26,674 research outputs found

    Author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012 /

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    Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Portraits of author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia

    Peregrinatio in Terram Sanctam. German

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    Illustrations--Relief--Woodcuts (Leaf lxxxii verso)[157] leaves (some folded) : ill. ; 28 cm. (fol.)Letterpress on handmade laid paperWoodcutsRebound in the 20th century in full orange calf. Stuck-on headbands. Title and author tooled with handle letters in gold. All edges trimmed. Marbled endsheets.Fragile: Should be handled as little as possible. Signatures: UW copy has 155 leaves, with neither signatures nor pagination; leaves are numbered by hand: i-v ix-lii lii-cliiii. Ideal copy signature statement from Goff is (fol.): a-b[superscript 8] c[superscript 2]+2+2+2 d-e[superscript 2], f-h[superscript 2]+2, i-s[superscript 8], t[superscript 6], v[superscript 2]+2+2 x-z[superscript 8] A-C[superscript 8]; 180 leaves. First German edition, published the same year as the first edition in Latin, in the same type (believed to have been cast by Peter Schoeffer), and with the same woodcuts as the Latin edition. - quoted from tipped on catalog notice with Hain 3959 reference. Seriously defective copy. All the woodcut panoramas are defective to some extent, some of them lacking several page-size sections. Lacks title page leaf with blank recto and frontispiece verso, plus other leaves. Title and imprint from first page and colophon statement. Gothic letter. 41-The first illustrated travel book to be printed. Bernhard von Breydenbach, a wealthy canon of the cathedral at Mainz, compiled a travel book of his journey to the Holy Land in 1483-4. He was accompanied by Erhard Reuwich, a painter from Utrecht, who is referred to in the text as the author of the maps of Venice, Parenzo in Illyria, Corfu, Modon near the bay of Navarino, Crete, Rhodes, and Jerusalem. Some are folding, and the map of Venice is 5 feet in length, though not in the UW copy. Despite the vulnerability of woodblocks, the same woodblocks were believed to have been used successively in editions printed in Mainz, Lyons, Speier, and Zaragoza. Source: Pollard, A.W., Early Printed Books, 1893

    Moral Good, the Beatific Vision, and God’s Kingdom Writings by Germain Grisez and Peter Ryan, S.J.. Edited by Peter J. Weigel

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    For close to half a century, the work of Germain Grisez has been highly influential, and his writings continue to receive considerable attention from philosophers and theologians of diverse viewpoints. His co-author for this work is the professor and noted moral theologian Fr. Peter Ryan, S.J., currently the executive director of the Secretariat of Doctrine and Canonical Affairs of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). These two eminent scholars explore fundamental questions about Christian eschatology, moral theory, the purpose of human life, and the promise of human fulfilment. The authors examine Christian teaching on the final destiny of persons, investigating the meaning of God's kingdom, the hope of the beatific vision, and the centrality of moral goodness and divine grace in one's final end. This work is an ideal source for students, scholars, ministers and lay persons interested in basic questions of Christian theology, the philosophy of religion, ethical theory, and Catholic doctrin

    Murder on the mountain: author talk with Peter J. Wosh

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    Author talk by Peter J. Wosh on May 5th, 2022, on his book, "Murder on the Mountain: crime, passion, and punishment in gilded age New Jersey.

    zu Ende ist allhier beigefüget eine Summarische Nachricht von dem Bakkeljau- und Stockfischfang bei Terreneuf

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    ausgefertiget durch Abraham Moubach ; aus dem Holländischen übersetzet ...[Erhard Reusch]. zu Ende ist allhier beigefüget eine Summarische Nachricht von dem Bakkeljau- und Stockfischfang bei TerreneufFrontispizTitel in Rot- und SchwarzdruckÜbersetzername von Blatt ₎₍verso: Erhard ReuschOriginaltitel: Bloeyende opkomst der aloude en hedendaagsche Groenlandsche visscher

    Peregrinatio in Terram Sanctam. German

    No full text
    Illustrations--Relief--Woodcuts (Foldout map on leaf xvii verso)[157] leaves (some folded) : ill. ; 28 cm. (fol.)Letterpress on handmade laid paperWoodcutsRebound in the 20th century in full orange calf. Stuck-on headbands. Title and author tooled with handle letters in gold. All edges trimmed. Marbled endsheets.Fragile: Should be handled as little as possible. Signatures: UW copy has 155 leaves, with neither signatures nor pagination; leaves are numbered by hand: i-v ix-lii lii-cliiii. Ideal copy signature statement from Goff is (fol.): a-b[superscript 8] c[superscript 2]+2+2+2 d-e[superscript 2], f-h[superscript 2]+2, i-s[superscript 8], t[superscript 6], v[superscript 2]+2+2 x-z[superscript 8] A-C[superscript 8]; 180 leaves. First German edition, published the same year as the first edition in Latin, in the same type (believed to have been cast by Peter Schoeffer), and with the same woodcuts as the Latin edition. - quoted from tipped on catalog notice with Hain 3959 reference. Seriously defective copy. All the woodcut panoramas are defective to some extent, some of them lacking several page-size sections. Lacks title page leaf with blank recto and frontispiece verso, plus other leaves. Title and imprint from first page and colophon statement. Gothic letter. 41-The first illustrated travel book to be printed. Bernhard von Breydenbach, a wealthy canon of the cathedral at Mainz, compiled a travel book of his journey to the Holy Land in 1483-4. He was accompanied by Erhard Reuwich, a painter from Utrecht, who is referred to in the text as the author of the maps of Venice, Parenzo in Illyria, Corfu, Modon near the bay of Navarino, Crete, Rhodes, and Jerusalem. Some are folding, and the map of Venice is 5 feet in length, though not in the UW copy. Despite the vulnerability of woodblocks, the same woodblocks were believed to have been used successively in editions printed in Mainz, Lyons, Speier, and Zaragoza. Source is Pollard, A.W., Early Printed Books, 1893

