We found 8231 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 8231 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
8231 item(s)/page
Waddingtons, Monopoly - Seven boxed modern editions of the board game Monopoly. Lot includes Monopoly 'Lord of the Rings Trilogy' edition; Monopoly 'One Direction; Monopoly 'World Cup France 98' and similar. Boxes appear to be in Good overall condition with signs of storage wear - contents are unchecked for completeness.
SELECTION OF JAPANESE MOVIE 'CHIRASHI' PROMO POSTERSall B5 approximately 7" X 10", movies including Taxi 3, Dora the Explorer, The Hotel Venus, Bend it like Beckham, Battle Royale, Old Boy, One Hour Photo, Pinocchio, The Sweetest Thing, Final Destination 2, the Rookie, The Day after Tomorrow, 8 Mile, etc. (110); together with four small Japanese promo posters for Charlie's Angels Full Throttle, approximately 14" x 10"; Japanese promotional fold out leaflets for Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Lord of the Rings and Johnny English
Approximately 70 Children’s and Fantasy Books to include Harry Potter, Ladybird, Tolkienand various vintage titles.Condition ReportApproximately 70 Children’s and Fantasy Books to include Harry Potter, Ladybird, Tolkienand various vintage titles.Hardbacks: ‘Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince’ by JK Rowling (2005). 1st Edition.‘William the Pirate’ (1950’s) by Richard Crompton. ‘True Confessions of Adrian Mole’(1980’s) by Margaret Hilda Roberts and Sue Townsend. ‘Pirates: An Adventure in Whaling’(2005) by Gideon Defoe, two 1 st Editions.Ladybird: Approximately 30 books to include: Santa Claus Has a Busy Night, NaturesRoundabout, Key Words Reading Scheme, Swiss Family Robinson, Aladdin, Under TheGround, Forest, Air, Ducks & Swans, Christmas Customs, How to Swim & Dive, Car Games,Puss In Boots, Dick Whittington, Tom Thumb, Houses & Homes, Metals, Henry V, The Party,Telling The Time, Your Body, The Seahorses, Rocks & Minerals, Pond Life, Beaky The Duck,Bob Bushtail, The Runaway x 2 copies, The First Day of The Holidays, The Motor Car, Rocks &Minerals, The Yellow Book of Bedtime Stories. Paperbacks…JRR Tolkien: ‘Farmer Giles of Ham’, ‘The Fellowship of The Ring’, ‘The Two Towers’(published by Unwin 1980’s). ‘The Silmarillion’ (published by Unicorn 1980’s). TolkienCentenary Collection (‘Lord Of The Rings’ trilogy published by Grafton in 1991)Terry Pratchett: Discworld novels: ‘Lords & Ladies’, ‘Men At Arms’, ‘Moving Pictures’,‘Reaper Man’ (published by Corgi 1990’s)Other Titles…1970’s: ‘Mr Gumpys Outing’ by John Burningham, ‘The Puffin Book of Nursery Rhymes’, ‘TheFrantic Phantom’ by Norman Hunter, ‘The Adventures of Uncle Lubin’ by W Heath Robinson,‘The Rudiments of Wisom’ by Tom Hunkin.1980’s: ‘The BFG’ by Roald Dahl, ‘Dirty Beasts‘ by Roald Dahl, ‘Small Harry and theToothache Pills’ by Michael Palin, ‘Dr Feggs Encyclopaedia of All Known World Knowledge’by Terry Jones & Michael Palin, ‘Mortimers Portrait on Glass’ by John Aitken, ‘The GreatPiratical Rumbustification’ by Margaret Mahy, ‘The Forest of Doom’ Published by Armada,‘The 6 th Armada Monster Book’, Nathan Elliot’s Hood’s Army Trilogy: ‘Earth Invaded’,‘Slaveworld’ and ‘The Liberators’. John Christopher’s Tripods: ‘The Pool of Fire’ and ‘TheWhite Mountains’ (BBC TV jackets), ‘Choose Your Own Adventure: Outlaws of SherwoodForest’, ‘Walkers Crisps: Children’s Pocket Trivia’, ‘The Reluctant Vampire’ by EricMorecombe.1990’s: ‘Stig of the Dump’ by Clive King (published by Puffin).2000’s: ‘Finding Nemo’ by Disney.
