Guide to Topics

Starts With: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z
  • Frontispiece to Sir Walter Raleigh's  The History of the World, London, 1614.  [(Ex) D57.xR155q]
  • Rare and Fine Press Books
  • Parrish Collection - Reade

    Reade, Charles (1814-1884)

    See Morris L. Parrish Collection of Victorian Novelists

  • Religion

    Use to retrieve collections of primarily American clergyman and missionaries, from the 18th through the 20th centuries, including diaries,
    correspondence, and sermon manuscripts, as well as collections of Latin American religious ephemera, particularly from Cuba.

  • ROBERT H. TAYLOR COLLECTION

    ROBERT H. TAYLOR COLLECTION

    Placed on deposit in the Princeton University Library in 1972, and received as a bequest in 1985, the Robert H. Taylor Collection consists of over 4,000 rare books and 3,300 manuscripts illustrating the scope of English literature from the fourteenth century to the 1920's.

  • Some passages of the life and death of the Right Honourable John earl of Rochester, who died the 26th of July, 1680. Written by his own direction on his death-bed, by Gilbert Burnet, D. D. Published/Created:	London, Printed for R. Chiswel, 1680. Ex 3911.1
  • Roman Coinage

    Roman Coinage, including “Greek imperials”. Over 7,000 coins:1,000 of the Roman Republic, mostly silver; over 5,200 of the Roman Empire, mostly silver and bronze, to Anastasius (ca.35 BCE-491 CE). Contents of the Firestone Princeton collection from the Republic through Commodus (ca.2,000 coins) have been published by B. Levy and P.C.V. Bastien, Roman Coins in the Princeton University Library I (Wetteren, 1985).There are notable holdings in the coinage of Roman Corinth, the 1976 gift of Prof. and Mrs. T. Leslie Shear, Jr.; about 100 of these are recorded in M.Amandry, Le monnayage des duovirs corinthiens (Paris, 1988).

    With the Greek and Roman coins should be mentioned two associated holdings: (1) The foundation piece of Princeton’s collection, a group of over 5,000 plaster casts of classical coins, bought by friends and alumni of the institution in 1849, and still in their original wooden trays. (2) Twelve cased volumes of impronte, i.e. plaster casts of classical (and neo-classical) intaglio gems, made up by the Roman firm of Paoletti, active in the 18th and 19th centuries.

  • Roman Coinage

    Roman Coinage, including “Greek imperials”. Over 7,000 coins:1,000 of the Roman Republic, mostly silver; over 5,200 of the Roman Empire, mostly silver and bronze, to Anastasius (ca.35 BCE-491 CE). Contents of the Firestone Princeton collection from the Republic through Commodus (ca.2,000 coins) have been published by B. Levy and P.C.V. Bastien, Roman Coins in the Princeton University Library I (Wetteren, 1985).There are notable holdings in the coinage of Roman Corinth, the 1976 gift of Prof. and Mrs. T. Leslie Shear, Jr.; about 100 of these are recorded in M.Amandry, Le monnayage des duovirs corinthiens (Paris, 1988).

    With the Greek and Roman coins should be mentioned two associated holdings: (1) The foundation piece of Princeton’s collection, a group of over 5,000 plaster casts of classical coins, bought by friends and alumni of the institution in 1849, and still in their original wooden trays. (2) Twelve cased volumes of impronte, i.e. plaster casts of classical (and neo-classical) intaglio gems, made up by the Roman firm of Paoletti, active in the 18th and 19th centuries.

  • Roman Coin

    Roman Coinage

    Over 7,000 coins:1,000 of the Roman Republic, mostly silver; over 5,200 of the Roman Empire, mostly silver and bronze, to Anastasius (ca.35 BCE-491 CE). Contents of the Firestone Princeton collection from the Republic through Commodus (ca.2,000 coins) have been published by B. Levy and P.C.V. Bastien, Roman Coins in the Princeton University Library I (Wetteren, 1985).There are notable holdings in the coinage of Roman Corinth, the 1976 gift of Prof. and Mrs. T. Leslie Shear, Jr.; about 100 of these are recorded in Michel.Amandry, Le monnayage des duovirs corinthiens (Paris, 1988). Among the coins on deposit from the Princeton University Art Museum from the collection of Dan Fellows Platt, there are strong representations of silver denarii of the Roman Republic and of Hadrian.

    With the Greek and Roman coins should be mentioned two associated holdings: (1) The foundation piece of Princeton’s collection, a group of over 5,000 plaster casts of classical coins, bought by friends and alumni of the institution in 1849, and still in their original wooden trays. (2) Twelve cased volumes of impronte, i.e. plaster casts of classical (and neo-classical) intaglio gems, made up by the Roman firm of Paoletti, active in the 18th and 19th centuries.

  • Luigi Rossini, 1790-1857. Le antichita romane; ossia, Raccolta delle più interessanti vedute di Roma antica, disegnatè ed incise dall’architetto incisore Luigi Rossini, Ravennate, in numero centuna vedute. Rome: Scudellari, 1829. Ex.N6920.R73e.
  • Louis M. Glackens, American, 1866–1933 Cartoon of Teddy Roosevelt, 1910 Pen and black ink on off-white board 40.8 x 33.1 cm. (16 1/16 x 13 1/16 in.) Gift of Frank Jewett Mather Jr. x1943-148
  • Death mask of Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882), from the original by Domenico Brucciani (1815/18-1880) in possession of W. M. Rossetti. Previously owned by Janet Camp Troxell. Referenced in Princeton University Library Chronicle vol. 33, no. 3, p. 173
  • "Miseries of Travelling," colored etching, 1807. One of many plates by  Rowlandson on the "Miseries" theme, inspired by James Beresford's  Miseries of Human Life (1806).  [(GA) GC 112]
  • Russia

    Use to retrieve collections related to Russian literature, U.S.-Soviet Union foreign policy during the Cold War, and travel to Russia.

  • No Knowledge=No Bread.  Knowledge Lies in Books.  Books are on the Cooperatives. (1925)  [(GA) GC091 / GA 2005.01165]
Starts With: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z