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SOUTH
AMERICA
A-B
C
D-F
G-J
K-M
N-Q R-S
T-Z
PROBLEMS
of an International
Debt
Collector
(New Granada). [Ancízar, Manuel]. [drop-title] Deuda del Peru a Nueva Granada. [Bogotá, 1855]. 8vo. 22 pp., [1 (blank)] f. [bound with his] Juicio de responsabilidad. Bogotá: Impr. de Echeverría Hermanos, 1856. 8vo. 15, [1 (blank)] pp. [and bound with his] [drop-title] Juicio de responsabilidad. [Bogotá, 1856]. 8vo. 32 pp.
$450.00
These three opuscules seek to justify Ancízar's actions as New Granada's agent for collection of monies that Peru owed Bogotá "por parte de la antigua acreencia colombiana le tocó segun el Convenio firmado en Bogotá el 25 de junio de 1853." Ancízar succeeded in collecting a goodly sum and then ran afoul of popular and official opinion when a considerable portion of it ended up under the control of the British government acting on behalf of British investors in New Granada.
These publications are filled with documents concerning the imbroglio. Ancízar's preface to the first is dated 18 September 1855 and that to the second 10 January 1856; while the third has no preface, it dates from 1856 after 16 August, the date of the last document present.
In recent plain wrappers. The original printed front wrapper of the second pamphlet is present. A number is stamped in one margin. Some waterstaining is visible on some pages, otherwise this is quite clean.

Niles, John Milton. A view of South America and Mexico, comprising their history, the political condition, geography, agriculture, commerce, &c.
of the republics of Mexico, Guatemala, Colombia, Peru, the United Provinces of South America and Chili, with a complete history of the revolution in each of these independent states. New York: H. Huntington, Jr., 1826. 12mo (18.7 cm, 7.4"). 2 vols. in 1. Frontis., 204, 239, [1 (blank)] pp.
[SOLD]
Second edition of this Latin American history, following the first of the previous year. One of the earliest works by a U.S. writer on the newly independent nations of Latin America, this is a very good source for what was known or believed about events and their reasons, and about Bolívar, San Martín, Iturbide, and the other personalities of the era. The frontispiece here is a steel-engraved portrait of Bolívar.
Niles, the U.S. Postmaster General in 1840–41, also served several terms in the Senate; during his first term, he was an early supporter of the admission of Texas into the Union, and later editions of this work include a history of the state.
Shoemaker 25597; Sabin 99547; Allibone 1429. Contemporary treed sheep, spine gilt extra; edges lightly rubbed, back cover showing small abrasions, spine leather creased and with a now-repaired tear. Pages with moderate offsetting (more pronounced opposite the frontispiece) and occasional light spotting.
A notably better than usual copy of this very readable book, often found in very worn, “read” condition.
Noticias historicas de la Republica Argentina
Núñez, Ignacio Benito. Noticias historicas de la Republica Argentina. Obra postuma del Sr. D. Ignacio Nuñez. Dedicada al Sr. Dr. D. Valentin Alsina...por el hijo del autor, D. Julio Nuñez. Buenos Aires: Impr. de Mayo, 1857. 8vo. 2 pts. in 1 vol. I: [2] ff., iv, iv, 365 pp.
II: 115 pp. [bound with] Trabajos literarios. Buenos Aires: Impr. de Mayo, 1857. 8vo. 81
pp.
$450.00


Núñez was a man of many partsa military
officer, government official, writer, and reporter (1792-1846)and authored
several works with similar titles, some of which were reprinted several times.
The Noticias históricas (pt. two being entitled Efemerides
americanas, desde el descubrimiento del Río de la Plata) is a first edition and should not be
confused with earlier works: Its focuses are the English invasions (1806-7) and the War of
Independence (1810-17), the foci of many of Núñez's historical writings. This 1857 Trabajos
literarios, composed of political essays, is also a first edition. Both works are scarce in U.S.
libraries.
Provenance: Partially erased presentation inscription on first title-page from Julio Núñez,
dated 1862.
Palau 196836, 196837, 196838. On Núñez, see: Archivo biográfico de España, Portugal, e Iberoamérica, fiche 665, frames 235-48. Mid-19th-century quarter cloth with marbled
paper sides, spine discolored. Private ownership stamps.
Supreme
Court Documents
Olañeta, Casimiro. Five MS. Letters Signed,
to the Secretary of State at the Office of Justice. Sucre, 11 March – 12 May
1858. On paper, in Spanish. Folio, 8 pp.
$725.00
The president of the Bolivian Supreme Court writes concerning the
receipt of official decrees (11 March), the salaries of court employees (6 April),
the court's opinion in the matter of substitute judges in the civil section
of the judicial system (9 April), the court's decision to press criminal charges
against a lawyer who had impugned the dignity of the court (10 May), and the
court's opinion regarding the official title of judges in certain criminal cases
(12 May).
The Court had just come through a period during which a military ruler had
systematically dismantled the courts and undercut their authority and dignity.
Olañeta had assumed his presidency only days before the first document
in the collection was penned.
Very good condition. A few small tears at folds.
Origuela, Elvira de, & others. Manuscript documents. On paper, in Spanish. Los Reyes [i.e., Lima], Peru, and Seville, Spain, 23 April 1620 – 26 November 1662. 4 cahiers. Folio (31.5 cm; 12.5"). 7, [1 (blank)] ff; 5, [1 (blank)] ff.; 12 ff.; 16, [4 (blank)] ff.
$700.00
Published
in
Exile
in “New-York”
Páez, José Antonio. Broadside.
Begins: "A los venezolanos." New-York, 21 October 1853. Folio (30.7 cm, 12").
[1] p.
$750.00
Click the image above for an enlargement.
In this address to his fellow Venezuelans, Paéz (1790–1873), the exiled general and former president—who would serve as president yet again in the early 1860s—denies any part in revolutionary conspiracies against the regime of General José Gregorio Monagas (1798–1858), then ruling Venezuela. Páez probably drew upon the pen of D. Antonio José de Irisarri (1786–1868) for the composition of this publication.
Handsomely printed on a single sheet, in two columns.
Rare: We fail to trace this piece of exile writing via OCLC, RLIN, NUC Pre-1956, or Palau.
In good/very good condition, save for short tears to margins. Good Venezuelan item.