Tolkien (J.R.R.) [The Lord of the Rings], 3 vol., comprising The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers and The Return of the King, first editions, folding map at end of each vol., original red cloth, extremities rubbed, 8vo, 1954-55.⁂ Return of the King without signature mark '4' and text block not sagging.
Tolkien (J.R.R.) The Lord of the Rings, 3 vol., comprising The Fellowship of the Ring, tenth impression, hinges weak, cocked, 1961; The Two Towers, seventh impression, 1954; The Return of the King, sixth impression, jacket torn at upper joint and fore-edge, upper panel creased and torn, 1960, first editions, folding maps, ink ownership inscriptions, original cloth, dust-jackets, chipping to spine ends and corners, some browning and surface-soiling, 8vo.
A collection of eighty assorted British quad film posters, to include Pearl Harbour, Toy Story 2, Harry Potter & the Philosopher's Stone, Star Wars Episode II, Eyes Wide Shut, Charlie's Angels, The Matrix, Shaft, Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring, American Beauty, Pokemon, You've Got Mail, Human Traffic, She's All That, Ten Things I Hate About You, Virtual Sexuality, The Exorcist, etc. S/D (80)
Tolkien, J R R "The Two Towers, being the second part of the Lord of the Rings", George Allen Unwin Ltd 1954, inscription on ffep dated November 1954, red cloth, dj not price clipped "The Return of the King, being the third part of the Lord of the Rings", George Allen & Unwin 1955, name and date October 1955 on ffep, red cloth, dj not price clippedCondition ReportAdditional images Both folded maps present as shown
Lego - A Lego 'Lord Of The Rings' boxed set #9474 'The Battle Of Helm's Deep'. The set is unchecked for completeness, and is presented in a re-sealed box which appears in Fair Plus condition with some tearing, scuffs and general storage wear. Condition Report - The Vendor has not confirmed the contents. The box has been re-sealed with sellotape. On inspection the loose parts appear to belong to the set.
One box containing a quantity of various Lord of the Rings collectable figurines and action figures to include the Mail Order Release Eagle Publications figure & magazine mail order sets, a Lord of the Rings Fellowship of the Ring Vivid Imaginations Legolas action figure, together with various other related Lord of the Rings Collectables
VIII: Original struck gold Medals by Simon, Lord Protector, c. 1655-8, a struck gold medal by T. Simon, armoured and draped bust left, signed tho:simon:f below, olivervs dei gra reipvb angliæ sco et hib & protector, rev. pax qværitvr bello, lion séjant displaying arms, 39mm, 29.68g (Lessen, BNJ 1977, type 1 and pl. xii, 1, this piece; Nathanson p.25; MI I, 409/45; E 188a). Numerous surface and rim marks and scratches, otherwise about extremely fine with reflective fields, extremely rare and important £10,000-£15,000 --- Provenance: R. Huth Collection, Part II, Sotheby Auction, 8 April 1927, lot 15; SCMB M311, March 1940 (64049); bt Spink 1966. In Simon’s archive there are invoices for five medals and their recipients, namely two English officers and three ambassadors. The officers were Major Daniel Redman (August 1655) and Colonel John Sadler (September 1655); the ambassadors were the Swedish Agent, who would be either Christer Bonde or less likely Peter Coyet (between June and October 1656), James, Duke of Courland, Rudolf von Strauch (July or August 1657) and the Portuguese ambassador, Adelino José Rodrigues de Mello (January 1657/8). In the 17th century it was normal for a ruler to give out precious awards to diplomats in the form of such items as miniature pictures in jewelled mounts, or gold medals and chains, and Cromwell employed both methods. Hence the bust has drapery to give it an imperial look (like the later crown, where Simon, on paper, originally had Oliver in a plain coat, but the Council altered that to a Caesarean image on the coin). There are two enigmas with this important historical, artistic and numismatic medal. The first is the unsuccessful attempt to correlate the surviving examples with the known recipients (BNJ 1977, p.121). Simon’s invoice and a separate petition for payment covers five