Null Photo archive Eugène Père Lafont, Belgian Jesuit. C. 1900 Eugène Lafont (Mo…
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Photo archive Eugène Père Lafont, Belgian Jesuit. C. 1900 Eugène Lafont (Mons 1837-1908 Darjeeling), was a Belgian Jesuit priest and missionary in India. There he became a scientist and founder of the first Scientific Society in India. After Lafont arrived in India in 1865 he soon was appointed to teach sience. He installed a laboratory in the college and started with daily meteorological observations which were regularly published in the major newspaper of Calcutta, the "Indo-European Correspondence". Lafont was particularly gifted in popularizing scientific knowledge. He held lectures for the general public which were a huge success. He observed the rare astronomical phenomenon of the passage of planet Venus before the sun which made him internationally known and led to financial help to build and develop laboratories to disseminate scientific knowlegde and improve science courses and research. In this lot: 16 sm. albumen prints of Turkish types, scenes from the Middle East and India: Tuareg people, Berber people, water pipe smoking women and girls, veiled women, an Egyptian (?) barber, resting Indians, etc.; 6 cabinet cards and larger original photos pasted on cardboard showing Lafont himself: posing with his badges of honor, in front of a tent camp, working with a scientific instrument, 2 photos by Johnston & Hoffmann (the first and largest studio based in Calcutta (now Kolkata)), one by Meade (?); 35 smaller and larger albumen prints pasted on cardboard showing the mission area of Lafont: natives doing laundry, Calcutta High Court, men and women of the labouring classes, Hooghly Bridge, cavalry in Gwalior, the grave of Gustave Mees in Calcutta, the Maharaja of Gwalior with colonel Robertson and Lafont in a carriage, the Delhi amphitheater in 1903, fort Gwalior, the Taj Mahal (gardens, sarcophagus), Henry Martin's pagoda at Serampore, the general post office of Calcutta, the temple in Coconada (now Kakinada), the Sas Bahu temple and the palace of the Maharaja of Gwalior, nice portrait of the Maharaja of Gwalior, an elephant procession during a state entry, etc. Two issues of "The Empress", an illustrated magazine, edited and published by Arthur James Parker, at Calcutta, n. 18 (1 December 1904) and n. 22 (2 May 1908). Both issues figuring an article and photos (resembling photos mentioned above) of Lafont. Program of the "Golden Jubilee" of religious life in the Society of Jesus of Père Lafont, 1854-1904, in Calcutta 12-13 December 1904.

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Photo archive Eugène Père Lafont, Belgian Jesuit. C. 1900 Eugène Lafont (Mons 1837-1908 Darjeeling), was a Belgian Jesuit priest and missionary in India. There he became a scientist and founder of the first Scientific Society in India. After Lafont arrived in India in 1865 he soon was appointed to teach sience. He installed a laboratory in the college and started with daily meteorological observations which were regularly published in the major newspaper of Calcutta, the "Indo-European Correspondence". Lafont was particularly gifted in popularizing scientific knowledge. He held lectures for the general public which were a huge success. He observed the rare astronomical phenomenon of the passage of planet Venus before the sun which made him internationally known and led to financial help to build and develop laboratories to disseminate scientific knowlegde and improve science courses and research. In this lot: 16 sm. albumen prints of Turkish types, scenes from the Middle East and India: Tuareg people, Berber people, water pipe smoking women and girls, veiled women, an Egyptian (?) barber, resting Indians, etc.; 6 cabinet cards and larger original photos pasted on cardboard showing Lafont himself: posing with his badges of honor, in front of a tent camp, working with a scientific instrument, 2 photos by Johnston & Hoffmann (the first and largest studio based in Calcutta (now Kolkata)), one by Meade (?); 35 smaller and larger albumen prints pasted on cardboard showing the mission area of Lafont: natives doing laundry, Calcutta High Court, men and women of the labouring classes, Hooghly Bridge, cavalry in Gwalior, the grave of Gustave Mees in Calcutta, the Maharaja of Gwalior with colonel Robertson and Lafont in a carriage, the Delhi amphitheater in 1903, fort Gwalior, the Taj Mahal (gardens, sarcophagus), Henry Martin's pagoda at Serampore, the general post office of Calcutta, the temple in Coconada (now Kakinada), the Sas Bahu temple and the palace of the Maharaja of Gwalior, nice portrait of the Maharaja of Gwalior, an elephant procession during a state entry, etc. Two issues of "The Empress", an illustrated magazine, edited and published by Arthur James Parker, at Calcutta, n. 18 (1 December 1904) and n. 22 (2 May 1908). Both issues figuring an article and photos (resembling photos mentioned above) of Lafont. Program of the "Golden Jubilee" of religious life in the Society of Jesus of Père Lafont, 1854-1904, in Calcutta 12-13 December 1904.

