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Reglamento Que Debe Observarse en los Partidos de Campo, Acerca de la Milicia Nacional Local [caption title]

Reglamento Que Debe Observarse en los Partidos de Campo, Acerca de la Milicia Nacional Local [caption title] by [Cuba]

2 to 4 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $10.00
Details
$2,250.00
( US$)
Seller: McBride Rare Books
Title
Reglamento Que Debe Observarse en los Partidos de Campo, Acerca de la Milicia Nacional Local [caption title]
Author
[Cuba]
Seller
McBride Rare Books (United States)
Condition
Good.
Description
Havana: January 5, 1822. Good.. Broadside, 11.5 x 8 inches. Foxed, faint signs of folding, a few small wormholes, not affecting text. An apparently unrecorded broadside order from the captain general of Cuba, Nicolas Mahy, directing all able-bodied men under the age of fifty to join up with their local militias in order to keep the peace. The local militias are directed to go out on nightly forays "en nùmero capaz de evitar las incursiones de los salteadores por los caminos, y la desercion que pueda acontecer de los negros de los ingenios cafetales y demas haciendas." Additionally, all men between the ages of fifty and seventy are told to report to “las casas mas fuertes de los pueblos" to form a garrison that can protect women, children and the elderly in case of insurrection. By the formation of these militias and the establishment of "el uso de los pasaportes," it was hoped to identify and arrest "los vagos y mal entretenidos." All mayors, within ten days of receipt of this regulation were to report the number of men they had enlisted along with their particulars. In the early 1820s much of Spanish colonial America was gripped by revolution, and with these orders the Cuban government likely hoped to avoid similar unrest on the island. Several independence groups had been formed in Cuba as of the promulgation of this decree, the largest of which was the Soles y Rayos de Bolívar, established in 1821. Signed in print by Mahy; not in OCLC.
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Two 17th-century manuscript inventories describing the considerable estate of the deceased Damoiselle Agnès de Het, wife of Jacques Lecouvreur, seigneur of Renancourt. Ink on paper, the first dated 11 January 1649, the second 23 November 1649, both in fine secretarial hands by (DE HET, Agnès)

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $20.00
Details
$1,750.00
( US$)
Seller: Jonathan A. Hill, Bookseller, Inc.
Title
Two 17th-century manuscript inventories describing the considerable estate of the deceased Damoiselle Agnès de Het, wife of Jacques Lecouvreur, seigneur of Renancourt. Ink on paper, the first dated 11 January 1649, the second 23 November 1649, both in fine secretarial hands
Author
(DE HET, Agnès)
Seller
Jonathan A. Hill, Bookseller, Inc. (United States)
Description
54; 7 leaves (final blank). Folio (both ca. 300 x 210 mm.), orig. stitching. [Amiens]: 1649. A rare survival on the market, two mid-17th-century inventories describing the estate of Agnès de Het, wife of a feudal lord, who was councillor to the king. They lived on the outskirts of Amiens. We have found a record of de Het’s husband, Lecouvreur, agreeing to rent land in 1688, but we are not able to find any record of de Het’s life. These two manuscripts provide an exhaustive listing of a 17th-century noble family’s numerous possessions. The first document (54 leaves), signed on the final leaf by Lecouvreur, is a complete inventory of this family’s belongings. It lists not only household items, but also a variety of luxury items, such as a golden coffeepot, a necklace holding fourteen diamonds, a golden ring encrusted with a diamond, two pearl necklaces, a silver clock, etc. Also recorded are tables, tablecloths, napkins, a mirror, clothing, carpets, several chests, other furniture, etc. The second manuscript (7 leaves) records the final record of de Het’s belongings. Unidentified signatory on the final leaf. Early inventories from the 17th century are quite scarce on the market, and the present manuscripts are exceptionally informative on the life and possessions of a wealthy woman of the period. In very good condition; minor dampstaining to a number of leaves.