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412-35207 Pensive senior woman looking away on winter beach
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412-35202 Pensive senior woman relaxing on beach boardwalk
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412-35185 Senior woman with hand in long gray hair on winter beach
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412-35199 Pensive senior couple hugging and looking at ocean view on windy winter beach
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412-35179 Affectionate senior couple hugging and looking away on beach
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412-35177 Smiling mother holding baby daughter at window
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990_16_9-Cuba_3HR Kingston, Jamaica: August 14, 1962 The coach and four members of the Cuban weightlifting team defected from Cuba while attending the Central American and Caribbean Games in Jamaica. They were expected to get visas that would enable them to gain political asylum in the united States.
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925_07_MW023206 Naga sadhus (monks) walk with great fan fare and beating of drums in a procession to the ghats
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925_07_MW023205 Naga sadhus (monks) walk with great fan fare and beating of drums in a procession to the ghats
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981_05_LC090411_0334_1 Great Expectations,' By H.H. Couldery
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iblimu10190136 Stained glass window depicting Hope and Love designed by Henry Holiday 1890s, Fressingfield church, Suffolk, England, UK
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akg7079422 Elias van Nijmegen (Nijmegen 1667 - Rotterdam 1755), Family of Darius at Alexander the Great, wallpaper painting canvas linen oil paint, In the battle of Issos in 333 BC. beats Alexander the armies of the Persian king Dareios who flees. However, the family of Dareios consisting of his mother, his wife Stateira, two daughters and five-year-old son in the hands of Alexander. Against the expectation, he does not let them kill but maintains their status; they will be called queen prince and princess. In 324, Alexander would marry daughter of Dareios who, like her mother, was called Stateira history piece Greek history generosity restraint Rotterdam City Triangle Boompjes Scheepmakershaven Rederijstraat Katwijk Elias van Nijmegen Originating from the Katwijk house, which was demolished in 1901, behind Boompjes 70 and stretching to the Scheepmakershaven. The building was demolished for the construction of Rederijstraat.
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alb3671726 Virgil's Tomb by Moonlight, with Silius Italicus Declaiming. Artist: Joseph Wright (Wright of Derby) (British, Derby 1734-1797 Derby). Dimensions: 40 x 50 in. (101.6 x 127 cm). Date: 1779.Wright depicts a site that had long been a popular destination for visitors to Naples. Indeed he could reasonably expect that Londoners who viewed this painting at the Royal Academy in 1779 would recognize the tomb of Virgil (70-19 B.C.), author of the Aeneid. Perhaps more obscure is the figure, Silius Italicus, the Roman orator who commemorated the anniversary of the great poet's death each year by reading his verses aloud within the tomb. As a meditation on mortality, Wright fittingly contrasts the flickering glow of the lantern and the silvery moonlight spreading over the landscape. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb1459761 Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial. Bronze statues that depict the Great Depression. Waiting in a bread line by George Segal. Washington D.C. United States.
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alb4092502 Gharwalis [sic] lining a reserve trench in expectation of a German attack. 1915. 'India Office Official Record of the Great War'. 22-Apr-21. The photographs appear in a variety of sizes, shapes and colours including shades of blue, green and brown. They record scenes of military life as experienced by the Indian and British armies in France during the First World War. The battle scenes are not real but staged from maneouvres. Source: Photo 21/(72). Author: H. D Girdwood.
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alb4153553 A Woman Sitting by the Window ("Evening Thou Bringest All"), from the first issue of Specimens of Polyautography. Henry Fuseli (Swiss, active in England, 1741-1825); published by Philipp André (German, active London, 1800-1805); and James Heath (British, 1757-1834). Date: 1803. Dimensions: 232 x 318 mm (image/primary support); 372 x 490 mm (secondary support). Lithograph in black on cream wove paper, tipped onto mount with aquatint border in gray on cream wove paper. Origin: United Kingdom. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA.
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alb3721414 La parisiens dans l'attente de la ...comète. Dated: 19th century. Medium: lithograph. Museum: National Gallery of Art, Washington DC. Author: HONORÉ DAUMIER.
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alb4087672 Ill Used'. Great Expectations. By Charles Dickens. [Twenty-one engraved plates, including a titlepage, after etchings by F. W. Pailthorpe.]. London : Robson & Kerslake, 1885. Source: K.T.C.28.b.20 page 6.
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alb5199603 Marriage Good Wishes, Brush and watercolor on paper, Two ladders form a flower arbor over a path. Inscribed at top: 'The Ladder of Matrimony'. At top of ladder: 'Congratulation'; at left: Consideration, Dissimulation, Disapprobation, Provocation, Detestation, Desperation, Separation'; at right: 'Acceptation, Palpitation, Hesitation, Declaration, Expectation, Flirtation, Admiration'., England, 18301835, Greeting Card, Greeting Card.
