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The Assize of Bread. Together with sundry good and needfull ordinances for Bakers, Brewers, Inholders, Victualers, Vintners, and Butchers: And also other Assizes in Weights and Measures, which by the Lawes of this Realme, are commanded to bee observed and kept by all manner of Persons, as well within Liberties as without. Whereunto there are also added, sundrie good and needfull Orders, in making and retayling of all kinds of lawfull Breads, vendible vnto His Maiesties Subiects in the Common-wealth, agreeing with the Statutes, Lawes, and Ancient Orders and Customes of this Realme of England…Newly corrected and enlarged from twelve pence the Quarter of Wheate, unto three pound and sixe pence the Quarter, according to the rising and falling of the price thereof in the market by sixe pence altring in every Quarter of Wheate…

The Assize of Bread. Together with sundry good and needfull ordinances for Bakers, Brewers, Inholders, Victualers, Vintners, and Butchers: And also other Assizes in Weights and Measures, which by the Lawes of this Realme, are commanded to bee observed and kept by all manner of Persons, as well within Liberties as without. Whereunto there are also added, sundrie good and needfull Orders, in making and retayling of all kinds of lawfull Breads, vendible vnto His Maiesties Subiects in the Common-wealth, agreeing with the Statutes, Lawes, and Ancient Orders and Customes of this Realme of England…Newly corrected and enlarged from twelve pence the Quarter of Wheate, unto three pound and sixe pence the Quarter, according to the rising and falling of the price thereof in the market by sixe pence altring in every Quarter of Wheate… by (BREAD)

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$18,500.00
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Seller: Jonathan A. Hill, Bookseller, Inc.
Title
The Assize of Bread. Together with sundry good and needfull ordinances for Bakers, Brewers, Inholders, Victualers, Vintners, and Butchers: And also other Assizes in Weights and Measures, which by the Lawes of this Realme, are commanded to bee observed and kept by all manner of Persons, as well within Liberties as without. Whereunto there are also added, sundrie good and needfull Orders, in making and retayling of all kinds of lawfull Breads, vendible vnto His Maiesties Subiects in the Common-wealth, agreeing with the Statutes, Lawes, and Ancient Orders and Customes of this Realme of England…Newly corrected and enlarged from twelve pence the Quarter of Wheate, unto three pound and sixe pence the Quarter, according to the rising and falling of the price thereof in the market by sixe pence altring in every Quarter of Wheate…
Author
(BREAD)
Seller
Jonathan A. Hill, Bookseller, Inc. (United States)
Description
1626. Numerous woodcuts in the text. 28 unnumbered leaves (incl. the first leaf, a blank). Small 4to, early 20th-cent. calf (final leaf with short tear in blank section, carefully repaired). London: W. Stansby for J. Grismand, 1626. A very rare book that describes the English bread-pricing regulations established in 1266, which remained in force, with modifications, for more than six centuries. As Britain’s early modern economy developed and the price of wheat fluctuated, these regulations were periodically revised and reissued by authority of the Privy Council. ESTC locates only one copy of our edition in North America. “Bread was one of the basic nutritional elements of the medieval diet and its supply and price were of the utmost concern to local authorities. Consequently, well-defined laws were laid down to control the manufacture and sale of bread: to judge the weight, quality, and price, and also to ensure an open and constant supply. The most significant and long-lasting commercial law in medieval England was the assize of bread, which was entered into statute law sometime [1266] in the thirteenth century… “The assize of bread was one of the most widely enforced statutes in medieval England. Its principle was simple: a unit loaf would be sold at a constant price (usually a farthing or halfpenny) while its weight would vary according to changes in the market price of grain. As the price of corn increased, the size of the loaf would decrease and vice versa. This system of variable weight was employed throughout Europe from our earliest Carolingian source in AD 794 until the eighteenth century.”–James Davis, “Baking for the Common Good: A Reassessment of the Assize of Bread in Medieval England” in Economic History Society, Vol. 57, No. 3 (August 2004), pp. 465-66–(& see the rest of this fine article). The theories of the “just price,” formulated by Thomas Aquinas and Albertus Magnus in the 13th century when assize regulation was developing, continued to prevail in following centuries. The origins of the thinking behind the assize of bread, in which a retailer’s profits were strictly controlled according to the level of the market price of grain, were consistent with medieval and early modern ideals of social structure, justice, and morality. This work contains 16 pages of assize tables, giving the different weights of half and wholes loaves made from different qualities of wheat. At the head of each column is a woodcut depicting the stages of baking bread. Fine copy.
Lysistrata