    Dissertationum philologicarum in epistolam s. Pauli ad Colossenses secunda

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    quam praeside Joh. Henrico Svicero ... placido examini subjicit Joh. Conradus Wildermetius, Biennensis ...Dedikation an Ludwig Perrot, Heinrich Ziegler, Jakob Wildermett, Peter Wildermett und Jean François Beynon auf dem Titelbl. verso. Gedichte von Joh. Jacob Balber, Joh. Peter Bunkhard, D. H., Rud. Hofmeister, Heinrich Zay und Hans Erhard Schmid auf Bl. )(3v-)(4v.Diss. Hohe Schule Zürich, 169

    Peregrinatio in Terram Sanctam. German

    No full text
    Printers and publishers – Marks and colophons (Leaf cliiii)[157] leaves (some folded) : ill. ; 28 cm. (fol.)Letterpress on handmade laid paperWoodcutsRebound in the 20th century in full orange calf. Stuck-on headbands. Title and author tooled with handle letters in gold. All edges trimmed. Marbled endsheets.Fragile: Should be handled as little as possible. Signatures: UW copy has 155 leaves, with neither signatures nor pagination; leaves are numbered by hand: i-v ix-lii lii-cliiii. Ideal copy signature statement from Goff is (fol.): a-b[superscript 8] c[superscript 2]+2+2+2 d-e[superscript 2], f-h[superscript 2]+2, i-s[superscript 8], t[superscript 6], v[superscript 2]+2+2 x-z[superscript 8] A-C[superscript 8]; 180 leaves. First German edition, published the same year as the first edition in Latin, in the same type (believed to have been cast by Peter Schoeffer), and with the same woodcuts as the Latin edition. - quoted from tipped on catalog notice with Hain 3959 reference. Seriously defective copy. All the woodcut panoramas are defective to some extent, some of them lacking several page-size sections. Lacks title page leaf with blank recto and frontispiece verso, plus other leaves. Title and imprint from first page and colophon statement. Gothic letter. 41-The first illustrated travel book to be printed. Bernhard von Breydenbach, a wealthy canon of the cathedral at Mainz, compiled a travel book of his journey to the Holy Land in 1483-4. He was accompanied by Erhard Reuwich, a painter from Utrecht, who is referred to in the text as the author of the maps of Venice, Parenzo in Illyria, Corfu, Modon near the bay of Navarino, Crete, Rhodes, and Jerusalem. Some are folding, and the map of Venice is 5 feet in length, though not in the UW copy. Despite the vulnerability of woodblocks, the same woodblocks were believed to have been used successively in editions printed in Mainz, Lyons, Speier, and Zaragoza. Source: Pollard, A.W., Early Printed Books, 1893

    Peregrinatio in Terram Sanctam. German

    No full text
    Printers and publishers – Marks and colophons (Leaf cliiii)[157] leaves (some folded) : ill. ; 28 cm. (fol.)Letterpress on handmade laid paperWoodcutsRebound in the 20th century in full orange calf. Stuck-on headbands. Title and author tooled with handle letters in gold. All edges trimmed. Marbled endsheets.Fragile: Should be handled as little as possible. Signatures: UW copy has 155 leaves, with neither signatures nor pagination; leaves are numbered by hand: i-v ix-lii lii-cliiii. Ideal copy signature statement from Goff is (fol.): a-b[superscript 8] c[superscript 2]+2+2+2 d-e[superscript 2], f-h[superscript 2]+2, i-s[superscript 8], t[superscript 6], v[superscript 2]+2+2 x-z[superscript 8] A-C[superscript 8]; 180 leaves. First German edition, published the same year as the first edition in Latin, in the same type (believed to have been cast by Peter Schoeffer), and with the same woodcuts as the Latin edition. - quoted from tipped on catalog notice with Hain 3959 reference. Seriously defective copy. All the woodcut panoramas are defective to some extent, some of them lacking several page-size sections. Lacks title page leaf with blank recto and frontispiece verso, plus other leaves. Title and imprint from first page and colophon statement. Gothic letter. 41-The first illustrated travel book to be printed. Bernhard von Breydenbach, a wealthy canon of the cathedral at Mainz, compiled a travel book of his journey to the Holy Land in 1483-4. He was accompanied by Erhard Reuwich, a painter from Utrecht, who is referred to in the text as the author of the maps of Venice, Parenzo in Illyria, Corfu, Modon near the bay of Navarino, Crete, Rhodes, and Jerusalem. Some are folding, and the map of Venice is 5 feet in length, though not in the UW copy. Despite the vulnerability of woodblocks, the same woodblocks were believed to have been used successively in editions printed in Mainz, Lyons, Speier, and Zaragoza. Source: Pollard, A.W., Early Printed Books, 1893
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