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alb5196189 Sampler, Martha Savage, Medium: silk embroidery on wool foundation Technique: counted and uncounted stitches; cross, satin, eyelet, knots and couching stitches on plain weave foundation; interlacing, Within an angularly curving border of carnations, bands of text and pattern, women in ball gowns embroidered in relief, and an oak tree with two stags, a snail and a caterpillar. At the bottom, the inscription 'Martha Savage Her Work 1769' and the initials A.S. between the ladies, with a verse:, 'All you my frinds (sic) who now expect to see a piece of work thus performed by me. Cast not a smile upon my small endeavor. I'll strive to mend and be obedient ever.', 'See now the lillies flourish white and fair, see now the ravens fed from heaven are, The neer distrust thy God for cloth and bread whilst lillies flourish and the raven's fed.', England, 1769, embroidery & stitching, Sampler.
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alb5175320 Death of Lord Nelson, John Bury, Medium: cotton Technique: block printed on plain weave, Large-scale design, block-printed in madder colors, with pencilled blue on a 'tea' ground. Various large flowers in shades of red, palms, and foliage among which appear attributes of Admiral Nelson's life. Upper left, an urn on a base with legend: THE NILE, arch, pyramid, and man on camel. Below an arch, Nelson's figure with drawn sword; legend above: 'Lord Nelson's Last Signal,' and below: 'England Expects Every Man to do His Duty.' Right, a pyrimidal monument, flowers entwined; eagle at top; two dark figures right and left. Bottom, on base: TO THE MEMORY OF ABOUKIR, COPENHAGEN and TRAFALGAR. Sphinx at right of base., Sabden, England, 180607, printed, dyed & painted textiles, Textile, Textile.
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alb2098490 JEAN SIMMONS in CADENAS ROTAS (1946) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by DAVID LEAN. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS. Portuguese title: GRANDES ESPERANÇAS.
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alb1789117 Woman waiting for crossing the street. Hampstead. London, England, United Kingdom.
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alb9503041 Water pitcher, 18th century, 17 x 26 in. (43.18 x 66.04 cm), Bronze, Nigeria, 18th century, This specially shaped vessel, called an aquamanile (from the Latin for 'water' and 'hand'), was used by kings, or obas, of the Benin Kingdom during hand-washing ceremonies. It was filled at the top of the head, its tail acted as a handle, and water was poured from its two nostrils. The leopard was an important symbol of the oba, embodying ferocity, intelligence, agility, and speed. The balanced posture indicates strength, while the perked ears and bared fangs show awareness and aggressiontraits the king was expected to have. Animal-shaped aquamaniles were introduced between 900 and 1200 from the Islamic world to Europe, and brought to the Benin peoples by Portuguese traders who came by sea. In Benin belief, the mid-fifteenth-century king Ewuare the Great is credited with gathering aquamanile vessels from the underwater palace of Olokun, the god of the sea.
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alb2162810 ALEC GUINNESS in CADENAS ROTAS (1946) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by DAVID LEAN. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS. Portuguese title: GRANDES ESPERANÇAS.
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alb3656262 The Plays of William Shakespeare, vol. 1, containing The Tempest, Two Gentlemen of Verona, Merry Wives of Windsor. Author: William Shakespeare (British, Stratford-upon-Avon 1564-1616 Stratford-upon-Avon). Dimensions: 8 9/16 x 5 9/16 x 1 1/2 in. (21.8 x 14.2 x 3.8 cm). Editor: Alexander Chalmers, A.M. (British (born Scotland), Aberdeen 1759-1834 London); George Steevens (British, Stepney 1734-1800 Hampstead). Engraver: James Neagle (British, London 1765- 1822 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania); William Bromley (British, 1769-1842). Illustrator: Henry Fuseli (Swiss, Zürich 1741-1825 London). Printer: C. and R. Baldwin (London). Published in: London. Publisher: F. C. & J. Rivington (London); John Johnson (London). Date: 1805.Fuseli designed the illustrations in this ten-volume set of Shakepeare's plays, edited by George Steevens and published in 1803. Bromley's print for The Merry Wives of WIndsor responds to act 5, scene 5, where Falstaff meets Mistress Ford and Mistress Quickly in WIndsor Great Park at night. The print translates a loose sketch in the Museum's collection (1975.131.232) into a tightly controlled image with no detail left to the imagination. A high degree of finish was expected from a good reproductive engraver in this period, and details of dress and expression have been added to clarify the narrative. The ladies' turned heads indicate their awareness of the approaching townsfolk, as their flirtatious gestures distract Falstaff from his coming humiliation. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb1327546 JOHN MILLS and VALERIE HOBSON in CADENAS ROTAS (1946) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by DAVID LEAN. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS. Portuguese title: GRANDES ESPERANÇAS.