Lysistrata by Aristophanes/Seldes/Picasso

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$8,500.00
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Seller: Bookbid Rare Books
Title
Lysistrata
Author
Aristophanes/Seldes/Picasso
Seller
Bookbid Rare Books (United States)
Condition
fine
Description
The Limited Editions Club, 1934. signed limited. hardcover. fine. SIGNED Limited edition, 1/1500. This being #316. Signed by Picasso. Book fine, stiff cover near fine with two small teats to bottom of spine. In very good slipcase, partial tears to bottom part.
Arrêtés, décisions et circulaires sur le commerce de l'opium et des eaux-de-vie de riz en Cochinchine

Arrêtés, décisions et circulaires sur le commerce de l'opium et des eaux-de-vie de riz en Cochinchine by Dupré, Marie Jules

3 to 6 days for delivery
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$3,500.00
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Seller: James Cummins Bookseller
Title
Arrêtés, décisions et circulaires sur le commerce de l'opium et des eaux-de-vie de riz en Cochinchine
Author
Dupré, Marie Jules
Seller
James Cummins Bookseller (United States)
Condition
Original printed yellow wrappers. Very good condition
Description
Saigon: Imprimerie de Gouvernement, 1878. First Edition. 24pp. 4to. Original printed yellow wrappers. Very good condition. First Edition. 24pp. 4to. The French government of French Cochinchina (present-day southern Vietnam) funded its occupation primarily through three state-controlled monopolies: opium, salt, and alcohol. This publication prints several regulations dating from 13 January 1870 to 8 September 1877. The regulation from 5 October 1871 relates to all alcohol made from rice (including sake), is signed by Commander Adimral Dupré and specifies in nineteen articles the rules by which France will administer its monopoly on alcohol. Details include how much sake a farmer might have for personal consumption as well as how he ought to keep his account books to verify production and consumption. The detail placed on these laws, as well as those regulating opium, show an evolution of the French maintenance of a monopoly on these two goods. The author, Marie Jules Dupré, was the governor of Cochinchina from 1871-1874. He negotiated the treaty with the Emperor of Vietnam that concluded the war that resulted from the invasion by the government of Napoleon III in 1858. By 1862 the area was under the control of the French -- it remained a French colony until 1949. OCLC shows only one copy, at the New York Public Library. This book is not in the usual wine or gastronomic bibliographies.
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Morbid conditions caused by Bacillus aerogenes capsulatus by Welch, William

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$450.00
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Seller: Jeremy Norman & Co., Inc.
Title
Morbid conditions caused by Bacillus aerogenes capsulatus
Author
Welch, William
Seller
Jeremy Norman & Co., Inc. (United States)
Description
1900. Welch, William (1850-1934). Morbid conditions caused by Bacillus aerogenes capsulatus. Offprint from The Philadelphia Med. J. (August 1900). 46pp. 208 x 141 mm. Without wrappers as issued. Some dust-soiling, small marginal stains on first leaf. Stamp of the Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health. Variant Offprint Issue. See G-M 2516, citing the version published in Johns Hopkins Hosp. Bull. 11 (1900). "Welch grouped together the diseases caused by Cl. perfringens, earlier discovered by him in association with Nuttall (see no. 2508)" (G-M). Welch headed the Johns Hopkins Institute for Hygiene and Public Health, the first school of public health in the United States.
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Group of Incoming Letters to Annie Parry Ladd Ward, wife of Attorney Maj. John Langdon Ward of New York City, 1875-1893 by Ward, Annie Parry Langdon

