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Les Vergers sur la Mer. Attique, Italie et Provence.

1937123 x 186 mm

FIRST EDITION
SIGNED AUTOGRAPH CONSIGNMENT
FROM THE LIBRARY OF THE BATTLESHIP RICHELIEU

120 

1 in stock

Description

FIRST EDITION, One of the copies of the current edition after 50 on Arches, 75 on papier du Marais, 150 on Alfa and 75 on vellum from the Rives paper mills.

FROM THE LIBRARY OF THE BATTLESHIP RICHELIEU provenance "Cuirassé Richelieu" at the foot of the spine, handwritten note on the 1st white endpaper "Carré off[iciers] subalt[ernes] / Richelieu / 1006".
SIGNED AUTOGRAPH CONSIGNMENT for the library of the battleship Richelieu :

At the "Richelieu
ship that our old French used to greet with their song: Que lou bou Diéu t'accompagno*.
with best wishes
C. Maurras
*may the good Lord be with you

The Richelieu, with its sister-ship the Jean Bart, was both the first 35,000-tonne battleship and the last French battleship. Built in 1935 to stand up to the Italian Littorio, she was originally designed only to operate in the Mediterranean - but on 14 June 1940, when the Richelieu was only 90% complete, the Germans bombarded the port of Brest. On 18 June, the battleship, still intact but still unfinished, left for Dakar. There, she was torpedoed and immobilised by the British. Under Vichy orders, she repelled Operation Menace in September, orchestrated by the British Royal Navy and Free France.
In 1943, under Allied control, the Richelieu sailed for New York to be repaired and modernised; passing under the Brooklyn Bridge forced the crew to dismantle the forward telepointer. The refitted Richelieu was designated to join the Eastern Fleet in the Indian Ocean. She took part in Operations Cockpit, Transom and Crimson. Her crew then fought against Japan alongside the East Indies Fleet, and were present at the Japanese surrender of Singapore on 12 September 1945. Finally, between October and December 1945, the Richelieu took part in the return of French forces to Indochina.
It was decommissioned in 1961 and scrapped 7 years later.

Paris,Flammarion,1937.In-12, Bound,123 x 186 mm,211 pp. .

Red half-maroquin, spine ribbed with gilt title and provenance at foot "Cuirassé Richelieu", speckled edges, bookmark. Binding signed "Taffin" on the 1st white endpaper.
Corners rubbed, small white stain on upper board.

Bio

Charles Maurras

(born on 20 April 1868 in Martigues, Bouches-du-Rhône and died on 16 November 19521 in Saint-Symphorien-lès-Tours, Indre-et-Loire)

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