A Good, Old-Fashioned, INDEX to Complicated Law Stuff
Perez y Lopez, Antonio Xavier. Teatro de la legislacion universal de España é Indias. Madrid: Various publishers, 1791–98. Small 4to. 28 volumes.
$4000.00
Click the images for enlargements.
An important, practical, dictionary-like guide to the complicated plethora of legislation (en)acted in the Spanish legal “theater.” An especially useful shortcut to finding royal decrees, court decisions, etc., on any of the thousands of topics indexed.

Palau 221275; Sabin 60899. Modern quarter brown calf over marbled paper boards, with red and green spine labels. A clean, very nice set, with only a bit of minor dampstaining and the odd spot or paper flaw in all the many volumes. All edges red. (25829)
Church/State/Money
[Pey de Andrade, Juan B.,
& José D. Duquesne]. Conducta de los gobernadores del arzobispado
con la Junta de Emprestito. Santafe de Bogota: Imp. del C.B. Espinosa, 1814.
Folio. [1] f., 25 pp
$1850.00
Relates to the conflict between the Church and State over the question
of compulsory loans. This publication is the archbishopric's refutation of a
diatribe entitled "Manifiesto de la conducta que ha observado la Junta de Empresitito
con los gobernadores del arzobispado," and a defense of the Church's position
vis-à-vis the proposed "loan." Juan B. Pey de Andrade and Jose
D. Duquesne have signed the document at the end.
Important,
early Colombian economic publication.
A minor observation on the printing: The paper used is wove, except that
of pp. 2124 which is fine quality laid; and p. 24 is misnumbered "17."
One wonders if these pages are cancels.
Not
found via NUC, OCLC, or RLIN.
Posada, Bibliografía bogotana, 392. Modern marbled
covered light boards. Brittle paper; small hole in final leaf costing two
letters.
Pons, François Raymond Joseph de. Voyage à la partie orientale de la Terre-Ferme, dans l'Amérique Méridionale, fait pendant les années 1801, 1802, 1803 et 1804: contenant la description de la capitainerie générale de Carácas.... Paris: Chez Colnet, F. Buisson, and others, 1806. 8vo (20 cm, 7.875"). 3 vols. I: [2] ff., 358 pp.; foldout map. II: [2] ff., 469, [1 (blank)] pp. III: [2] ff., 362 pp.; 3 foldout maps.
$2875.00
Single-click the image above, for an enlargement.
The map is NOT fully folded out that would have mandated an image either too small
in scale to be at all useful, or simply TOO big.
Depons’s Voyage gives us a picture of the Spanish Main (Venezuela, Guyana, Surinam, etc. to the mouth of the Amazon) in the period shortly before independence, including Spanish colonial administration, the colony’s commerce, finance, and military, a discussion of the inhabitants—including aboriginal ones—and notes on the organization of the Church, including
the Inquisition. The maps are “Carte de la Capitainrie Génerale de Caracas (vol. I, facing p. 1), “Plan de la ville de Caracas” (vol. II, facing p. 63),“Plan de la Port de la Goayre” (vol. III, facing p. 124), and “Plan de la Rade et de la Ville de Porto” (vol. III, facing p. 128).
François Raymond Joseph de Pons (1751–1812) was archivist for the French Navy. This work also appeared in English, German, and Spanish editions; this is its first edition, and the sole French edition.

Provenance: Engraved armorial bookplates of Thomas Munro on front pastedowns. Unattributed note in pencil in top margin of half-title of vol. I (repeated in substance in the other volumes): “This was Talleyrand’s copy.”
Sabin 19641; Palau 70507. Treed calf, spines gilt with red leather labels, marbled endpapers; a little rubbed with fine chipping and some cracking along joints, endpapers with some browning from turn-ins, pages with some light waterstaining and brownspotting and a few small holes resulting in loss of individual letters. Closed tear (without loss) into map in vol. I, short closed tear into right border and some soiling and browning in bottom portion of map facing p. 63 in vol. III, light browning in bottom margin and faint waterstaining in top portion of map facing p. 124 in vol. III, and light waterstaining in map facing p. 128 of the same volume. All edges speckled red and blue.
Overall quite handsome and intriguing.

