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Auction archive: Lot number 66

MIVART, St. George Jackson (1827-1900). A Monograph of the Lories, or Brush-Tongued Parrots, composing the Family Loriidae . London: R. H. Porter [printed by Taylor and Francis], 1896.

Auction 02.06.1999
2 Jun 1999
Estimate
£2,000 - £3,000
ca. US$3,191 - US$4,787
Price realised:
£7,475
ca. US$11,929
Auction archive: Lot number 66

MIVART, St. George Jackson (1827-1900). A Monograph of the Lories, or Brush-Tongued Parrots, composing the Family Loriidae . London: R. H. Porter [printed by Taylor and Francis], 1896.

Auction 02.06.1999
2 Jun 1999
Estimate
£2,000 - £3,000
ca. US$3,191 - US$4,787
Price realised:
£7,475
ca. US$11,929
Beschreibung:

MIVART, St. George Jackson (1827-1900). A Monograph of the Lories, or Brush-Tongued Parrots, composing the Family Loriidae . London: R. H. Porter [printed by Taylor and Francis], 1896. 4 (316 x 256mm). 61 hand-coloured lithographic plates by and after J. G. Keulemans, 4 maps with coloured areas of distribution, anatomical figures in text. (A few plates with slight spotting or slight dust-soiling at upper margin.) Original publisher's brown cloth ruled and lettered in gilt, t.e.g. Provenance : L. Brasil,(book label) FIRST ISSUE with the name 'R. H. Porter' at foot of spine. The maps show the distribution of the family across Australia, New Guinea and the South Pacific Islands, and provide a detail of the islands between Celebes and New Guinea. The plates are described by Sitwell as Keuleman's 'best work', and represent 16 species for the first time. In his introduction the author explains his interest in the family Loriidae 'a very attractive group of rather small birds' varying in dimension 'from the size of a Turtle-Dove to about that of a Sparrow', and consisting 'of 75 more or less distinct species.... The family is remarkable for its brilliancy and gay coloration', and its friendliness: 'Some of them ... will spontaneously approach human dwellings, and most of them make excellent pets....' Their feeding habits are a special feature: 'The lorries are very choice feeders, living as they do on the nectars and pollen of flowers.... The tongue is very remarkable, the papillae at the sides of the dorsal surface and towards its apex being much elongated and bent inwards and more or less backwards so as to form a kind of brush, which is no doubt destined to extract the nectar....' Fine Bird Books p. 94; Nissen IVB 640; Wood p. 468: 'an excellent treatise with beautiful hand-coloured plates'; Zimmer p. 439.

Auction archive: Lot number 66
Auction:
Datum:
2 Jun 1999
Auction house:
Christie's
London, King Street
Beschreibung:

MIVART, St. George Jackson (1827-1900). A Monograph of the Lories, or Brush-Tongued Parrots, composing the Family Loriidae . London: R. H. Porter [printed by Taylor and Francis], 1896. 4 (316 x 256mm). 61 hand-coloured lithographic plates by and after J. G. Keulemans, 4 maps with coloured areas of distribution, anatomical figures in text. (A few plates with slight spotting or slight dust-soiling at upper margin.) Original publisher's brown cloth ruled and lettered in gilt, t.e.g. Provenance : L. Brasil,(book label) FIRST ISSUE with the name 'R. H. Porter' at foot of spine. The maps show the distribution of the family across Australia, New Guinea and the South Pacific Islands, and provide a detail of the islands between Celebes and New Guinea. The plates are described by Sitwell as Keuleman's 'best work', and represent 16 species for the first time. In his introduction the author explains his interest in the family Loriidae 'a very attractive group of rather small birds' varying in dimension 'from the size of a Turtle-Dove to about that of a Sparrow', and consisting 'of 75 more or less distinct species.... The family is remarkable for its brilliancy and gay coloration', and its friendliness: 'Some of them ... will spontaneously approach human dwellings, and most of them make excellent pets....' Their feeding habits are a special feature: 'The lorries are very choice feeders, living as they do on the nectars and pollen of flowers.... The tongue is very remarkable, the papillae at the sides of the dorsal surface and towards its apex being much elongated and bent inwards and more or less backwards so as to form a kind of brush, which is no doubt destined to extract the nectar....' Fine Bird Books p. 94; Nissen IVB 640; Wood p. 468: 'an excellent treatise with beautiful hand-coloured plates'; Zimmer p. 439.

Auction archive: Lot number 66
Auction:
Datum:
2 Jun 1999
Auction house:
Christie's
London, King Street
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