Type d'article
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Evaluation du vendeur
Edité par Downing, Ruth, U.k., 1982
Vendeur : PsychoBabel & Skoob Books, Didcot, Oxfordshire, OXON, Royaume-Uni
Hardcover. Etat : Good. Hardcover (no dust jacket). Slight bumping on spine ends. Light marks on page block and one or two pages. Contents are clear. AF. Used.
Edité par Ruth Downing and John McLachlan, Sheffield, 1982
Vendeur : Alexander's Books, Royal Leamington Spa, Royaume-Uni
Livre Edition originale
Hardcover. Etat : Fine. No Jacket. 1st Edition. First edition, first printing. Hardback, cloth, gilt. 48 pp. Frontispiece. Fine condition.
Edité par J. W. Northend, West Street, Sheffield, 1940
Vendeur : Rosley Books est. 2000, WIGTON, Royaume-Uni
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. Plate (illustrateur). First Edition. FIRST EDITION. SHEFFIELD : 1940. 'Reprinted from the Transactions of the Unitarian Historical Society, 1937-1938'. Light brown printed card covers; stapled. A bright, tight and clean copy. No owner name or ink internal markings. A few neat light pencil marks and note. VERY GOOD. 36pp. 8vo. **Reduced shipping on this item. Will be well-packed for posting/shipping**. [ Rosley Books for Antiquarian books, CHS, Cumberland, Everyman, GKC, Inklings, Keswick, Literature, MacDonald, Rarities, Theology and History. ].
Edité par Woodbury, New York, U.S.A.: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Pr, 1988
ISBN 10 : 087969226XISBN 13 : 9780879692261
Vendeur : Bingo Used Books, Vancouver, WA, Etats-Unis
Livre
Hardcover. Etat : Near Fine. Hardback in near fine condition.
Edité par Oxford University Press, 1951
Vendeur : Anybook.com, Lincoln, Royaume-Uni
Etat : Good. This is an ex-library book and may have the usual library/used-book markings inside.This book has hardback covers. In good all round condition. No dust jacket. Please note the Image in this listing is a stock photo and may not match the covers of the actual item,650grams, ISBN:
Edité par Oxford University Press
Vendeur : Antiquariaat Looijestijn, Rotterdam, Pays-Bas
1951. viii, 352 pp.Original dark blue cloth with gilt lettering. Rare and fine copy. Pictures on request.
Edité par Clarendon, 1951
Vendeur : Arches Bookhouse, Portland, OR, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
Hardcover with Dust Jacket. Etat : VERY GOOD. Etat de la jaquette : Very Good. First Edition. 8vo, Navy cloth, gilt spine lettering. Ex-parish stamp to FPEP, some trivial rubbing around the edges, very clean and sharp otherwise with tight binding; DJ tips rubbed with a bit of loss, price clipped, wrapped in archival mylar. 'That minor stream in the religious life of England which is to-day known as Unitarianism, but in its formative period was called Socinianism, did not achieve a coherent organised form, with acknowledged leaders and a common purpose, until early in the nineteenth century. But the springs from which it arose, and the scattered streams which they fed before they united in a single movement, lay hidden far back in the early seventeenth century. Its pioneers were more or less isolated individuals who, most often from their personal study of the Bible, arrived independently at doctrinal views at variance with the accepted creeds, but for fear of persecution or prosecution usually shared them confidentially only with trusted friends or else kept them to themselves. Least of all were they inclined to put their convictions into print which might easily fall into unfriendly hands. Hence it becomes an arduous task to find clear traces of their work or their writings. Only brief traces of these early heretics have survived as rare and obscure sources, which even in their own time had but a limited private circulation, and are now widely scattered and have long lain neglected in hidden corners. These sources have hitherto been studied only piecemeal, and the work here under review is, we think, the first attempt to survey the whole field and gather all these scattered materials together as contributory parts of the background of an organized Socinian movement. H. John McLachlan has evidently made an exhaustive search for all discoverable sources, finding them largely in the Bodleian and in various college libraries at Oxford and in the British Museum, and has used them with the scrupulous care of a trained scholar. It is doubtful whether later scholars will be able to find any considerable material that has escaped his attention.' - Earl Morse Wilbur.