Edité par London Thomas Hatchard, 1852
Vendeur : Shapero Rare Books, London, Royaume-Uni
Edition originale
EUR 1 154,84
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierFirst edition. 8vo, vii, 78 pp., 4 lithographs (2 folding), original brown cloth gilt by J. Dean, 28 Villiers Street, Strand, with his ticket, original cloth gilt, lightly faded, a very good copy. Rev. Baker gives an account of the opening of the second Anglo-Burmese War, when Rangoon was occupied by the British shortly after they had seized the port of Martaban in April 1852.
Edité par 1852, 1852
Vendeur : Charlotte Du Rietz Rare Books (ILAB), Stockholm, Suède
Edition originale Signé
EUR 1 320
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierPp. (viii), 78. With one coloured frontispiece, one plate of a Burmese ship and two folding plates depicting a costal view of Rangoon and the attack on the Dunnoo Stockade. Unopened copy in original cloth, rebacked with most of the original spine preserved, rubbed. First edition of an eye-witness account of the Second Anglo-Burmese War (April 1852 - January 1853), posthumously published. No treaty was signed but trade resumed between British Burma and the Kingdom of Ava until there was an outbreak of new violence in 1885. Reverend Thomas Baker was Chaplain of Her Majesty's ship Fox. Abbey Travel 407. Cordier BI 455.
Edité par Thomas Hatchard, London, 1852
Vendeur : Rulon-Miller Books (ABAA / ILAB), St. Paul, MN, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
EUR 1 388,03
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierFirst edition, slim 8vo, pp. vii, [1], 78; lithograph frontispiece, 3 lithograph plates (2 folding); original brown cloth, gilt-lettered spine; the binding a bit spotted and worn, but in all a good, sound copy, or better. A reliable eye-witness account of the first three months of the second Anglo-Burmese War by the late chaplin and naval instructor of the H.M.S. Fox who succumbed to cholera. Wikipedia notes: "In 1852, Commodore George Lambert was dispatched to Burma by Lord Dalhousie over a number of minor issues related to the Treaty of Yandabo between the countries. The Burmese immediately made concessions including the removal of a governor whom the Company made their casus belli. Lambert, described by Dalhousie in a private letter as the "combustible commodore," eventually provoked a naval confrontation in extremely questionable circumstances by blockading the port of Rangoon and seizing the King Pagan's royal ship and thus started the Second Anglo-Burmese War which ended in the Company annexing the province of Pegu and renaming it Lower Burma . The first substantial blow . was struck by the Company on 5 April 1852, when the port of Martaban was taken. Rangoon was occupied on the 12th and the Shwedagon Pagoda on the 14th, after heavy fighting, when the Burmese army retired northwards. Bassein was seized on 19 May, and Pegu was taken on 3 June.".