Laces Bolchevique. German anti-communist book published by the Ministry of Information in France. Rare. B AH
Price: $180.00
Laces Bolchevique. German anti-communist book published by the Ministry of Information in France. Rare. B AH
Price: $180.00
1934 French Anti-Soviet Le Sans Dieu. 32 pages. Rare. B
Price: $120.00
Rare Russian press photo of captured Japanese soldiers.B
Price: $70.00
13 Italian press photos of Italian forces in Russia in 1942. B
Price: $650.00
Photo album of a French cement factory at Rostov-on-Don, pre-WW1. 24 photos. B
Price: $250.00
1903 postcard of the King of Montenegro. B
Price: $40.00
2 postcards of the visit of the King of Jugoslavia arriving at Marseilles in 1934. B
Price: $70.00
3 postcards from the Dogger Bank Incident. B
Price: $100.00
Note: The Dogger Bank incident (also known as the North Sea Incident, the Russian Outrage or the Incident of Hull) occurred on the night of 21/22 October 1904, when the Baltic Fleet of the Imperial Russian Navy mistook a British trawler fleet from Kingston upon Hull in the Dogger Bank area of the North Sea for Imperial Japanese Navy torpedo boats and fired on them. Russian warships also fired on each other in the chaos of the melée. Two British fishermen died, six more were injured, one fishing vessel was sunk, and five more boats were damaged.[3] On the Russian side, one sailor and a Russian Orthodox priest aboard the cruiser Aurora caught in the crossfire were killed. "Damage to the Aurora was concealed...and only discovered by the deciphering of a wireless message intercepted at [the British] Felixstowe station. It was also considered highly significant that no officer from that ship appeared before the Commission, nor were her logs produced." The incident almost led to war between the British Empire and the Russian Empire.
Four pro-Russian, French propaganda cards during WW1. B
Price: $120.00
La Paysannerie en URSS, by Henri Mounier. 32 pages. B
Price: $150.00