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$350.00
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Seller: Michael Brown Rare Books, LLC
Title
Group of Incoming Letters to Annie Parry Ladd Ward, wife of Attorney Maj. John Langdon Ward of New York City, 1875-1893
Author
Ward, Annie Parry Langdon
Seller
Michael Brown Rare Books, LLC (United States)
Description
67 letters, 318 manuscript pages, (54 retained mailing envelopes), dated February 3, 1875, to October 22, 1893, the bulk of the letters date between 1875 t0 1881, there are also 12 related ephemeral items. Most of the letters are incoming correspondence to Annie Parry Ladd Ward of New York City. The letters were written to her by various family members, female friends, associates, etc. They discuss family affairs, social news and activities, their comings and goings, and other family news, in particular news concerning Sophia Langdon Ward who married a man twice her age and moved to London. Annie Parry Ladd (1842-1925) and Maj. John Langdon Ward (1841-1915) Annie Parry Ladd was born April 3, 1842, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Ladd was daughter of cotton merchant Alexander Hamilton Ladd (1815-1900) and his wife Elizabeth Wyer Jones (1818-1865), both Portsmouth residents. Annie's father was educated at Phillips Exeter Academy and Dartmouth College but left college to enter business. He established a factory in Portsmouth to refine Sperm whale oil. He later became interested in the iron industry in Maine, and afterwards was active in business in Galveston, Texas, where he was a cotton buyer for large New England mills. Annie was one of at least seven children born to her parents, the others were: Mary Tufton Ladd (1841-1912), William Jones Ladd (1844-1923), Elizabeth Hamilton Ladd (1845-1924), Maria Haven Ladd (1848-1941), Alexander Alex Ladd (1853-1873), Charles Albert Ladd (1857-1863). Annie Parry Ladd married John Langdon Ward on October 25, 1871, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. J. Langdon Ward was born October 25, 1841, in Buffalo, New York. He was the son of William Raymond Lee Ward (1812-1897) of Salem, Massachusetts and his wife Sophia Ann Langdon (1818-1855) of Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Ward spent the greater part of his youth in Salem. Ward entered Harvard University in the Class of 1862. However, after the attack on Fort Sumter and the outbreak of the Civil War, Ward was among the first to leave campus departing five days after the attack on Sumter. With a Salem militia group, he had belonged to before the war, he enlisted as a private for a three-month tour of duty in Company I, Massachusetts 8th Infantry Regiment on April 30, 1861, mustering out August 1, 1861, in Boston, where he rejoined his college class and graduated from Harvard in 1862. He then recruited a company of men and enlisted in Company B, Massachusetts 50th Infantry Regiment on September 15, 1862, and was commissioned Captain of the 50th Massachusetts Infantry that day. Ordered with the regiment to Louisiana, he served with the 19th Corps through the siege of Port Hudson. Ward was commissioned Major of the 3rd Infantry Corps d'Afrique, the third regiment of black troops in the United States, changed to the 75th United States Colored Infantry July 24, 1863. He was detailed to the staff of the Corps under General George L. Andrews as Commissary of Musters. When the Corps organization was broken up Ward resigned his commission July 21, 1864. After the war he went to New York City and practiced law with North, Ward & Wagstaff. After North's retirement and after Wagstaff became the Clerk of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, he formed the firm of Ward, Wilson & Hayden at 1t 16 Exchange Place, New York City ad was with the firm until his death. Ward was active in Republican politics and was nominated in 1891 for Judge of the Common Pleas Court. He was a member of the Bar Association and the Secretary of the Union League in its early days. He was also a member of the University Club and an officer of the Loyal Legion. The 1880 Census shows Annie Parry Ward and her husband John and their children residing at 15 Washington Place, New York. They had several live-in servants. When the 1900 Census was taken the family were living at 125 West 74th Street, New York. They also had a summer home in Old Orchard, Maine. Annie and her husband had five children: a boy (1872-1872), Alexander Ladd Ward (1874-1948), Miles Ward (1878-1881), a boy, (1880-1880), and Ethel Ward (1880-1977). J. Langdon Ward died July 18, 1915, and was buried in Proprietors Burying Ground, Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Annie outlived her husband and lived with her daughter Ethel after the death of her husband. Annie Ward died October 12, 1925, and was buried with her husband. Sample Quotes: "32 North St. Paul Street, Rochester, Feb 24 79 My dear Anna, I thank you for the letter that I received from you some days since, A severe cold making me quite ill & afflicting me with an owlish stupidity is why I have not before acknowledged