medals and their weights with chains: Courland was added to the 1657 Simon account also in the same year, but the Portuguese was in a subsequent petition of his on 13 July 1658. So it is possible that there were other separate official requests for medals and payments. We can only rely on the extant paper records, and these five are all that are known. The surviving medals are: 1. Gold. The present specimen. The lettering is absolutely not bifurcated, meaning a collar was used, and there may possibly be evidence of a witness line, but this is not certain for the edge is scored all round. There is certainly no trace of a loop having been removed. 2. Gold. British Museum, illustrated by Henfrey (pl. i, 6). No discernible witness line and apparently flat letter bases. 3. Gold. Montagu Collection (lot 234), present location unknown. With loop and ring and bifurcated letters. 4. Gold. Murdoch Collection (lot 152), present location also unknown. With bifurcated letters but no loop. 5. Silver. British Museum, ex Hawkins. Bifurcated letters and, with its badly cracked reverse, would have been made by Simon for the record when it was too late to do anything further. Had it been necessary, he could have made a new reverse die. It was made without a collar, which is somewhat surprising, because a collar could have prevented a broken die from completely destroying itself. It is possible that the Montagu and Murdoch specimens are one and the same, if mention of the loop and ring was omitted by the Murdoch cataloguer. The Montagu specimen sold to Spink and the Murdoch to Whelan for £9 more. The Murdoch catalogue annotated by Jacques Schulman implies that the medal was in fact ex Montagu, so there may only be three examples with just the Montagu/Murdoch medal being untraced. The second enigma is the problem of how these medals were made, what the dies looked like and how the chains were handled, for all had chains, which was their main monetary value. Assuming that the two gold medals known today were made with collars, as must have been the case with no fish-tail letters, then the dies had to be circular with no integral loop, as was true for many of Simon’s oval medals on round dies. The Montagu or Murdoch examples with bifurcated letters would simply have been struck without using collars, and that is acceptable. But what about the Montagu with a loop? This loop does not appear integral to the dies, and could simply have been gold soldered on - we do not know. Regardless of all this, the question remains – how were the expensive chains attached? Always, other Simon medals had loops and rings and the chains threaded through the ring (for example the 1653-4 naval rewards). The missing Montagu specimen might tell us if this bifurcated striking without a collar does or does not have an integral loop in the die(s). A separate surround mount with ring could have been supplied with the medal to take the chains, for the chains most certainly would not have been given with the medal with no method of attachment. Thus the type of dies, the question of bifurcation or not, and the ring to hold the chains, all tie in to these unanswered questions. This medal is sometimes incorrectly called an ‘Inauguration Medal’, which it was not. The inauguration of the Lord Protector was in December 1653, but no medal was made for the occasion or later; the term Lord Protector medal, too, is simply a modern composed designation
Tolkien (J.R.R.) The Hobbit, 2nd edition (5th impression), London: George Allen & Unwin, 1951, colour frontispiece, illustrations, map endpapers, top edge green, original green pictorial cloth, dust jacket, spine a little toned, a few small chips and tears, 8voQty: (1)NOTESA good copy of the 2nd edition, the 5th printing overall, and notable for the revisions by Tolkien to chapter 5, 'Riddles in the Dark'. As Tolkien was writing The Lord of the Rings he became aware of the inconsistencies in the character of Gollum, who originally was less demented and corrupted by his association with the Ring, and therefore at odds with his desperate obsession with the Ring in Lord of the Rings, hence the substantial revisions to chapter 5 in this present edition.
