Null Hugo Cipriano detto "Uriano" (1887-1960), caminetto in marmo, diaspro verde…
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Hugo Cipriano detto "Uriano" (1887-1960), caminetto in marmo, diaspro verde e metallo in patina d'argento, composto da: (x1) orologio con giovane donna e cigno ai suoi piedi, firmato sul retro della giovane donna "Uriano" (vetro del quadrante mancante / c44x43x20 cm) + (x1) coppia di cassolette (finiture della base mancanti / 20,5x20x11 cm)

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Hugo Cipriano detto "Uriano" (1887-1960), caminetto in marmo, diaspro verde e metallo in patina d'argento, composto da: (x1) orologio con giovane donna e cigno ai suoi piedi, firmato sul retro della giovane donna "Uriano" (vetro del quadrante mancante / c44x43x20 cm) + (x1) coppia di cassolette (finiture della base mancanti / 20,5x20x11 cm)

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Two Autograph letters addressed to Victor Hugo. Victor HUGO. Louis-Napoléon-Loetitia-Charles de Ladoucette, Baron. Autograph letter addressed to Victor Hugo.21 June 1846 One sheet in large 8vo mm. 210x175. Text on one page. Clear cursive handwriting, brown ink. Very good condition. "Monsieur le Vicomte, et tres honore Collegue". The deputy and prefect, perpetual secretary of the Societe Philotechnique, writes to Victor Hugo as secretary of the commission for the equestrian statue of Joan of Arc to be erected in Orléans. He asks his 'very honourable' colleague for the amount of his contribution. The bronze statue will then be created by the neo-classical sculptor Denis Foyatier and placed in the Place du Martroi. Boudn with: Victor HUGO. VIRMAITRE, Claude. Autograph letter addressed to Victor Hugo.4 September 1846 8vo. Text on two pages mm. 200x132. Clear cursive handwriting, brown ink. Very good condition. ‘Ce qui pourroit etre tout a fait determinant serait un mot d'un ministre quelconque, et surtout de M. Dumon le Suzerain de le Chemin de fer.’ Claude Virmaître, 1806?-1854, editor at the newspaper Le Corsaire and collaborator of Victor Hugo, asked the writer, then a Member of Parliament, for an intervention in order to obtain a post with the railways. He quotes Pierre Sylvain Dumon in this regard. ‘the Sovereign of the Railways', Minister of Public Works from December 1843 to May 1847: having invested a large part of his personal fortune in the railway companies, in particular the Paris-Lyon-Mediterranean, he firmly opposed, as minister, the exploitation of the railways by the state; hostile to their nationalisation, he thus favoured the monopoly of large companies.