it. I cant tell you how very sorry I feel for Sophia; when she wrote me of her engagement to Mr. Jackson, she mentioned the disparity of years, and his baldness, which she greatly regretted; and, his divorce, of which I knew the circumstances, I should approve, yet as she said 'all that makes no difference, my love for him is so very great, and I shall always think of Mt. Desert as a paradise as it was there I met him,' poor child, she was completely enveloped in the glamor of love. In other letters she spoke of him so affectionately, wished that I knew him, I would like him so much. She only in one letter hinted that it was not quite approved, and then she said she received sweet messages from his family, but they had not written her as yet as her family had not acknowledged the engagement. I suppose it was on account of the difference in years, which I did not think of vital consequence if she was content to be an old man's darling. A letter from Vineland was the first intimation I had, that it was so disagreeable to her brothers & then no reason was given why it should be. Well dear Anna, as the event is accomplished it seems to be wisdom to make the best of it for Sophia's sake; but it is an awful pity. I presume he has a great deal of personal magnetism & Sophia was incapable of resisting his influence, perhaps he will make every effort to make happy, if he has an ugly disposition or temper, she will have to use a great of tact & self-control to be half way comfortable with him. It is a satisfaction that he is a gentleman by both birth & well connected. This is a topsy turvy kind of world & the wisest get unbalanced sometimes… How does Hannah feel about Sophia's marriage? I suppose it was a great blow to her … Lots of love … affectionately, yr attached Aunt Charlotte L. Ames" "Boston March 12/79 My dear Annie, After leaving you I thought (I had after thoughts) how foolish I had been to tell you of the sad disturbing features connected with Charles' sickness. They ought to have been kept – even if from Mary's own sisters & brother and those of us who did know of them ought to have held our tongues and I beg of you not to mention it to Langdon or ever to refer to it to any of the family. The sooner we drop all such things the better. I shall send you a letter in a few day, suggesting to Father & Mary a way out of the apparent impossibility of her living here, based on the idea of which we talked, and if it meets with your and Maria & Lizzie's approval, I shall send it, otherwise not. I was very pleasant to catch a glimpse of you again. The night in the cars quite cured my bilious attack. Yours aff'y, Will" "London, April 6th, 1879 Dear Annie, I meant to send you a letter by yesterday's steamer, but was so busy all day that I could not, so take this opportunity Sunday morning, when we breakfasted too late to attend divine worship. Last evening, we dined at the Playfaires & had a delightful time. There were twelve in all, & certainly Mr. Lyon Playfaire deserves the reputation he has won of being a most charming man. He showed me one thing which would have interested you. A coin, composed of nine hundred times its own bulk of hydrogen, & which if held in in the hand would evaporate, so no one can touch it, there is but one other in the world. Also, my eyes were gladdened by two or three superb pieces of jewelry given by some royal personage, Lady Owen had a gorgeous bracelet, presented by the Prince of Wales with the name in raised letters on the back. We meant to go to the Oxford-Camb race yesterday, but Norman has had such a horrid cold, that I thought it would not be prudent for him, so we staid at home. Friday night, Mr. Washington Jackson, Harriet, Norman & I went to see 'Pinafori' which, tho in some respects better in the whole in our judgment, did not equal the American play. It seemed so funny to be ushered to our box by a woman with dainty white caps, who in the entr'actes came continually to ask if we would have any refreshments. I never saw such a perfect man trap as that theater was, the entrance is in the Strand, & after descending a number of steps you go by a subterranean passage, not wider than your hallway, under houses, under another street, & then ascend to the theater, the reason being that they wish to be on the Strand. Had there been fire, there would have been no hope, as it was Mr. N. J. was a little fidgety. Wednesday Mrs. Frank Blake gave us a dinner of seventeen, a very handsome one, all Americans were there, & by Wednesday Mrs. Frank Blake gave us a dinner of seventeen, a very handsome one, all Americans were there, & by the way, tell Anais that I met there Mr. Carl Joy, & had quite a talk with him, tho I was not introduced to his wife … Do you realize that it is three months today since I was married & I have not repented it yet. Does it seem so long, or longer to you? Can't you write me oftener in the six weeks I have been in England, I have had but two letters from you & I have written either you or Hannah every week… Ever aff'ly yours, S. L. J."
[Promotional Circular for Kevin by Wallace Hamilton]