Tolkien (J.R.R.) The Hobbit, 9th impression, London: George Allen & Unwin, 1957, colour frontispiece, illustrations, previous owner inscription, small marginal water stain, map endpapers, original green cloth, spine a little faded, dust jacket, lacking spine, some tears, losses and repairs, 8vo, together with Farmer Giles of Ham, 1st edition, London: George Allen and Unwin, 1949, colour frontispiece and illustrations by Pauline Baynes, light partial offsetting to endpapers, original cloth, dust jacket, repaired at head to verso, 8vo, with others related including The Lord of the Rings, 1st one volume India paper edition, 1969, The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, 1981 and The Children of Húrin, de luxe edition, 2007 (in original shrinkwrap)Qty: (10)
Tolkien (J.R.R.) The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, 2nd edition, 2nd impression, 1967; The Two Towers, 4th impression, 1956; The Return of the King, 2nd impression, November 1955, folding map to each (both maps detached in Fellowship and Return of the King, Return of the King map with one blank corner torn away, Two Towers map tipped-in at rear pastedown), occasional light spotting, previous owner signatures, top edge red, original red cloth, some fading to Two Towers and Return of the King spines, edges a little rubbed, 8voQty: (3)
Tolkien (J.R.R.) The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, 2nd edition, 2nd impression, 1967; The Two Towers, 2nd edition, 1966; The Return of the King, 2nd edition, 1966, folding map at end of each, previous owner inscription to front endpapers, original red cloth, dust jackets, faint ring mark to Two Towers front panel, a little rubbed with tiny tears at spine ends, 8voQty: (3)
Tolkien (J.R.R.) The History of Middle-Earth, 12 volumes, edited by Christopher Tolkien, 1984-1996, volumes 7, 9 & 12 1st editions, the others all later impressions or reprints, volume 4 a Book Club Associates edition, volumes 10 & 11 US later impressions, illustrations, volume 12 textblock a little toned, original cloth, dust jackets, some without printed price to flaps (i.e. for export), a few tears and some fading, 8vo, together with others by Tolkien including The Adventures of Tom Bombadil, 2nd impression, 1962 (with clear tape marks to endpapers), The Silmarillion, 1977, Unfinished Tales, 1st edition, 1980, David Day's A Tolkien Bestiary, 1979 and The Lord of the Rings, 3 volumes, Folio Society, 9th printing, 2002Qty: (26)
700-1100 AD, Viking Age. A heavy bronze bracelet with punched dot and box decoration, and incised lines on the terminals thought to be a stylised depictions of dragons, which frequently appear on Viking-age ornaments. In Viking society, arm rings and bracelets were not just decorative, but also served to mark bonds of loyalty between a lord and his followers in a culture where honour was a matter of life and death. Such items were also. given to young men to mark their coming of age and bracelets of precious metals were also used as currency in a time before the widespread availability of coinage. Dragons were important figures in Norse mythology, and were known for their powerful, destructive nature, perhaps reflecting a claim to power by the individual who once owned this bracelet. Good condition, beautiful patina; Size: L:52mm / W:66mm ; 35g; Provenance: Private London collection, formed in the 1980-90s on the UK and European art market.
700-1100 AD, Viking Age. A heavy silver coiled bracelet intended to evoke the form of a snake. In Viking society, arm rings and bracelets were not just decorative, but also served to mark bonds of loyalty between a lord and his followers in a culture where honour was a matter of life and death. Such items were also. given to young men to mark their coming of age and bracelets of precious metals were also used as currency in a time before the widespread availability of coinage. In Norse mythology, Jormungand (pronounced “YOUR-mun-gand;†Old Norse Jörmungandr, “Great Beastâ€), also called the “Midgard Serpent,†is a snake or dragon who lives in the ocean that surrounds Midgard, the visible world. He was so enormous that his body forms a circle around the entirety of Midgard. He’s one of the three children of Loki and the giantess Angrboda, along with Hel and Fenrir. Good condition; beautiful patina;Size: L:30mm / W:30mm ; 19.2g; Provenance: From an old British collection, acquired on the UK art market in the 1990s.
A COLLECTION OF 2000AD COMICS JUDGE DREAD EARLY 1980S, together with a few 1990s and three 2000 AD presents crisis (115), FANTASY MEDIA MAGAZINES 1979/1980 INCLUDES VOLUME 1 NUMBERS 1-5 AND VOLUME 2 NUMBER 3, featuring Battlestar Galactica, Lord of the Rings, Star Trek, Ray Bradbury, Anne McCaffrey interviews etc (6) and TWELVE ISSUES "VOYAGER" MAGAZINE No 1-11 AND NO 13 198-1985 featuring Patrick Moore, ET, Return of the Jedi, Spacelab 1 etc
TOLKIEN, J.R.R. 'THE HOBBIT', 'THE LORD OF THE RINGS' AND 'POEMS AND STORIES', three de luxe editions, in presentation boxes, published by Allen & Unwin (3) Condition Report Lord of the Rings - fifth impression 1976. Poems and Stories - 1980, no edition number. The Hobbit - 1976, no edition number. The books are in good condition, the cases are marked, two have splits to the corners Condition Report It lists various edition from First published in 1937 through to De Luxe edition 1976, it doesn't mention any other editions for 1976
A COLLECTION OF ASSORTED CHESS SETS, various styles and materials, to include Oriental, a Lord of the Rings set (one piece missing), cased three player set, with a boxed Parker Lord of the Rings Risk board game, appears complete box opened but all pieces still sealed in original packaging (8)

-
8231 item(s)/page