Editore: The British Museum, 1985
Da: Shore Books, London, Regno Unito
Rivista / Giornale
EUR 12,03
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSoft cover. Condizione: Very Good. 40 pages. Illustrated. Wladimir Zwalf "How Buddhism came west" / Arthur Searle "Handel - the royal archive" / Hannah Lane "Why Sir Hans has come in from the garden" / Timothy Wilson "Sculptor to the Quality" / Leslie Webster "Europe's new medieval order" / Brian Cook "Centenarian and still growing" / John Cherry "Castles of the Conqueror" / Dyfri Williams "Brygos Tomb reassembled" (BT#37).
Da: CSG Onlinebuch GMBH, Darmstadt, Germania
EUR 63,04
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: Gut. Gebraucht - Gut * ex-library; on outside with little abrasion, inside very good, clean condition, no markings in text * -Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- INTRODUCTION -- LIST OF BIBLIOGRAPHICAL WORKS -- Index -- LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS -- CHAPTER I: ALGEMEEN RIJKSARCHIEF (GENERAL STATE ARCHIVES) -- CHAPTER II: EERSTE KAMER DER STATEN-GENERAAL (FIRST CHAMBER OF THE STATES GENERAL) -- CHAPTER III: MINISTRIES -- CHAPTER IV: STATE ARCHIVES -- CHAPTER V: MUNICIPAL ARCHIVES -- CHAPTER VI: UNIVERSITIES -- CHAPTER VII: OTHER SCIENTIFIC INSTITUTIONS -- CHAPTER VIII: MISSIONARY ORGANIZATIONS -- CHAPTER IX: LIST OF SOME OTHER RELEVANT INSTITUTIONS -- INDEX -- Introduction -- A-K -- L-Z -- Backmatter.
Da: Majestic Books, Hounslow, Regno Unito
EUR 240,71
Quantità: 3 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: New. pp. 547.
Condizione: New. pp. 547.
Editore: [Copenhagen], [Copenhagen], 1860
Da: High Ridge Books, Inc. - ABAA, South Deerfield, MA, U.S.A.
Blue-backed sea chart in good condition only. Several mended horizontal cracks. One small hole near top. Title is in the top margin, with no title block or cartouche. Attribution is from the insignia of the Chart Archive at the bottom. A chart of the Kattegat, the primary passage between the North and Baltic Seas, shows south to Copenhagen and just beyond Samso Island, north to Tjorn Island, Sweden. First published in 1848, revised to 1860. An attractive and rare chart of one of the busiest sea lanes in the world.
Data di pubblicazione: 1820
Da: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Mappa
Working nautical chart with manuscript annotations of a maritime nature. Laid down on archival tissue. Exhibits some soiling. Closed tears professionally repaired on verso. Size 35.25 x 22.75 Inches. This is an 1820 Royal Danish Nautical Charts Archive nautical chart or maritime map of the Kattegat, the strait between Denmark and Sweden. This is one of the most actively navigated bodies of water in the world. With Denmark on the left and Sweden on the right, myriad islands appear along Sweden's coastline, and the many islands dotting the strait are illustrated and labeled. Depth soundings and rhumb lines provide navigational aids. Manuscript notes suggest that this chart was used aboard ship. The Kattegat Bordered by the Jutland Peninsula to the west and Sweden to the east, the Kattegat is a shallow sea that can be dangerous and difficult to navigate. Sandy and stony reefs abound, and it's tricky currents shift regularly. Before the completion of the Eider Canal in 1784, the Kattegat was the only way to access the Baltic region by sea. The Danish royal family began imposing dues on shipping in 1429. The dues were then continued by Denmark until 1857. Today, a network of improvements has been created to safeguard the immense amount of international maritime traffic that passes through the region. Many of its reefs have been dredged and several artificial channels have been dug. An extensive light-signaling network has also been installed. This map was created by the Royal Danish Nautical Charts Archive and published in 1820. Two examples are cataloged in OCLC and are part of the institutional collections at the Bibliotheque nordique in Paris and the Royal Danish Library in Copenhagen. References: OCLC 1153438805.