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Three works bound togheter in one volume in-8vo. 165x105 mm. Contemporary binding in vellum by old page of an antiphonary. I: [KIRWITZER, Wencelas Pantaleon]. Histoire de ce qui s'est passé au Royaume de la Chine en l'année 1624. Tirée des letres écrites & adressées au R. P. Mutio Viteleschi. Traduite de l'Italien en François.Paris, S. Cramoisy, 1629.Pp IV, 102. II: [PAEZ, Gaspar - MENDEZ, le Père Alphonse]. Histoire de ce qui s'est passé au Royaume d'Ethiopie es années 1624.1625.& 1626. Tirés des lettres écrites au Mutio Viteleschi. Traduite de l'Italien (par J.-B. de Machault). Paris, S. Cramoisy, 1629. Pp. [8], 252 (i.e. 262).III: [ANDRADE, Antonio; de]. Histoire de ce qui s'est passé au Royaume du Tibet. Tirée des lettres escriptes en l'année 1626. Addressee a R.P. Mutio VitelleschiPp. [8], 104. Pinter's device on the three titlepages. Adorned headpieces and initials. On the first titlepage an ancient note of ownership. Little abrasions on binding, internally some brownings and slight stains, traces of wear. Good and fresh copy. First French edition. Three reports written by Jesuits on mission in China, Ethiopia and Tibet and sent to Father Mutio Vitelleschi, General of the Jesuit Company are collected. During his mandate, the presence of the Jesuits in China became significant. I work: Chadenat: "Curieux et rare recuei." The author of the letters from China, which expose what happened in 1624, is probably Wencelas Pantaléon Kirwitzer who signs the last of the letters. But the work has sometimes been attributed to Father Darde or Father Jean-Baptiste Machault. The first two chapters give an overview of the political situation in China and the progress of the Christian religion in that country at the time. The other letters testify to the situation of the various missions established in the country. Kirwitzer, an astronomer and mathematician, joined the Jesuits in 1606. He went on a mission to Asia with other Jesuits in 1618, stayed in Goa and China, where he died in 1626.Cordier, BS 815; Streit, 2136 and 2127; Chadenat 4896; de Backer-S. II, 1824. Löwendahl 81. II work: Paëz, who was martyred in Ethiopia in 1635, gives a detailed account of the country, the state of the church in the country and the activities of the various Jesuit missions. The work was apparently translated by the Jesuit Jean Darde.Sommervogel, V, 258 ; Carayon 906. Unknown to Chadenat, Brunet et Barbier. III work: Letters of Antoine de Andrade during his second trip to Tibet, translated into French by Father Jean Darde. Antonio de Andrade was a Portuguese Jesuit missionary who was sent to Goa and then Agra. After hearing about Christian communities outside the Himalayas, he decided to go there. In 1624 it was he, with his Jesuit brother Manuel Marques, the first Western European, who went to Tibet. After Andrade obtained permission to open a mission in Tsaparang, the capital of Guge, one of many kingdoms in Tibet, he returned to Goa. He wrote a long and enthusiastic letter translated into many languages and returned to Tsaparang to start the mission. But in 1630 the kingdom was invaded by the troops of the king of Ladakh and the missionaries were expelled. This book contains the story of this second journey and the beginning of the mission.Streit V, 310; Cordier BS 2901.

RUSSE CANNES (06) - Oleg TRIPET°° SKRYPITZINE (1848-1935, painter, curator and patron of the Fragonard Museum in Grasse) - Notice sur la Famille TRIPET SKRYPITZINE: Father Eugène Tripet, Consul of France in Moscow, married Alexandra Feodoravna Skrypitzine and settled in Cannes, building the Villa Alexandra, acquiring agricultural land, followed by many other Russians, which led to this new district being called "Little Russia"; on the death of his wife, Eugène built a chapel on her land; in 1924, after having subdivided the land, Oleg donated part of it to the town of Cannes, which became the Cros-Vieil district; Oleg continued to be involved in local life, becoming a town councillor and President of the Société Agricole et Horticole / Oleg TS's archive, collected in 3 volumes in sheets, titled "Au cours de ma vie" (In the course of my life); Oleg had a lifelong passion for memory, for preserving current events on a day-to-day basis, writing, cutting, illustrating a kind of perpetual diary in which he comments, analyzes and stages himself; over time, the sheets have been downgraded, but we can retain here 2 distinct parts: 1°) his youth and military time, with 11 letters to his father (37 p in-8) in 1876-79, from Auxonne, Dijon, Marseille, his appointment by the Minister of War to the rank of lieutenant in 1877, 2 photos in lieutenant's uniform in the 10th Dragoon Regiment, the autographed photo of his friend Captain Camille Hébert, the (caricatured) photo of his first platoon officer Lhuilier ("un maboul"), the large photo of General Pellé, the letter from the Berger-Levrault bookshop concerning the shipment of the book on the history of the 10th, followed by several sheets of articles and cut-outs on dragoons and cavalry and several documents; a photo of Marseille painter Etienne Martin - Oleg then kept a set of visiting cards written in 1882 on the death of his wife Esmeralda (née Alexandrine Hélène Basily), whom he had married in 1879: 19 messages from such notables as the Roux family of Marseille, Salignac Fénelon (his sister was married to a member of this family), the Bishop of Fréjus and Toulon, etc.This is followed by a large set of inscriptions containing around 500 signatures of personalities present at a funeral in Marseille on August 16, 1892 (death unidentified). It is safe to say that all of Marseille's society was present, with signatures from the Ballazzi, Canaple, Roux, Azuelos, Pianello, Gilbert des Voisins, Métaxas, Mavrogardato, Nicolaidès, Séchiari, Tommasi, Fraissinet, Alphandery families, etc., among others.followed by 50 pages of miscellaneous articles on the painter Ziem, Gambetta, Normandy, the events of May 16, 1877, etc, The second volume is devoted to the First World War, with the "éphémérides, récits de guerre" (battle of Issoncourt in September 1914): over 100 handwritten pages and 150 p of cut-out articles; of note, preserved in envelopes, are letters from his godson, a soldier in the 165th infantry, awarded the Croix de Guerre with citations, and a letter from a soldier wounded at Verdun with a leg amputated.