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alb3667597 The Martyrdom of Saint Cecilia (Cartoon for a Fresco). Artist: Domenichino (Domenico Zampieri) (Italian, Bologna 1581-1641 Naples). Dimensions: Irregular oval: 67 13/16 × 59 9/16 in. (172.2 × 151.3 cm). Date: 1612-14.This monumental, exquisitely rendered composition is among the most significant extant cartoons (full-scale drawings) by Domenichino. It was a preparatory design for the central portion of his fresco of the Martyrdom of Saint Cecilia, painted on the left wall of the Polet chapel at San Luigi dei Francesi, the French church of Rome. Domenichino received the contract for the frescoes on February 16, 1612, from Pierre Polet (died in Rome in 1613), a prelate from the diocese of Noyon who was dedicated to the cult of Saint Cecilia. In 1599, he had attended the exhumation of her relics from a casket underneath the high altar of her titular church at Santa Cecilia in Trastevere in Rome. According to Jacobus de Voragine's Golden Legend, Cecilia (2nd or 3rd century A.D., Rome), a virtuous virgin matron was to be burned in a boiling bath, "but she remained in the bath as in a cool place, nor felt so much as a drop of sweat." She then suffered three decapitating blows of the sword that did not sever her head, and since a fourth blow was prohibited by Roman law, she lived on for three more days, during which she gave all her possessions to the poor. On her last day, Saint Cecilia entrusted to Pope Urban all the Christians that she had converted and beckoned him to consecrate her house as a church. Domenichino's final work alludes to this part of the story, and, here, the moribund Cecilia is seen at center, attended by a maid servant, a bearded man, and a child at right. Domenichino holds a pivotal place in the development of Baroque Classicism in Rome, and his frescoes in the Polet chapel at San Luigi dei Francesi are amongst the principal examples of that style. Since this is the most important Italian Baroque drawing in the United States, the following, more indepth observations may be added. This is the only large cartoon (full-scale drawing) for a major work by an important Renaissance or Baroque artist in this country. Two cartoon fragments by Domenichino, for the left and right sides of the composition of the Martyrdom of Saint Cecilia, are preserved in the Musée du Louvre, Département des arts graphiques inv. nos. 9080 and 9081 (Paris). They too have pricked outlines for the transfer of the design and are drawn in a similar technique and medium on a surface comprised of multiple sheets of paper joined together. The drawing surface of the Metropolitan Museum's cartoon is comprised of fourteen large sheets of paper, which was originally of a blue-gray hue like many other drawings of this time. As is typical of Renaissance and Baroque artistic practice, the sheets of paper of the cartoon were glued together (probably with flour paste), with overlapping seams. This was done in the artist's studio, by the artist himself or by a studio assistant. Domenichino's cartoon is drawn very carefully in charcoal with white chalk hightlighting, but the handling is very broad in many passages and many pentimenti are evident. The strokes of charcoal in important passages of the design are rubbed together to create effects of sfumato, but many other passages of parallel hatching and outlines were left untouched by the artist. The technique of drawing cartoons is often very bold, because such drawings are meant to be seen from a far viewing distance. The outlines of the cartoon were pricked for the transfer of the design, but in this case this was probably to transfer the design to a "substitute cartoon," which was the object actually used on the moist fresco surface itself. This technique of the "substitute cartoon" saved the valuable carefully executed drawing from destruction in the working process. Once Domenichino's beautifully drawn cartoon served its purpose in the artist's studio, it was preserved as a collector's item: it was cut in the shape of an oval, lined with canvas, and was mounted on a stretcher like a picture for display before 1705 or 1706. The cartoon's frame dates to the eighteenth century. Domenichino has focused attention on the drama of Saint Cecilia's suffering, her faith and her spirituality at the moment of death. Her idealized beauty, expression, and corporeal grace of pose are meant to convey the transcendental beauty of her Christian virtue. The viewer's reaction to this scene of the saint's noble suffering and unwavering faith was critically important to the artist's thinking in developing the composition. The figures at right participate as witnesses to the scene. The gestures of these secondary figures at right play out the reactions of empathy and contemplation the artist expected from the viewers seeing the composition: the devout practioners attending church.There are slightly differing accounts on the martyrdom of Saint Cecilia, who was already accepted into the hagiographic canon by the fifth century A.D. The main source on her life, Jacobus de Voragine's Golden Legend (thirteenth century), states that she was to be burned in a boiling bath, "but she remained in the bath as in a cool place, nor felt so much as a drop of sweat." The virtuous virgin matron then suffered three decapitating blows of the sword that did not sever her head, and since a fourth blow was prohibited by law, she lived on for three more days, during which she gave all her possessions to the poor (the mainscene fresoed on the opposite wall of the Polet chapel). On her last day, Saint Cecilia entrusted to Pope Urban all the Christians that she had converted and beckoned him to consecrate her house as a church. Domenichino's composition of the saint's martyrdom includes the pope and the converts in an atemporal arrangement that also alludes to the consecration of her house. Domenichino's biographers, Giovanni Pietro Bellori (1672) and Giambattista Passeri (1772) also describe the particulars of Saint Cecilia's martyrdom.Domenichino represented the agonizing Saint Cecilia within the imposing interior of a Roman bath (presumably the caldarium that was part of her house),where the prefect Almachius had unsuccessfully attempted to have her martyred. The contract between patron and artist governing the commission of this fresco, dated February 16,1612, mentions this setting.In 1599, the patron commissioning the fresco, Pierre Polet had apparently attended the exhumation of the saint's relics from a casket underneath the high altar of the basilica of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere, and this event was recorded. The ceremony of recognition of the relics was officiated by the titular of the basilica, Cardinal Paolo Sfondrati, on October, 19, 1599, and was witnessed by the great debunker of saints of the Counter-Reformation movement, Cesare Baronio, who pronounced the relics authentic.The cartoons by Domenichino for the two main frescoed scenes in the Polet chapel at San Luigi dei Francesi are also cited in the 1612 contract between the patron and the artist. According to the