John Price Antiquarian Books: Calendar
found: 3 books

 
COLSON (Nathaniel):
The Mariner's New Calendar. Containing The Principles of Arithmetic and Practical Geometry; with the Extraction of the Square and Cube Roots: Also Rules for finding the Prime, Epact, Moon's Age, Time of High-Water, with Tables for the same. Together with Exact Tables of the Sun's place, Declination, and Right-Scension.... Also The Use of the Sea-Quadrant...With Directions for sailing into some Principal Habours. The whole revis'd, and adjusted to the New Stil, By William Mountaine, F. R. S.
London: Printed for W. and J. Mount, T. Page and Son..., 1756. Small 4to, 190 x 150 mms., pp. [3] 4 - 136, with separate title-page for Table of Difference, 2 blank leaves at beginning of text, contemporary limp calf; with annotations and scribbles on the blank leaves, annotations in many places, apparently made by an able seaman to accord with the ship that he was crewing, rather worn and affected by sea-water, but a very good example of a technical manual that was clearly used. The first edition of this work appears to have been published in 1676, and there were at least another 38 editions published in the 18th century.
John Price Antiquarian BooksProfessional seller
Book number: 9038
GBP 495.00 [Appr.: EURO 581.25 US$ 633.68 | JP¥ 98906]
Catalogue: Calendar
Keywords: calendar mathematics prose

 
HOLDER (William):
A Discourse Concerning Time, With Application of The Natural Day, and Lunar Month, and Solar Year, as Natural; And of such as are derived from them, As Artificial Parts of Time, for Measures in Civil and Common Use: For the better understanding of The Julian Year and Calendar. The First Column also in our Church-Calendar explained. With other Incidental Remarks.
London, Printed by J. Heptinstall, for L. Meredith..., 1694. FIRST EDITION. 8vo, 171 x 104 mms., pp. [viii], 120, contemporary panelled calf. A fine copy, with the calligraphic autograph, probably contemporary, "Henry Wigley" on the top margin of the front paste-down end-paper, and "Berd. Whalley" on the top margin of the title-page. Wigley is probably the Reverend Henry Wigley of Pensham House, Worcestershire. Wigley was the grandfather, through his daughter, of Ambrose St. John (1815 - 1875), the Roman Catholic priest and headmaster, who was born in Islington, and this perhaps suggests an Islingtonian provenance for this book. In yet another hand, probably contemporary or early 18th century, are two salutary bromides: "It is very Rare, yt [that] either ye joy, or ye Benefit of an Estate infamously gotten, continues long." And: "To sleep, to eat, to drink, at other Peoples Hours [?House], to walk thier Pace & to Love & Hate as they do, is ye vilest of Servitudes." "Berd. Whalley" is possibly Bernard Whalley, correspondent of Alexander Pope and subscriber to Pope's translation of the Iliad, about whom very little is known. Holder (1615/16 - 1698) is also the author of Principles of Harmony, also published in 1694. Robert Poole in his ODNB article on Holder notes, " Holder's subsequent Discourse Concerning Time (1694), written to explain the issue of calendar reform and reissued in 1701 after the renewed English rejection of the Gregorian calendar, was an elegant exposition of the concept of harmony on a cosmic scale. In it he developed the idea that rational human perception was required to give meaning to creation, for 'Time is always Transient, in a continual Flux, neither to be seen, nor felt, nor reserved; but only measured by an Act of the Mind.'" Wing H2385. Macclesfield 1044. Further editions were published in 1701 an 1712.
John Price Antiquarian BooksProfessional seller
Book number: 7615
GBP 1650.00 [Appr.: EURO 1937.25 US$ 2112.27 | JP¥ 329687]
Catalogue: Calendar
Keywords: calendar chronology prose

 
PERTHES (Justus), publisher:
Gothaischer genealogischer Hof-Kalender auf das Jahr 1826
Gotha, bei Justus Perthes, 1826. 12mo, 109 x 70 mms., pp. [ii], 198, 167 [168 - 170 adverts], engraved frontispiece, 2 engraved portraits, 8 leaves flags printed in colour, original printed decorative boards, with all edges gilt. A very good copy. So far as I can tell, the first court calendar printed at Gotha was in 1763; Justus Perthes took over the printing in 1765 and continued until 1816. It began to be recognized as a genealogical reference works in the 1820s.
John Price Antiquarian BooksProfessional seller
Book number: 8521
GBP 330.00 [Appr.: EURO 387.5 US$ 422.45 | JP¥ 65937]
Catalogue: Calendar
Keywords: calendar genealogy prose

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