Details
HUMBOLDT, Friedrich Wilhelm Heinrich Alexander von (1769-1859). Kosmos, Entwurf einer physischen Weltbeschreibung. Stuttgart and Tbingen: J.G. Cotta, 1845-1862 [text]; Stuttgart: Krais & Hoffman (n.d.) [atlas].
5 volumes and atlas. 8o (215 x 133 mm) [text]; oblong 4o (280 x 340 mm) [atlas]. 39 hand-colored lithographs, 3 steel-engravings, text illustrations [atlas]. Contemporary diced green calf, gilt spines, red leather spine labels [Volumes I-III]; contemporary smooth green calf, red leather spine labels [Volumes IV-V]; contemporary half blue russia morocco, gilt-lettered spine [atlas]. Provenance: occasional English marginalia.
FIRST EDITION. "One of the last really comprehensive physical surveys ever to be attempted" (PMM). Humboldt's last and most important work, which occupied the last 30 years of his life, and of which Volume V was published posthumously from his notes. This ambitious work was intended, as Humboldt described it, to "represent in one work the whole material world, everything we know today of the phenomena in the celestial spaces and of life on earth, from the nebulae to the geography of mosses on granite rocks ...". Volumes I and II were extremely popular on publication, although Volumes III and IV, which contained the author's special research findings, were less immediately successful. Volume V contains an index prepared to Humboldt's directions, citing over 9000 of the sources he drew upon, making the work an important reference for the history of science. PMM 320; Norman 1112. (6)
5 volumes and atlas. 8o (215 x 133 mm) [text]; oblong 4o (280 x 340 mm) [atlas]. 39 hand-colored lithographs, 3 steel-engravings, text illustrations [atlas]. Contemporary diced green calf, gilt spines, red leather spine labels [Volumes I-III]; contemporary smooth green calf, red leather spine labels [Volumes IV-V]; contemporary half blue russia morocco, gilt-lettered spine [atlas]. Provenance: occasional English marginalia.
FIRST EDITION. "One of the last really comprehensive physical surveys ever to be attempted" (PMM). Humboldt's last and most important work, which occupied the last 30 years of his life, and of which Volume V was published posthumously from his notes. This ambitious work was intended, as Humboldt described it, to "represent in one work the whole material world, everything we know today of the phenomena in the celestial spaces and of life on earth, from the nebulae to the geography of mosses on granite rocks ...". Volumes I and II were extremely popular on publication, although Volumes III and IV, which contained the author's special research findings, were less immediately successful. Volume V contains an index prepared to Humboldt's directions, citing over 9000 of the sources he drew upon, making the work an important reference for the history of science. PMM 320; Norman 1112. (6)