document, the cartoons were to be retained by the priest Don Mass. Bruni, the prior of the church of San Luigi dei Francesi. The cartoons for the sides of the fresco of the Martyrdom of Saint Cecilia (the fragments today in the Louvre) passed to the collection of the painter Charles Le Brun, then to the French royal collections and the Louvre.The cartoons by Domenichino were from the beginning regarded as the key drawings for the Polet Chapel, and the central portion of the composition with the Martyrdom of Saint Cecilia (i.e., the work today at the Met) was probably especially prized. This may well explain why this is the only major surviving cartoon for the project which Charles Le Brun was unable to acquire when he visited Rome after Domenichino's death. It is clear from a reading of the contract of February 16, 1612, between Domenichino and his patron, that the first owner of the proposed cartoon section for the Martyrdom of Saint Cecilia must have been the priest - possibly the prior of San Luigi dei Francesi -- Don Mass. Bruni, who must have also owned the Louvre cartoon fragments for the composition, the ones which Charles Le Brun obtained during his Roman sojourn in 1642-48. The 1664 inventory of the possessions of Francesco Raspantino, Domenichino's pupil in Naples and artistic heir, lists three preparatory cartoon fragments for the Polet chapel decoration by his master: the "Marriage of Saint Cecilia to Valerian," the "Apotheosis of Saint Cecilia," and "Saint Cecilia Refusing to Sacrifice to the Idols." Curiously, none of these are for parts of the fresco decoration that were deemed significant in the 1612 contract. Finally, Charles Le Brun was apparently unable to procure the central and main portion of the composition of the "Martyrdom of Saint Cecilia," for he had it copied in full scale in a large drawing that is in the Musée du Louvre. It may (or may not) be the cartoon referred to in a Chigi inventory of 1705/6. (Carmen C. Bambach, September 2015). Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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les03010244 Rhind Mathematical Papyrus. A number of documents have survived that allow us insight into the ancient Egyptians' approach to mathematics. This papyrus is the most extensive. It is not a theoretical treatise, but a list of practical problems encountered in administrative and building works. The text contains eighty-four problems concerned with numerical operations, practical problem-solving, and geometrical shapes. The majority of literate Egyptians were scribes and they were expected to undertake various tasks. These must have demanded some mathematical as well as writing skills. The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus is also important as a historical document, since the copyist noted that he was writing in year 33 of the reign of Apophis, the penultimate king of the Hyksos 15th Dynasty (about 1650-1550 BCE) and was copied after an original of the 12th Dynasty (about 1985-1795 BCE). On the other side of the papyrus " year 11" is mentioned, with a reference to the taking of some Egyptian towns. This probably refers to the fighting between the Egyptians and the Hyksos before the beginning of the New Kingdom (1550-1070 BCE). However, it is not certain to which king " year 11" refers. Length: 319 cm, width: 34.3 cm; from Thebes, Egypt Around 1550 BCE (end of the Second Intermediate Period) EA 10057. Location: British Museum, London, Great Britain.
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ado00067865 Nathaniel Bentley, known as Dirty Dick, English hardware dealer, who refused to wash following the death of his fiance on their wedding day. He could be a possible inspiration for Miss Havisham in Charles Dickens' Great Expectations (England). In the 18th century. Author: UNKNOWN ARTIST.
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alb5564513 JEAN SIMMONS and JOHN MILLS in CADENAS ROTAS (1946) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by DAVID LEAN. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS. Portuguese title: GRANDES ESPERANÇAS.
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ado00058329 Postal service in France. During World War I, in Brittany, the postman distributes a very expected letter and which commes from the front (France). Ca. 1915. Author: Unknown photographer.
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ado00062443 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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ado00062440 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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ado00062435 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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ado00062442 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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ado00062439 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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ado00062434 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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ado00062433 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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ado00062444 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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ado00062446 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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ado00062437 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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ado00062445 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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ado00062441 World War I. Picture reserved to the schools produced by Service de la Propagande du Ministre de l'Instruction Publique (Propaganda Department of the Public Education Ministry) on the New Year of 1918 occasion (France). In 1918. Author: Victor Prouv.
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akg3693622 Benjamin Gratz Brown; American politician (1871-1873 Governor of Missouri). Lexintgton (Kentucky) 28. 5. 1826 - Kirkwood (Missouri) 13. 12. 1884. - "Great Expectation". - (Cartoon on the presidential election campaign in 1872: B. Gratz Brown, candidate of the Liberal Republicans for the office of the vice-president, as the proverbial mouse that the mountain gives birth. From the mouse left from Reuben Fenton, Horace Greeley, Lyman Trumbull, Carl Schurz, and Thomas Tipton). Wood engraving by Thomas Nast (1840-1902). From: Harper's Weekly, New York, 18 May 1872.
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akg157210 Forbes Robertson, Eric. 1865-1935. "Great Expectations", 1894. Öl auf Leinwand, 75 × 100 cm. Northampton, Central Museum Art Gallery. Museum: Northampton, Central Museum Art Gallery. Author: ERIC FORBES-ROBERTSON.
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alb3305700 Great expectations, three dogs in front of a dish with food, engraving from a painting by Horatio Henri Couldery (1832-after 1910), illustration from the magazine The Illustrated London News, volume LXII, March 1, 1873.
