Type d'article
Etat
Reliure
Particularités
Livraison gratuite
Pays
Evaluation du vendeur
Edité par L'ETUDIANT, 2005
ISBN 10 : 2846245045ISBN 13 : 9782846245043
Vendeur : medimops, Berlin, Allemagne
Livre
Befriedigend/Good: Durchschnittlich erhaltenes Buch bzw. Schutzumschlag mit Gebrauchsspuren, aber vollständigen Seiten. / Describes the average WORN book or dust jacket that has all the pages present.
Plus de choix d'achat de la part d'autres vendeurs sur AbeBooks
Offres d'occasion à partir de EUR 3,28
Edité par L'Etudiant Pratique
ISBN 10 : 2867457947ISBN 13 : 9782867457944
Vendeur : Librairie Parrêsia, Figeac, France
Livre
Etat : Used: Good. L'Etudiant, 1999. In-8° broché, 167 p. Couverture propre. Dos solide. Intérieur frais sans soulignage ou annotation. Exemplaire de bibliothèque : petit code barre en pied de 1re de couv., cotation au dos, rares et discrets petits tampons à l'intérieur de l'ouvrage. Très bon état général pour cet ouvrage [BB7].
Plus de choix d'achat de la part d'autres vendeurs sur AbeBooks
Edité par L'Harmattan, France, 1994
ISBN 10 : 2738428398ISBN 13 : 9782738428394
Vendeur : Librairie Françoise Causse, COURTENAY, France
Livre
Couverture souple. Etat : Bon. 13,5 x 21,5 cm broché, 222 pages. Dos légèrement biaisé avec pli de lecture. Plats de couverture légèrement marqués aux angles. Très bonne tenue du brochage. Intérieur très bon état. RÉSUMÉ Les îles du Sud-Ouest de l'océan Indien (Comores, Mayotte, Madagascar, La Réunion, Maurice) ne sont pas uniquement des lieux de rêve et de fascination. Pour l'historien de la colonisation, elles ont été longtemps au XIXème siècle des points d'appui pourvoyeurs d'espace et des objets de rivalité entre Européens, avant d'être rassemblées ? pour les terres françaises ? autour de Madagascar dans la première moitié du vingtième siècle. Après la Seconde Guerre mondiale, la décolonisation constitue pour la France une forme de décontinentalisation, et la départementalisation de La Réunion peut être interprétée comme une revanche de l'insularité bourbonnaise sur la continentalité malgache. Aujourd'hui, des enjeux géopolitiques et économiques nouveaux apparaissent dans la région, ravivant les anciennes fractures, en créant de nouvelles, assurant un étonnant revif de l'ancienne stratégie des points d'appui. Biographie Edmond Maestri, après de longues années de coopération en Afrique noire, est actuellement professeur d'histoire contemporaine à l'Université de La Réunion où il occupe depuis 1990 les fonctions de doyen de la Faculté des Lettres et des Sciences humaines. Il est l'auteur de nombreux articles sur la colonisation française, sur le Sud-Ouest de l'océan Indien et sur La Réunion en particulier. Il est spécialiste d'histoire coloniale notamment ferroviaire, puisque sa thèse sur la zone intertropicale française est intitulée : Mythes et réalités ferroviaires de l'Afrique Intertropicale française des années 1880 aux années 1930.
Plus de choix d'achat de la part d'autres vendeurs sur AbeBooks
Offres neuf à partir de EUR 22,50
Offres d'occasion à partir de EUR 14
Trouvez également Couverture souple
Edité par L'etudiant, 2007
ISBN 10 : 2846247692ISBN 13 : 9782846247696
Vendeur : RECYCLIVRE, Paris, France
Livre
Etat : Bon. Attention: Ancien support de bibliothèque, plastifié, étiquettes. Merci, votre achat aide à financer des programmes de lutte contre l'illettrisme.
