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the Brazilian physician and autodidact historian Alexandre José de Mello Moraes. It is genuinely uncommon in commerce, with only two incomplete sets appearing at auction; it is rarely seen complete due to its slightly complex publication history. The set was published by two different houses over a period of five years. Volumes I and II were published by Soares de Pinho, and volumes III, IV, and I (part II) were published by J. J. Patrocino. A second edition of the work was issued in 1866–8. Born in the Brazilian state of Alaoas, Mello Moraes (1816–1882), was orphaned at an early age and taken in by two uncles, both of them in religious orders. Despite his early adversities, Moraes qualified as a medical doctor in 1840. He began his career as an allopathic practitioner in Bahia, later becoming an early promoter of homeopathic medicine, and president of the Instituto Homeopático do Brazil. Although not a trained historian, he meticulously collected historically valuable documents and manuscripts towards the compilation of the present publication. Mello Moraes immersed himself in politics representing his home province from 1869 to 1872. He aligned himself with the opposition to Pedro II’s government. In 1865, he wrote that “it would truly be a national day, if the country’s government, true to the oath that it took, kept in mind that the constitution that governs us, the best constitution that we know of, is like the Ark of the Tabernacle, which no one could touch without falling dead” (Kraay, p. 250). The renowned Portuguese bibliographer, Inocêncio Francisco da Silva elaborates on the impact that Mello Moraes’s strained relationship with the government had on the present publication: “The author was forced to suspend the production of this work . . . since the proceeds from the sale were not enough to cover even half of the printing expenses. In a recently published pamphlet entitled A Posteridade he expands on his grievances more heartily, complaining about the lack of assistance given by the government to such an important publication. The lack of assistance becomes more curious as the legislative chambers decreed that the same government would order a thousand copies of the Corographia to help with the printing expenses, an order that was never to be carried out” (p. 37). Provenance: with the bookplate of Eugénio Eduardo de Andrea da Cunha e Freitas, on verso of front free endpaper of volume I. Freitas (1912–2000) was a prominent Portuguese lawyer, historian, and genealogist, who wrote more than 400 academic articles and books, and contributed to the Grande

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Enciclopédia Portuguesa e Brasileira . A leaf of neat notes, possibly by Freitas, is pasted in at the end of volume III. 4 volumes bound in 5, octavo (226 × 152 mm). Contemporary dark red quarter sheep, raised bands, gilt- lettered direct, compartments decorated with gilt devices, marbled boards, vellum tips, marbled endpapers. With lithographed portrait mounted on India paper of diplomat Antonio de Menezes Vasconcellos de Drummond in vol. I. Marginal pencil notes throughout (occasionally in blue and red). Each volume with a small contemporary slip of pink paper annotated “Garnier”, tipped in at half-titles, the set possibly having been purchased from or bound for the famous Rio bookseller-publishers Livraria de Baptiste Louis Garnier. Bindings expertly refurbished, frontispiece with light foxing and faint hygroscopic tidemark encroaching slightly on one corner, occasional marginal tears, scattered toning and soiling, a few small holes and minor paper repairs. A very good set, handsomely bound. ¶ Sabin 47458. Not in Borba de Moraes. Dave Treece, Exiles, Allies, Rebels: Brazil’s Indianist Movement, Indigenist Politics, and the Imperial Nation-state , 2000; Hendrik Kraay, Days of National Festivity in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1823–1889 , 2013. Inocêncio Francisco da Silva, Diccionario Bibliographico Portuguez: Supplemento I: A-B , 1867 (our translations). £5,750 [156764]

present book form, the plates were first published in 12 parts from 1825 to 1827. 2 volumes, large octavo (264 × 178 mm). Contemporary red straight-grain morocco, spines lettered and richly floral- tooled in gilt, compartments and covers bordered with thin and thick gilt rules, sides with triple blind fillets, gilt frame, and dense floral roll enclosing lyre centrepiece in gilt, board edges tooled in gilt, turn-ins with large gilt rules and floral roll, red doublures and free endpapers, edges gilt. With 24 mezzotint plates, in the smaller format, by John Martin. Front endpapers with bookplates of Sir William Purves- Hume-Campbell, 6th Baronet (1767–1833); John Muir Grant (1864–1897), financial secretary to Clydebank Shipbuilding; and Davenport Brown (1879–1973). Light sunning to spines, inner hinges just starting at ends, sporadic foxing, some light offsetting from plates, a strikingly bound copy in very good condition. ¶ Muir, p. 75; Ray 69A. £2,500 [157839] 99 MELLO MORAES, Alexandre José de. Corographia historica, chronographica, genealogica, nobiliaria, e politica do Imperio do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Typographia Brasileira – Edictor J. J. do Patrocini & Typographia Americana de José Soares de Pinho, 1858–63 an invaluable source for the history of brazil First edition of this encyclopaedic work on the political, economic, and social history of Brazil from the 15th to the mid-19th century, written by

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All items are fully described and photographed at peterharrington.co.uk

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