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alb4088747 'The Terrible Stranger in the Churchyard'. Pip encounters the convict, Magwitch, in a graveyard. Illustration for the novel 'Great Expectations'. Great Expectations. By Charles Dickens. [Twenty-one engraved plates, including a titlepage, after etchings by F. W. Pailthorpe.]. London : Robson & Kerslake, 1885. Source: K.T.C.28.b.20 page 2.
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alb4081987 Map of Hampstead. The individual settlements that make up this area of London are shown by red blocks, with boundary lines indicating the fields separating them. Shading and soft interlining indicate relief, neatly illustrated at Primrose Hill, the summit of which is left bare. The barracks at the edge of Hyde Park are illustrated at the very bottom of the map. The dark blue-black line running from West Drayton to Brentford and Paddington is the Grand Junction Canal. This was London's principal link to the rest of Britain's canals, allowing the passage of goods to and from the industrial towns of the North and Midlands. Hyett includes a ground plan of Kenwood House in Hampstead, showing a level of detail much greater than might be expected from a map with a scale of two inches-to-the-mile. [Hampstead.]. 1807. Map scale ratio: 2'' : 1 Mile (1 : 31680). Length: 51; Width: 30 Pen and ink on paper . Source: OSD 152, no.20. Author: William Hyett.
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alb4054672 "May I -- May I?!!" . Great Expectations. By Charles Dickens. [Twenty-one engraved plates, including a titlepage, after etchings by F. W. Pailthorpe.]. London : Robson & Kerslake, 1885. Source: K.T.C.28.b.20 page 7.
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alb4057242 Pip at the finger post. Illustrated title page for the novel 'Great Expectations'. Great Expectations. By Charles Dickens. [Twenty-one engraved plates, including a titlepage, after etchings by F. W. Pailthorpe.]. London : Robson & Kerslake, 1885. Source: K.T.C.28.b.20 title page.
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alb4069642 "The Guileless Confectioner". Great Expectations. By Charles Dickens. [Twenty-one engraved plates, including a titlepage, after etchings by F. W. Pailthorpe.]. London : Robson & Kerslake, 1885. Source: K.T.C.28.b.20 page 9.
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alb4066587 "Aged P". Great Expectations. By Charles Dickens. [Twenty-one engraved plates, including a titlepage, after etchings by F. W. Pailthorpe.]. London : Robson & Kerslake, 1885. Source: K.T.C.28.b.20 page 10.
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alb3109671 Great expectations/1894. Museum: NORTHAMPTON ART GALLERY / NORTHAMPTO / G. BRETAÑA. Author: ERIC FORBES ROBERTSON.
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alb4061175 "The old place by the kitchen firelight". Joe and Biddy, with their child, sitting in front of a fireplace. Pip looking at them from behind a door. Great Expectations. By Charles Dickens. [Twenty-one engraved plates, including a titlepage, after etchings by F. W. Pailthorpe.]. London : Robson & Kerslake, 1885. Source: K.T.C.28.b.20 page 20.
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alb4072107 "Trabb's boy". Great Expectations. By Charles Dickens. [Twenty-one engraved plates, including a titlepage, after etchings by F. W. Pailthorpe.]. London : Robson & Kerslake, 1885. Source: K.T.C.28.b.20 page 11.
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alb1508457 Charles Dickens, from a recent daguerreotype by Mayall, 1 December, 1855. Memoir of Charles Dickens. The lives of men of genius when happy, are ordinarily uneventful. It may, perhaps, be one of the reaspms for the paucity of materials available for the life of him who was "not for an age but for all time," that our Shakespeare went through life a prosperous gentlemen, that he had shares, and rents, and messages, and tenements, and that he died at last in affluence, in his bed, in his own house, near the pleasant town he loved so well. But the most moving and most copious literary memoirs are merely records of miseries. The blindness of Milton, the weary life-struggle of Dryden, the deformity of Pope, the persecution of Defoe, and the melancholy of Swift; the stern woe of Dante, the heart-sickness of Petrarch, the despair of Butler; Tasso's fetters, Cervantes' neglect, Camoens' hospital pallet, Guilbert's starvation, and Chatterton's suicide; all these are bold and jutting headlands in the seascape of life - stern and rugged rocks, all beaten by the tempests of time, and seamed and furrowed by the salt waters of sorrow. These the painter can seize and transfer to canvas, giving force and variety to his picture. He can paint the surging billows and the angry sky; but what scope has he for display when the sea is smooth as glass, calm as a good man's bossom, when the bark glides placidly along, when the log of the mariner may be summed up in two words: Genius or Success?. These two words are really the summary of the career of the famous writer whose portrait graces our page. There are no moving accidents by flood or field in his life to tell; his life has been one of uniform industry and prosperity. Yet, as our readers must naturally be anxious to learn even the minutest particulars concerning one who possesses such remarkable talents, and has occupied for so long so conspicuous a position in society, we will proceed, to the best of our ability, to tell how Mr. Dickens won that fame he preserves so staunchly and wears so gently.. Charles Dickens was born in February, 1812, at Landport, Portsmouth. His father, Mr. John Dickensm, had been, in the earlier part of his life, a clerk in the Navy Pay department, and his duties rendered it necessary that he should make frequent changes of residence from one naval dockyard to another - moving from Portsmouth to Plymouth, and from Portsmouth again to Sheerness and Chatham. The future novelist received his education in a school in or near Rochester; and it is to his youthful peregrinations in the