Plus de choix d'achat de la part d'autres vendeurs sur AbeBooks
Offres d'occasion à partir de EUR 9,93
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 10 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations to rear cover by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 10 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations to front and rear covers by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 8 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: large grease spot to upper edge area of front cover; covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to rear cover by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 9 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: pencil annotations in Italian to front and rear covers by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 10 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to rear cover by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 9 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to front and rear covers by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 10 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to rear cover by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 9 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to rear cover by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 11 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to rear cover by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 13 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to rear cover by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 9 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to rear cover by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 11 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to front cover by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 10 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to front cover by former owner. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 9 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 9 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 9 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 8 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; some light spotting to upper left edge area of front cover; pencil annotations in Italian to rear cover. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 10 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to rear cover. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 9 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to rear cover. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par The Crusaders Order of the World, Inc., 1932
Vendeur : Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. An upper-stapled publication in Italian measuring 8-3/4" by 10-3/4" and containing 10 pages including front and rear covers, with the inside pages printed in black ink from a hand-cranked mimeograph machine. The front cover contains a photograph of the headquarters, that at 1857 Anthony Avenue in New York City (as printed: "Palazzo di Amministrazione, 1857 Anthony Avenue, Corner Mt. Hope Place, Between 176th & 177th Streets, New York, N.Y.") and headlined "The Crusaders Academy of Science, Incorporated, Accademia dei Cavalieri della Grace, Constituita por la promozione e suiluppo delle facolta mentali e spirituali, Diretta dai Maestri dell'Ordine dei Cavalieri della Croce (The Crusaders Order of the WOrld, Inc.)." No date, although circa 1932, based on one issue listed on this site that ascertains the "future date" (day of the year) of "1932 Christmas" from an astrological table. Condition: covers lightly age-toned and fragile; pencil annotations in Italian to rear cover. History (from the very scant information I was able to find on the internet): the 16-room mansion located at 1857 Anthony Avenue in the Mount Hope section of the Bronx, New York, and now claimed to be haunted, was known as the Shuttleworth Mansion, built in 1896 by Edwin Shuttleworth. Still standing, and certified as a City landmark, Gaetano Russo and his wife, Elvira, purchased the mansion in 1928. Their son-in-law, William Evers, who married the Russo's daughter, Gilda, purchased the house circa 1937 (one website indicates that he owned the property for 70 years and, at the age of 91, sold the mansion in 2007 for $675,000). When William Evers and his wife, Gilda, married, they lived five blocks away and it wasn't until 1962 that he moved into the house. The mansion served as headquarters for the Masonic Society's The Crusaders Order of the World. The Director General, Gaetano Russo - possibly a chiropractor and possibly part owner of a funeral home in Brooklyn - brought lamps and other fixtures from the Harlem Masonic Club to outfit the mansion in the 1930s. Edmond Grace Lyonheart served as Grand Master of the organization. The lessons issued from the Order were printed in either English or Italian. The individual issues, each listed separately, are exceptionally rare and possibly unique at this point in history.
Edité par L harmattan université de la réunion, 2002
Vendeur : Librairie Lire et Chiner, Colmar, ALSAC, France
Etat : CN. Paris, broché, couverture illustr; in-8, 451 pp.
Edité par L'HARMATTAN, 2004
ISBN 10 : 274755676XISBN 13 : 9782747556767
Vendeur : Gallix, Gif sur Yvette, France
Livre
Etat : Neuf.
Plus de choix d'achat de la part d'autres vendeurs sur AbeBooks
Offres neuf à partir de EUR 35
Edité par Editions L'Harmattan, 2002
ISBN 10 : 2747530175ISBN 13 : 9782747530170
Vendeur : Gallix, Gif sur Yvette, France
Livre
Etat : Neuf.
Plus de choix d'achat de la part d'autres vendeurs sur AbeBooks
Offres neuf à partir de EUR 41
Edité par L'HARMATTAN, 1999
ISBN 10 : 2738484387ISBN 13 : 9782738484383
Vendeur : Gallix, Gif sur Yvette, France
Livre
Etat : Neuf.
Plus de choix d'achat de la part d'autres vendeurs sur AbeBooks
Offres neuf à partir de EUR 55