[Promotional Circular for Kevin by Wallace Hamilton]

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $8.00
Details
$100.00
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Seller: Langdon Manor Books LLC
Title
[Promotional Circular for Kevin by Wallace Hamilton]
Seller
Langdon Manor Books LLC (United States)
Condition
Very good +
Description
New York, New York: St. Martin's Press, 1980. Very good +. 8½" x 14". Two leaves printed recto only. Very good plus: folded for mailing, light overall wear. This is a pre-publication circular for Kevin by Wallace Hamilton, published by St. Martin's Press. It displays the cover image of an attractive, innocent young man looking wistfully in the distance. The publisher offers three blurbs, which included one from NAMBLA. Not found in OCLC. This item is offered by Langdon Manor Books, LLC, antiquarian booksellers. We package our items carefully, ship daily, and have a no hassle returns policy--your satisfaction is guaranteed. We are members of the Antiquarian Booksellers' Association of America (ABAA), the International League of Antiquarian Booksllers (ILAB) and the Independent Online Booksellers Association (IOBA) and adhere to their rules of ethics.
The Happy Home Quadrille by C.H.R. Marriott ... Pr 4/-

The Happy Home Quadrille by C.H.R. Marriott ... Pr 4/- by [DANCE - Social]

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $12.50
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$69.00
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Seller: J & J Lubrano Music Antiquarians LLC
Title
The Happy Home Quadrille by C.H.R. Marriott ... Pr 4/-
Creator
[DANCE - Social]
Seller
J & J Lubrano Music Antiquarians LLC (United States)
Description
London: Ashdown & Parry, 1860. Folio, 348 x 247 mm. Coloured lithograph by Concanen depicting fashionably dressed children dancing within an arched border framed by holly leaves and berries at lower corners; a group at right background admires a Christmas tree. Slightly worn, browned, and stained; slightly trimmed, affecting one word of titling at upper margin; left margin of verso reinforced with light tape. Small circular embossed publisher's stamp to upper left corner. Cover only.
A Brown Owl.

A Brown Owl. by Tomlinson, H.M.

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $6.00
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$35.00
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Seller: Ten Pound Island Book Co.
Title
A Brown Owl.
Author
Tomlinson, H.M.
Seller
Ten Pound Island Book Co. (United States)
Condition
1 st edition, One of 100,. Signed by author. VG with decorated boards.
Description
Garden City: Henry & Longwell, 1928. 1 st edition, One of 100,. Signed by author. VG with decorated boards. . 14.5 cm. 19 pp.,
No image available

Grounded Angels. by AKMAKJIAN, Alan P.

5 to 14 days for delivery
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$20.00
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Seller: Jeff Maser, Bookseller-ABAA
Title
Grounded Angels.
Author
AKMAKJIAN, Alan P.
Seller
Jeff Maser, Bookseller-ABAA (United States)
Description
Conever: Third Lung Press, (1993).. First edition.. 44 pp. Fine in stapled wrappers. Poems with artwork by Eugene R. Gryniewicz. Brief note from Akmakjian laid in, presenting this copy for review.
J.D. Salinger and the Nazis
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

J.D. Salinger and the Nazis by ALSEN, Eberhard

6 to 14 days for delivery
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$18.75
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Seller: Argosy Book Store
Title
J.D. Salinger and the Nazis
Author
ALSEN, Eberhard
Seller
Argosy Book Store (United States)
ISBN
9780299315702
Condition
fine
Description
Madison: University of Wisconsin, 2018. hardcover. fine/fine. Illustrated. x + 154 pages, thin 8vo, brown cloth, d.w. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, (2018). A fine copy in a fine dust wrapper.