Lloyd o ll (4 resultados)

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- Primera edición
Librería: Benjamin Books, Ottawa, ON, CanadaBenjamin Books
Contactar con el vendedorVendedor de 5 estrellasCondición: Usado - Bueno
EUR 22,47
Envío por EUR 10,47Se envía de Canada a Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Hardcover. Condición: Very Good. 1st Edition.

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Librería: Librerias Prometeo y Proteo, malaga, MA, EspañaLibrerias Prometeo y Proteo
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EUR 13,50
Envío por EUR 70,00Se envía de España a Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Rústica. Condición: New. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Nuevo. 01. Cómo crear situaciones enriquecedoras para el lenguaje y pensamiento de los más pequeños. LIBRO.
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Librería: Lacey Books Ltd, Cirencester, Reino UnidoLacey Books Ltd
Contactar con el vendedorVendedor de 5 estrellasCondición: Usado - Regular
EUR 118,68
Envío por EUR 28,81Se envía de Reino Unido a Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Hardcover. Condición: Fair. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Good. 1996 OUP hardcover edition. Ex library copy with stamps and labels else good condition. Contents: 1. The Origins of the English Manorial Court Rolls as a Written Record: A Puzzle; 2. What did Edwardian Villagers Understand by Law?; 3. What did English Villagers Mean b…y 'Customary Law'?; 4. The Development of Deathbed Transfers in Medieval English Manor Courts; 5. Charitable Bequests, Deathbed Land Sales, and the Manor Court in Later Medieval England; 6. Politics in Manorial Court Rolls: The Tactics, Social Composition, and Aims of a pre-1381 Peasant Movement; 7. Merton College's Control of its Tenants at Thorncroft, 1270-1349; 8. The Dyffryn Clwyd Court Roll Project, 1340-1352 and 1389-1399: A Methodology and Some Preliminary Findings; 9. The Population History of Medieval English Villages: A Debate on the Use of Manor Court Records; 10. Intrafamilial Ties and Relationships in the Medieval Village: A Quantitative Approach Employing Manor Court Rolls; 11. The Peasant Land Market in Medieval England - and Beyond; 12. The Late Medieval View of Frankpledge and the Tithing System: An Essex Case Study; 13. A Periodic Market and its Impact upon a Manorial Community: Botesdale, Suffolk, and the Manor of Redgrave, 1280-1300; 14. Low-level Urbanization: The Seigneurial Borough of Thornbury in the Middle Ages; 15. Exploitation of the Landless by Lords and Tenants in Early Medieval England.
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Editorial: HENRY FROWDE HODDER & STOUGHTON Oxford University Press, London 1919
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- Primera edición
- Firmado
Librería: Andrew Cox PBFA, Shropshire, , Reino UnidoAndrew Cox PBFA
Contactar con el vendedorVendedor de 5 estrellasCondición: Usado - Aceptable
EUR 1127,46
Envío por EUR 22,47Se envía de Reino Unido a Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Hardcover. Condición: Good. 1st Edition. Published in 1919, this is the scarce first edition of this important study into Trench Fever published immediately after the First World War. This is a Unique Association Copy: and includes an original typed and signed letter by Major William Byam (W. Byam), the primary author of the boo…k. Byam was a major in the Royal Army Medical Corps (R.A.M.C.) who led the British War Office Committee on Trench Fever. The letter is addressed directly to co-author Captain J. H. Churchill on official New End Military Hospital letterhead, dated 30th June 1919. New End Military Hospital, Hampstead, N.W.3. was a vital location in medical history. Originally a workhouse infirmary, it was requisitioned during WWI as a military hospital specifically dedicated to researching trench fever and heart conditions affecting soldiers Byam explicitly mentions distributing this "Trench Fever book" via Oxford Press and details transitioning Churchill's medical responsibilities (specifically his "blood counting method") to a successor. The letter reads "Herewith four copies of the Trench Fever book; should you require more I will try and get them out of the Oxford Press for you, but cannot promise to succeed." "I am glad to say I have at last got a successor to take on your job -- quite a keen man named Coles. I have told him about your blood counting method and said that when he found his feet, I would ask you whether you could spare time some day to come and give him a demonstration. I should think in about a week's time he should have learnt sufficient about trench fever to make a start." The book features the official bookplate of the Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine Library, University of Oxford, cleanly stamped "Withdrawn," confirming its legal deaccession and direct link back to Oxford's historic collections. CONDITON The books covers have some general edge wear rubbing, and a stamp along top page edges (pictured) internally bookplate of the Wellcome History of Medicine Library to front pastedown and a further library label and stamp to front free endpaper (pictured) the letter is tipped in to the reverse of the frontispiece and has a small Wellcome Library stamp to its reverse. Contents in good condition. An exceptional, museum-quality association copy of this landmark World War I medical text. Inscribed by Author(s).