613

BUNBURY ( Sir Charles J

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:150.00 - 200.00 EUR
BUNBURY ( Sir Charles J

Bidding Over

The auction is over for this lot.
The auctioneer wasn't accepting online bids for this lot.

Contact the auctioneer for information on the auction results.

Search for other lots to bid on...
Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
BUNBURY ( Sir Charles J. F. ). Journal of a residence at the Cape of Good Hope; with excursions into the interior, and notes on the natural history, and the native tribes. John Murray, 1848FIRST EDITION, with a frontispiece and 4 plates, pages xii, 297, (3, advertisements), 8vo, recent boards, with label, uncut : with some light fingering, but still a very good copy.ALSO WITH THIS LOT: (1) GUYOT ( Yves ). Boer Politics. Translated from the French. John Murray, 1900. FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH, pp xvi, 155, (1), 8vo, original printed wraps : very goodClaimed, by Jules Hedeman of Le Siècle, in his 2-page preface, as more up to date than the original French edition. (2) SOUTH AFRICAN GOLD TRUST COMPANY. Verbatim transcript of the proceedings at the first annual general meetings of The South African Gold Trust and Agency Company, Limited. Held March 13th, 1890. J. J. Hamilton, Esq., in the chair. (London : Keating and Co.) (1890). FIRST EDITION, 10-pages, 8vo, original printed paper wrappers : a nice, copy. Not found in Mendelssohn (either edition), COPAC, etc. This gold investment company declared a dividend of 100% at the end of its first year. (3) LYTTLE ( Richard ). Origin of the Fight with the Boers. Sketch of South African history. Fourth edition. With new chapters on the slavery question and native labour in mines. (Belfast : Wm. Brown & Sons, Printers, 30 Chichester Street) (1900). Pages (2), (1) - 25, (1, blank), small 8vo, original pictorial printed paper wrapper : a little tired, but a very good copy in original state. Hackett, South African War Books, page 166, cites, but does not locate, copies of the third and sixth editions. COPAC has the 6th and another, but unnumbered, edition, locating the LSE and ULRLS copies only. Not found on-line in D. Title above quoted from the wrapper. The front wrapper is not included in the pagination. The inside of the back wrapper is numbered as page 25, and the outer back wrapper is blank. Dated at end, January 5th, 1900. One of the most notable contemporary pro-Boer pamphlets. It was heavily quoted in the press in both Britain and Ireland. The Rev. Richard Lyttle, a Unitarian clergyman based at Moneyrea, County Down, was a member of the Gaelic League and a friend of the nationalist poet Alice Milligan. (4) CURRIE ( Sir Donald ). Thoughts upon the present and future of South Africa, and Central and Eastern Africa. A paper read … at the Royal Colonial Institute, on Thursday, 7th June, 1877 … London [no printer or publisher] 1877. FIRST EDITION, pages 54, (2, blank), original grey printed paper wrappers : with a small, light stamp on the title-page, otherwise a nice copy in original state.Currie (1825-1909), shipowner, called 'the Scotch Fox" by a fellow director of De Beers, mediated between President Brand of the Orange Free State and British officials in their dispute over the diamondiferous territory of Griqualand West, and supported the Boer delegation to London in 1877 protesting against the Transvaal's annexation ; he scored a lucky coup by both bringing to Britain news of the devastating defeat at Isandlwana and speedily taking back the military instructions which averted further disasters. (5) IRVINE ( Thomas W. ). British Basutoland. The Basutos. H. J. Infield (1881). FIRST (?ONLY) EDITION, pages (2), 32, 8vo, disbound, with the upper printed paper wrapper : with two small stamps on the title-page, otherwise a very good copy.Written, "for private distribution only, to make known a few facts connected with the history of the most promising native tribe in S. Africa". Irvine, a trader in the country, puts the blame for the Basuto rising upon "Mr. Sprigg and his colleagues, who, with unreasonsble stubborness, have persisted in what they proudly call their vigorous native policy … until they have goaded the people into rebellion." (6) CHESSON ( Frederick Wm. ). The Basuto War. A brief reply to Sir Bartle Frere's article in "The Nineteenth Century". Published by P. S. King, 1881. FIRST EDITION, 16-pages and original printed paper wrappers, 8vo, with a small stamp on the title-page, otherwise a very good copy in original state.Alleges that Frere was unfair in his dealing with the Basutos. Chesson (1833–88), campaigner for the rights of indigenous people, active campaigner for a wide variety of humanitarian issues, closely connected with committees and pressure groups, came to believe in ‘responsible imperialism’, arguing that as the expansion of European influence was inevitable, Europeans had an obligation to regulate the relationships between colonists and native populations, believing this could only be achieved by effective local administrations amenable to firm metropolitan control. (7).TRAVEL; AFRICA; SOUTH AFRICA; NATURAL HISTORY; HISTORY; BOER WAR; MILITARY; ECONOMICS; MINING; GOLD; WARBURTON; DUBLIN PRINTED