, Von Neumann (âOn the Theory of Games of Strategy,â pp. 13-42), Shubik, et al. Shapley won the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel for 2012, commonly known as the Nobel Prize in Economics.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Cambridge University Press, 2011
ISBN 10: 1108029205 ISBN 13: 9781108029209
Da: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Regno Unito
EUR 34,91
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: Brand New. 228 pages. 8.50x5.51x0.51 inches. In Stock. This item is printed on demand.