Lot 58
Insurance.- Magens (Nicholas) An Essay on Insurances, explaining the Nature of the various Kinds of Insurance practised by the different Commercial States of Europe..., 2 vol., first edition in English, by J. Haberkorn, 1755.
Hammer Price: £550
Description
Magens (Nicholas) An Essay on Insurances, explaining the Nature of the various Kinds of Insurance practised by the different Commercial States of Europe..., 2 vol., first edition in English, bookplates to pastedown, pagination of pp. 433-466 in vol. 2 corrected by pasted-over printed slips, some foxing, small library 'withdrawn' stamp to rear pastedowns, contemporary calf, rubbed, new red & green morocco spine labels, corners bumped, spines chipped, joints cracked but holding firm, still a very clean and attractive set overall, [Goldsmiths' 9045; Higgs 975; Kress 5453], 4to, by J. Haberkorn [for] W. Baker, 1755.
⁂ Magens settled in London in the early 1700s, where he became an insurance trader and director of the London Assurance Company. His Essay on Insurances is a much amended and expanded translation of his Versuch uber Assecuranzen, Hamburg, 1753, produced because of the lack of any work on mercantile and maritime insurance in England. Adam Smith quotes him with respect (as "Mr Meggens") in Wealth of Nations and he owned a copy of Magens's explanations to his well-known Universal Merchant.
Description
Magens (Nicholas) An Essay on Insurances, explaining the Nature of the various Kinds of Insurance practised by the different Commercial States of Europe..., 2 vol., first edition in English, bookplates to pastedown, pagination of pp. 433-466 in vol. 2 corrected by pasted-over printed slips, some foxing, small library 'withdrawn' stamp to rear pastedowns, contemporary calf, rubbed, new red & green morocco spine labels, corners bumped, spines chipped, joints cracked but holding firm, still a very clean and attractive set overall, [Goldsmiths' 9045; Higgs 975; Kress 5453], 4to, by J. Haberkorn [for] W. Baker, 1755.
⁂ Magens settled in London in the early 1700s, where he became an insurance trader and director of the London Assurance Company. His Essay on Insurances is a much amended and expanded translation of his Versuch uber Assecuranzen, Hamburg, 1753, produced because of the lack of any work on mercantile and maritime insurance in England. Adam Smith quotes him with respect (as "Mr Meggens") in Wealth of Nations and he owned a copy of Magens's explanations to his well-known Universal Merchant.