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Verlag: WENTWORTH PR, 2016
ISBN 10: 1373009535ISBN 13: 9781373009531
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Kartoniert / Broschiert. Zustand: New.
Verlag: Berlin. Verlag von Julius Springer. 1866., 1866
Anbieter: Antiquariat & Verlag Jenior, Kassel, HE, Deutschland
252 S. Kartoniert. Sauberes Exemplar ohne Stempel und Anstreichungen. Zahlreiche Abbildungen und Tafeln. Seiten etwas stockfleckig. Untere rechte Ecke des Einbandes etwas geknickt. Buchrücken und Ecken und Kanten etwas berieben und bestoßen. Schnitt leicht nachgedunkelt. Sonst gut erhalten. Sprache: deu.
Verlag: Berlin, Verlag Julius Springer, 1866
Anbieter: Antiquariat Andreas Moser, Inh. W.Klügel, Wien, Österreich
Buch Erstausgabe
3 nn. Bll., 252 SS. Mit 24 Federlithographien nach Originalzeichnungen und Photographien des Verfassers. Gln.bd. d. Zt. Erstausgabe. - Hauptsächlich ethnologische und geologische Darstellungen seiner Reise in Südostasien, die er laut Vorwort in den Jahren 1857-1861 durchführte. - Einband berieben, beschabt und abgegriffen, das hintere Außengelenk angeplatzt, etwas schiefgelesen. Durchgehend gebräunt, tw. braunfleckig. Die Tafel nach Seite 210 mit einer alten hs. Korrektur mit Bleistift, diese kann man später mit einem Radiergummi entfernen. Der hübsche originale Vorderumschlag wurde mitgebunden!.
Verlag: Forgotten Books, 2017
ISBN 10: 0266300839ISBN 13: 9780266300830
Anbieter: Buchpark, Trebbin, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: Sehr gut. Zustand: Sehr gut - Gepflegter, sauberer Zustand. | Seiten: 316.
Verlag: Alpha Editions, 2022
ISBN 10: 9356704082ISBN 13: 9789356704084
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Kartoniert / Broschiert. Zustand: New. KlappentextDieses Buch Singapore, Malacca, Java Reiseskizzen von F. Jagor. wurde in der gesamten Menschheitsgeschichte als wichtig angesehen, und damit dieses Werk niemals vergessen wird, haben wir uns bemueht, es zu bewahren, indem.
Anbieter: Antiquariat Kainbacher, Baden bei Wien, Österreich
Berlin, Julius Springer 1866. 4to. (24 x 17 cm). Mit 2 nn. Blättern ( Vorwort - Inhaltsverzeichnis ), 252 Seiten. Mit 24 schwarz-weißen Zeichnungen auf Tafeln. Neuerer roter Lederband mit montiertem Wappenemblem des Raffles-Hotels in Singapur. Gelenk innen angebrochen, leicht gebräunt. Gutes Exemplar. Sehr selten! ? Jagor bereiste nicht nur die Philippinen, sondern auch Singapur, Malacca und Java. Dieser Umfangreiche Reisebericht konzentriert sich v.a. auf die geographischen und ethnologischen Erkenntnise von Jagor.
Verlag: Printed by the Mission Press of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, [maps printed in Calcutta by Jean-Baptiste Tassin at the Oriental Lithographic Press], Singapore, 1837
Anbieter: Hordern House Rare Books, Surry Hills, NSW, Australien
Erstausgabe
Quarto, with a large folding handcoloured frontispiece map and five folding maps (all but one handcoloured), in original binding of marbled boards with a backstrip of fine linen, remains of printed paper label. First edition: a great Singapore rarity, one of the first books to be published there, and including the earliest detailed map of Singapore Town and its surroundings, "The Town and environs of Singapore", based on a survey by G.D. Coleman. Published just after the island had become the capital of the Straits Settlements, it marks the beginning of the colony's enormous growth as a regional trading hub and the centre of the rubber industry. John Henry Moor moved to Singapore from Malacca in 1830 and became editor of the Singapore Chronicle, Singapore's first newspaper, in 1831. The book is mainly composed of his articles written for the Chronicle between 1824 and 1834. "Notices has claimed its place in history as a valuable record of Singapore's early years and is one of the first books published on the island. It curates studies on the Indian archipelago - present-day Indonesia, East Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines, East Timor and Singapore - that were republished from newspapers or journals, including many from Singapore Chronicle, Singapore's first English newspaper. of which no known copies from 1824 to 1826 remain; his publishing project therefore preserved some precious articles that would otherwise have been lost forever. "One such article is an account of John Crawfurd's formal possession of Singapore and its adjacent islands in 1825. Crawfurd, who was appointed Resident of Singapore in 1823, set off in August 1825 on a 10-day journey around Singapore on his ship the Malabar and landed at Pulau Ubin. There, the British flag was hoisted and the 21-gun salute fired as part of the ceremonial proceedings. The account also includes Crawfurd's notes on Singapore's outlying islands and Bukit Timah Hill; these are all documented in "Journal of a Voyage Round the Island of Singapore", one of six articles in the volume of direct relevance to Singapore" (National Library, Singapore, online article "The Book that almost didn't happen"). Moor, who later moved to the Singapore Free Press, was the first headmaster of the Raffles Institution from 1834, and established the first free library in Singapore, which subsequently became Singapore's National Library. The technology to print the maps was not available in Singapore at the time and Moor arranged for them to be printed at the Oriental Lithographic Press in Calcutta, set up by the French émigré Jean-Baptiste Tassin to print government maps, which helped to cause a near two-year delay in the publication. This and other problems with the production led to the abandonment of an originally planned second volume. . Provenance: Ink inscription on title-page presenting the book to an indecipherable name "A Present from Dr Martin 13 Aug 1845". This may feasibly have been M.J. Martin, the doctor who owned the Singapore Dispensary, an advertiser in the Singapore Chronicle from 1832. Occasional spotting due to paper type, neatly repaired tears to frontispiece map and another two folding maps; oxidisation to some colour outlining on all maps; joints of the binding neatly repaired; generally extremely good.
Erscheinungsdatum: 1700
Anbieter: Hammelburger Antiquariat, Hammelburg, Deutschland
Karte
Kein Einband. Zustand: Gut. Le Royaume de Siam avec les royaumes qui luy sont tributaires. Et les isles Sumatra Andemaon.: Mortier, Pierre (1661-1711), from Atlas Maritimus, fist edition, anno 1700, contemporary colours, printed on thick paper. Very good condition. Engraved map (82.6 x 58.2 cm) on two joined sheets with contemporary partial handcoloring and coloring in outline. The map extends from Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, and the Malay Peninsula and the Gulf of Bengal in the north, to Java and Sumatra in the south, centered on Malacca and Borneo. There is a note about a discovery attributed to the Portuguese captain Pedro Bertollo ("Pierre Bertollo") near Singapore, referred to as the "Canal de Consicao de N(uestra) S(enhora)," in 1633-the same year that the Dutch East India Company blockaded the Straits of Singapore and Malacca. The route was a new passage south of Bintan and Galang and west of the Karimun Islands and extended through the Riau Archipelago. The map also shows numerous depth soundings and shows the trade routes between Batavia (Jakarta, Java) and Siam and details the shoals and reefs off the coast of modern- day Vietnam. REFERENCE: Koeman IV: Mor 7 (26).