county of Kent, and his Kentish schoolboy experiences, that we may ascribe much of the minute knowledge he displays in his writings on the topography and scenery of the county of "hops, apples, and pretty girls," and of the fondness he evinces for recurrence to Kentish scenes and Kentish people. "On revient toujours à ses premières amours." The memorable equestrian expedition of Mr. Pickwick (as noteworthy, surely, as the expedition of "Humphrey Clinker") started from the Mitre, at Rochester; Dingley Dell was near Cobham; the catastrophe of the Tubbs family took place ar Ramsgate; it was in the Theatre Royal, Portsmouth, that Nicholas Nickleby played Romeo to poor Smike's Apothecary; it was to Dover, through Rochester, Chatham, and Maidstone, that little David Copperfield travelled, weary and footsore, to his aunt Trotwood; it was at Canterbury he went to school to Doctor Strong; and, finally, it was in the keeping room of Master Richard Watt's charity, at Rochester, that the "seven poor travellers," "not being rogues or proctors," told their Christmas stories.. We have no means of judging how far, or to what age, the scholastic curriculum of Charles Dickens extended. We learn, however, that at the peace, Mr. John Dickens retired, with a pension, from the Government service, and, removing to London, found lucrative employment for his talents, as a reporter for the public press. It is therefore probable that his son completed his education in the metropolis. The fact of his father being a newspaper reporter, would, it has been somewhat flippantly remarked, have "familiarised him with 'copy'" from an early age; yet such implied familiarity did not, on his entrance into authorship, exempt him from the delightful tremour, that anguish of delight, incidental to all tyros in printers' ink, and that moved him, as he himself graphically describes, after reading in a magazine his first effusion, "dropped stealthily one evening at twilight, with fear and trembling, into a dark letter box, up a dark court in Fleet Street," to walk down to Westminster Hall, and turn into it for half an hour, because his eyes "were so dimmed with joy and pride that they could not bear the street and were not fit to be seen there.". Like many other future celebrities thrust into lawyers' dens to engross deeds instead of penning stanzas, the youthful Charles Dickens was for some time in an attorney's office. We were turning over a biographical notice of the author of "Pickwick" the other day, where, in reference to this portion of his career, it was stated that "his father took the preliminary steps to make him an attorney;" but this we think to have been no more the case than the appointment of a youth to a Clerkship in the Stamp Office is a "preliminary step" towards making him Chairman of the Board of Inland Revenue. However, in the sojourn in the domains of Themis, Charles Dickens became intimately acquainted with the mysteries of legal penetralia, and the intricacies of legal chicane, both of which he has so admirably depicted and exposed in his novels. But the literary vocation, the cacoethes scribendi, was not to be kept down by pounce and green "ferret." To use a French idiom, it "pierced," and doubtless after the irretrievable ruin of many skins of parchment and blotting of office foolscap, it asserted and made itself recognised. Charles Dickens's literary début took place, like those of Talfourd and Campbell, in the Reporters' Gallery. He became a member of the parliamentary corps of the "True Sun," an ultra liberal paper. He was subsequently one of the reporters on the "Mirror of Parliament," a journal whose avowed object was to give in extenso, word for word, all the speeches of every member of the Legislature. It was splendidly printed, produced at an enormous expense, and after a session or two fell to the ground in the true heroic style. Mr. Dickens, about 1835-6, passed to the staff of the "Morning Chronicle," and in its succursal, the "Evening Chronicle," appeared serially those delightful daguerreotypes of life and character, the "Sketches of Boz." After a lapse of twenty years' cheap literature, these "sketches" seem at the first glance to be very slight performances indeed. There is probably not a number of Mr. Dickens's own periodical, "Household Words," that does not contain an article on London life or manners, either from his own or a coadjutor's pen, possessing more thought, and observation, and graphic truth than can be found in a dozen of the "Sketches." But they were the first of their class. Dickens was the first to unite the delicately playful thread of Charles Lambe's street musings, half experiences, half bookish phantasies, with vigorous wit, and humour, and observation of Goldsmith's "Citizen of the World," his "Indigent Philosopher," and "Man in Black," and twine them together into that golden cord of essay which combines literature with philosophy, humour with morality, amusement with instruction. The Sketches by "Boz," (the pseudonym originated with one given to a pet brother, who, rechristened "Moses," in honour of the "Vicar of Wakefield," facetiously pronounced the name through the nose, "Bozes," and at last corrupted it to "Boz"), made a great sensation at the time. They were afterwards collected into one volume, with numerous etchings by George Cruikshank, then in the zenith of his fame, and were published by Mr. Macrone, of St. James's Square, a young and enterprising bookseller. We are not aware of the exact sum paid to Mr. Dickens for the copyright of the "Sketches," but it is patent that, a few months afterwards, the publisher, falling into difficulties, sold his copyright in the work either to Mr. Bentley or to Messrs. Chapman and Hall, for eleven hundred pounds. Poor Macrone was unfortunate, fell into ill health, and died, leaving a widow and young children, for whose benefit Mr. Dickens, with the assistance of some literary friends, edited and published a work composed of "voluntary contributions," called the "Pic-Nic Papers.". The "Sketches by Boz," were, as all the world knows, succeeded