WORLD MYTHOLOGY — 8 Vols. & Thousands of Entries
Pozzoli, Giovanni; Felice Romani; Antonio Peracchi, et al. Dizionario storico-mitologico di tutti i popoli del mondo. Livorno: Stamperia Vignozzi, 1824–28. 8 vols. 8vo (21 cm, 8.25"). I: 580 pp. II: 581–1163, [1] pp. (pp. 1057–64 repeated in place of pp. 1065–72). III: [1165]–1708 pp. (pagination 1551–52 repeated, 1687–88 skipped). IV: [1709]–2342 pp. V: 2351–3086 pp. (pagination skips 2519–26). VI: 3087–3855 pp. (pagination skips 3407–08). VII: 576 pp. VIII: 577–1074 pp.
$2500.00
Click the middle and right hand-images for enlargements.
Second edition of this classic dictionary of comparative mythology, a hefty collection of the deities, heroes, tales, festivals, antiquities, and other folklore of numerous cultures and countries including Mexico,
Peru, America, Africa, India, Japan, China, etc, along with Jewish, Greek, and Roman antiquities. The foundation of the work was François Noel's Dictionnaire de la Fable; copious additions and corrections were made by Pozzoli, Romani (the famed poet, scholar, and librettist for La Scala), and Peracchi (another librettist). The resulting encyclopedic endeavor was originally published from 1809–27 under the title Dizionario d'ogni mitologia e antichità incominciato, according to Graesse and Brunet, who both give Pozzoli's first name as Girolamo.
This set includes two volumes of supplemental text, adding a number of entries. The first edition was followed by two volumes of supplemental plates, not present here and not called for: Graesse describes this edition as “sans grav.”
The pagination is erratic in a number of places; there is a numbering gap from 2342 to 2351 between vols. IV and V, but the text and signatures are uninterrupted.
Uncommon: OCLC locates only two U.S. institutional holdings of this second edition.
Provenance: Most volumes with small inked ownership inscription in an outer margin: “G.R.W.” the mark of William Rollinson Whittingham (1805–79), fourth Episcopal Bishop of Maryland and an enthusiastic book collector.
Brunet, IV, 851; Graesse, V, 429. Not in Sabin. Contemporary half binding, recently rebacked with tan paper, spines with printed paper labels; boards rubbed and faded with small chips, one vol. with front cover waterstained. Foxing almost throughout, generally no worse than moderate; light waterstaining in upper margins of vol. I; one leaf in vol. VII with lower outer portion torn away, with loss of words from about 18 lines on each side. Vol. II with printer's error replacing pp. 1065–72 with duplicates of pp. 1057–64; pagination erratic in other places. Most vols. with ownership mark as above; vol. VI with one pencilled and one inked marginal annotation. (25862)
Prescott, William Hickling. History of the conquest of Peru, 1524–1550. Mexico City: Imprenta Nuevo Mundo for the members of the Limited Editions Club, 1957. Folio (32 cm, 12.6"). xxxvi, 252 pp., [2] pp.; illus.
$150.00
This Limited Editions Club edition of Prescott’s classic account of the clash of empires in Peru and the destruction of that of the Inca is limited to 1500 copies. It includes an introduction by Samuel Eliot Morison and water-color illustrations by Everett Gee Jackson. The colophon is
signed by the illustrator and by Harry Block, the printer. The book was designed and issued to be a companion volume to the Club’s printing of Bernal Diaz del Castillo’s Discovery and Conquest of Mexico (Mexico City, 1942).
The binding is full marbled sheep (pasta española) with gilt-stamped red spine-labels and raised bands accented with gilt rules.
Limited Editions Club, Bibliography of the Fine Books Published by The Limited Editions Club, 1929–1985, 275. Original red slipcase; rubbed, chipped and splitting along edges, with some paper loss at corners; case spine sunned. Spine leather a bit darkened, bottom of front joint starting. A very good copy, in a good slipcase.
Prescott, William H. History of the conquest of Peru, with a preliminary view of the civilization of the Incas. New York: Harper & Bros., 1847. 8vo (24.3 cm, 9.55"). 2 vols. I: Frontis., xl, [1], 527, [1] pp.; 1 map. II: Frontis., xix, [1], 547, [1] pp.; 1 plt.
$300.00
First U.S. edition, first issue of a classic account of the clash of empires in Peru and the destruction of that of the Inca. Prescott’s follow-up to his well received History of the Conquest of Mexico appears here in BAL’s state B, without printer’s imprint on verso of title-leaf of vol. I (with no precedence established).
BAL 16346; Gardner P-7; Sabin 65272. Publisher’s blind-stamped cloth, spines with gilt-stamped titles; sunned and with small spots of discoloration, spines each showing traces of a now-absent shelving label. Front pastedowns each with private collector’s bookplate, institutional rubber-stamp, and speckled show-through of binder’s glue. Light to moderate foxing throughout.

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