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E. von Seydlitzsche Geographie
von E. Gehlmann
Hirt Verlag, 1899
Hardcover
€15,55
(inkl. MwSt.)
Inhalt: Allgemeine Erdkunde, Länderkunde, Handelsgeographie, Geschichte der Geographie, u.v.m.
E=mc2
von Gerald Kahan
DuMont Verlag, 1987
Softcover
€4,14
(inkl. MwSt.)
Inhalt: The Claudian invasion, Catastrophe and reconstruction, The North and the walls, The later army, Commerce and manufacture u.v.m.
Eagles, Hawks and Falcons of Australia
von David Hollands
Nelson Verlag, 1984
Hardcover
€45,00
(inkl. MwSt.)
Inhalt: Little Eagle, Black Kite, Brown Goshawk, Brown Falcon, u.v.m.
Early Christianity and Society
von Robert M. Grant
Harper & Row Publishers, 1977
Hardcover
€10,00
(inkl. MwSt.)
Inhalt: The Christian Population of the Roman Empire, Christian Devotion to the Monarchy u.v.m.
Early Gentile Chrstianity and its hellenistic background
Harper & Row Publishers, 1964
Softcover
€12,00
(inkl. MwSt.)
Inhalt: Early gentile christianity and its hellenistic background, a note on the resurrection, hellenistic mysteries and christian sacraments u.v.m.
Early Italian Engravings
von Jay A. Levenson
1973Softcover
€35,00
(inkl. MwSt.)
Inhalt: Maso Finiguerra, Baccio Baldini, Anonymous Fine Manner u.v.m.
Aus der Privatbibliothek von Prof. Dr. Dr. Kurt Rudolph.
Early Soviet Jet Fighters
von Yefim Gordon
Midland Publishing, 2002
Softcover
€59,99
(inkl. MwSt.)
Inhalt: The First Mikoyan Jet, The Jet 'Tadpoles' of Aleksandr Yakovlev u.v.m. By the end of the Second World War the USA and Great Britain had developed viable jet fighters, even if these aircraft came a bit too late to have a significant impact on the course of the conflict. Germany achieved greater success, using the Me 262 and He 162 jet fighters operationally in the closing stages of the war. In contrast, the Soviet Union lagged behind, even though research on turbojet engines had begun in the USSR in the late 1930s. This deficiency was recognized and at the end of the war, captured German jet aircraft and engines enabled the USSR to reverse-engineer the technology. Even so, the USSR struggled to catch up until in 1946, the British Labor government gifted the Soviets the latest in propulsion technology, the Rolls-Royce Nene and Derwent V engines. This inexplicable action allowed a much more capable generation of Soviet jet fighters to be born and by the end of the 1940s Soviet industry had caught up with, and in some respects surpassed the West, in jet aviation. Because of the Stalinist era in which the first Soviet jets were developed, up until now little has been known about the early post-war designs from the design bureaus of Mikoyan, Yakovlev, Lavochkin, Sukhoi and Alekseyev and the background to even relatively well-known types such as the MiG-9, La-9 and YAK-15 is barely documented. Other early jet types, proposals and projects were virtually unknown in the West. This gap is now redressed by the famous Soviet aviation historian Yefim Gordon and in his latest work he draws on extensive research in design bureau files, official documents and military archives, many of which have only very recently become available, having been labelled 'Top Secret' for decades. This volume presents, in considerable detail, the development, history and technical specifications of the earliest Soviet jet fighters and the extensive illustrations-around 750 photos, over 50 specially-commissioned color drawings and a host of line drawings--are mostly from previously classified sources the majority of which are previously unseen. This book is certain to be essential reading for aviation historians, enthusiasts and modelers.