by the "Pickwick Papers". Originally intended as a mere vehicle to Robert Seymour's admirable caricatures, a foil to his redundant humour, they became, after he lamented the inexplicable death of the artist, attractions in themselves. The wit and genius of the author soon elevated Mr. Pickwick from a burlesque elderly Cockney to the rank of the hero of a comic epic. It would be useless, impertinent were there indeed space, to descant on the merits of this glorious book. Many more has Dickens written since the last number of "Pickwick" has been given to the world. Thousands and thousands have since laughed and wept at the bidding of this kindly magician, but no work of his has ever created, will ever create, the excitement, excite the curiosity, compel the attention, give half the genial pleasure, felt by the whole public when they perused the "Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club." As when a man is blet with many children, and looks around and knows not which he loves the most, but yet remembers the first little child that died, the "baby" - there have been many "babies" since then, but this was "baby" par excellence - so we, gratefully and pleasurably calling in review the many good books, which, in the familiar green covers, have delighted us from year to year, can never forget or conceal our preference for the first-born - the book of books. We put him not first because he was the best, but we like him best because he was the first. "Pickwick" brought about the same result with Dickens as "Childe Harold" with Byron. He awoke one morning and found himself famous. From the ranks of the great army of literary martyrs, he came calmly and smilingly to take the bàton of field-marshal as of right. That is very nearly twenty years ago, and bravely has he kept his high command. Reader, remember, when Charles Dickens was an unknown newspaper reporter, William Makepeace Thackeray was a "crack" writer on "Fraser's Magazine," and lo! it is but four or five years since the author of "Vanity Fair" attained an equally elevated seat on the literary daisas the author of the "Pickwick Papers".. The history of Mr. Dickens, from the publication of "Pickwick" to the present time, is little more than a history of his successive works - "Oliver Twist," "Nicholas Nickleby," "The Olde Curiosity Shop," "Martin Chuzzlewit," "Barnaby Rudge," "Dombey and Son," "David Copperfield," and "Bleak House,"; the Christmas books - the "Christmas Carol," the "Chimes," the "Cricket on the Hearth," the "Battle of Life," and the "Haunted Man". Beyond the fact that he has produced these good works, that he has made journeys to the United States and to Italy, and embodied his travelling experience in "American Notes" and "Pictures from Italy," that he has been since 1850 the conductor and (we believe) the proprietor of "Household Words," and that he has avowed himself lately to be a thoroughgoing Administrative Reformer, and made an eloquent speech at the great meeting at Drury Lane Theatre, very little more can be said of Mr. Dickens's public career. Of him, in his private capacity, a few more words remain to be written. Our fair readers will be glad to learn that he married, in the morning of his fame, Miss Catherine Hogarth, the daughter of Mr. George Hogarth, a well-known musical critic and writer, and that he is blessed in having a quiver full of arrows - male and female. For his personal appearance, we must refer our readers to the portrait; and to those who would wish to form an idea of his more youthful semblance, we may commend the engraving from Mr. Maclise's picture, prefixed to the first edition of "Nicholas Nickleby". To yet more curious amateurs of sayings and doings, we may add that Charles Dickens is an early riser and worker, an indefatigable pedestrian, averaging, we have heard, ten miles a day; that he is a vivacious companion, a brilliant conversationalist, and an accomplished amateur actor. Were the writer of this notice in the habit of eating toads or hunting tufts, he could add a great deal more concerning Mr. Dickens's private character, and of certain things he does with his right hand, letting not his left hand know that he does them. Some women that are widows, and same children that are fatherless, and, we regret to say, too many members of the ingenious confraternity of begging-letter writers, will understand our meaning. Of course, Mr. Dickens has had his detractors: of course, Sir Benjamin Backbite has shaken his head, and said "It could not last"; of course, Mrs. Sneerwell has smiled sarcastically and whispered "overrated, my dear". What else could be expected? Some charitable people even circulated a report a few years ago, that he had gone raving mad! Some even set afloat a joke (good, but stolen from an honester wit) that Dickens had "gone up like a rocket, and would come down like the stick." Somehow, he has not come down yet. Then the army of detractors took refuge in the safe insinuation, "that he had written himself out." Somehow, "Bleak House," his last work had a larger sale than any of its predecessors.. This is not the place to criticise the writings of Charles Dickens. The best criticisms, perhaps will be spontaneously evoked from the hearts of thousands of our readers, when they glance at this portrait, and remember how many smiles they have given to young Bailey - how many tears to Little Nell. Criticism! - if such were indeed needed - the noblest, would be found in the admission of William Thackeray, that he had wept for the death of Tiny Tim, and sung a paean of triumph when he found that Bob Cratchit's little child did not really die.
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alb1468596 RESIDENCIA Y ACTUAL MUSEO DE DICKENS. DICKENS, Charles (Lanport, Portsmonth, 1812-Gads Hill, Kent, 1870). Novelista británico. Autor de The Pickwick Papers (1836-37) que fue publicada por entregas mensuales, Oliver Twist (1837-38), A Christmas Carol (1843), David Copperfield (1849-50), Hard Times (1854), Great Expectations (1860-61) entre otras obras. LONDRES. INGLATERRA.
