Publication Date: 2025
Seller: True World of Books, Delhi, India
£ 18.28
Convert currencyQuantity: 18 available
Add to basketLeatherBound. Condition: New. Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden leaf printing on spine. Bound in genuine leather with Satin ribbon page markers and Spine with raised gilt bands. A perfect gift for your loved ones. Reprinted from 1851 edition. NO changes have been made to the original text. This is NOT a retyped or an ocr'd reprint. Illustrations, Index, if any, are included in black and white. Each page is checked manually before printing. As this print on demand book is reprinted from a very old book, there could be some missing or flawed pages, but we always try to make the book as complete as possible. Fold-outs, if any, are not part of the book. If the original book was published in multiple volumes then this reprint is of only one volume, not the whole set and contains approximately 44 pages. IF YOU WISH TO ORDER PARTICULAR VOLUME OR ALL THE VOLUMES YOU CAN CONTACT US. Resized as per current standards. Sewing binding for longer life, where the book block is actually sewn (smythe sewn/section sewn) with thread before binding which results in a more durable type of binding. Language: English,English.
Published by London: Printed by W. Clowes? 1850., 1850
Seller: Nigel Phillips ABA ILAB, Chilbolton, United Kingdom
8vo, 172 pages, one folding coloured map. Library binding of quarter red morocco and red cloth sides, label on front endpaper. Minor damage to title by a shelf label removing first two letters of ?Presented?, a few faint library stamps, margins cut rather close. FIRST EDITION of the report that changed the practice of burial in England. ?From 1840 to 1855 attention was repeatedly called to the condition of the London churchyards? The vaults under the pavement of the churches, and the small spaces of open ground surrounding them, were crammed with coffins. In many of the buildings the air was so tainted with the products of corruption as to be a direct and palpable source of disease and death to those who frequented them.? In all the large towns the evil prevailed in a greater or less degree?and?the churchyards were finally closed by the act of 1855, and the cemeteries which now occupy a large extent of ground to the north, south, east and west [of London] became henceforth the burial places of the metropolis? Burial within the limits of cities and towns is now almost everywhere abolished?? (Ency. Brit., III, 659). John Sutherland (1808?1891) was one of the great figures in public health of the nineteenth century. He conducted a special inquiry into the cholera epidemic of 1848?1849, which prompted this Report, and was the head of a commission sent to foreign countries to enquire into the law and practice of burial. Not a good copy, but an important document that is very scarce.