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alb3605289 Mourning dress. Culture: British. Date: 1894-95.This gown was once worn by Queen Victoria (1819-1901) of the United Kingdom. Purchased from an annual sale of the Queen's garments, it shows the traditional touches of mourning attire, which she wore from the death of her husband, Prince Albert (1819-1861), until her own death. The gown follows the style of the period and is finely detailed inside and out, details which would be expected by a Queen.Black mourning dress reached its peak during Queen Victoria's reign. She set the standard by wearing mourning for half of her life. With these standards in place, it was considered a social requisite to don black from anywhere between three months to two and a half years while grieving for a loved one or monarch. The stringent social custom existed for all classes and was available at all price points. Those who could not afford the change of dress often altered and dyed their regular garments black. The amount of black to be worn was dictated by several different phases of mourning; full mourning ensembles were solid black while half mourning allowed the wearer to add a small amount of white or purple. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3656067 Stirrup for a Child. Culture: German or Bohemian. Dimensions: H. 3 in. (7.62 cm); W. 3 1/8 in. (7.94 cm); Wt. 7 oz. (198.45 cm). Date: second half 15th century.Some decorative features of this stirrup, like the pierced 'window' motif on the sides, are typically Bohemian, but were also sometimes adopted by surrounding regions like eastern Germany. This stirrup reproduces in bronze more common examples made of twisted and pierced iron. The animal heads at the front are more unusual, and take advantage of the greater malleability of this material. The small size of this stirrup means that it was probably made for a child. Children from wealthy families would start riding lessons as soon as they could sit on a pony, usually around the age of 3. Horsemanship was an important component of European noble society, and children of the elite were expected to master the art of equitation. Moreover, as many nobles served in the cavalry, it was essential for them to be skillful riders by the time they were old enough to go to war. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3669824 Serpent Labret with Articulated Tongue. Culture: Aztec. Dimensions: H. 2 5/8 × W.1 3/4 × D. 2 5/8 in. (6.67 × 4.45 × 6.67 cm)Wt. 1.81 oz (51.35 g). Date: A.D. 1300-1521.Crafted in the shape of a serpent ready to strike, this labret (lip plug) was ingeniously cast as two separate pieces, so that the movable bifurcated tongue could be retracted or allowed to swing from side to side as the wearer moved. The curled eyebrow and snout and the feathered headdress may mark this creature as Xiuhcoatl, the mighty fire serpent and animate weapon of the Sun God, Huitzilopochtli. Labrets were insignia of military and political power, and specific types were awarded based on achievement on the battlefield.Este bezote estupendamente elaborado en forma de serpiente lista para el ataque, fue fundido en dos partes separadas: la lengua bifurcada amovible podía ser retractada, o podía moverse de lado a lado con el movimiento de la persona que lo llevaba puesto. Los bezotes eran insignias de poder militar y político. Algunos tipos específicos de bezotes eran atribuidos según los logros en el campo de batalla. Las cejas y el hocico curvos y el tocado de plumas permiten identificar a este ser, aunque no de manera certera, como Xiuhcoatl, la poderosa serpiente de fuego, y animar al dios del sol, Huitzilopochtli.Superbly crafted in the shape of a serpent ready to strike, this labret--a type of plug inserted through a piercing below the lower lip--is a rare survival of what was once a thriving tradition of gold-working in the Aztec Empire. Gold, in Aztec belief, was teocuitlatl, a godly excrement, closely associated with the sun's power, and ornaments made of it were worn by Aztec rulers and nobles. Historical sources describe a variety of objects made of gold, including a serpent labret sent by Hernán Cortés as a gift to the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, yet nearly all of these objects were melted down at the time of the Conquest and shortly thereafter, converted to gold ingots for ease of transport and trade. The serpent's head features a powerful jaw with serrated teeth and two prominent fangs. Scales are represented in delicate relief on the underside of the lower jaw. A prominent snout with rounded nostrils rises above the maw of the serpent, and the eyes are surmounted by a pronounced supraorbital plate terminating in curls. On the crown of the head, a ring of ten small spheres and three loops rendered using the technique of false filigree represents a feather headdress with beads. The bifurcated tongue, ingeniously cast as a moveable piece, could be retracted, or swung from side to side, perhaps moving with the wearer's movements. The sinuous form of the serpent's body attaches to a cylinder or basal plug ringed with a band of tiny spheres and a band of wavelike spirals. The plain, extended flange would have held the labret in place within the wearer's mouth. Labrets, called tentetl in Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs, were manifestations of political power. The Codex Ixtlilxochitl, an early colonial-period manuscript now in the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris, includes a portrait of the ruler Nezahualcoyotl in full warrior attire, complete with a gold raptor labret (fol. 106r). Nezahualcoyotl was the lord of Texcoco, one of the three cities that formed the Triple Alliance, the union at the core of the Aztec Empire formed by the Mexica of Tenochtitlan, the Alcolhua of Texcoco, and the Tepaneca of Tlacopan. The Aztec title for the royal office was huey tlahtoani, or "great speaker," and the adornment of the mouth was highly symbolic. According to Patrick Hajovsky, a scholar of Aztec art, labrets were the visual markers of the eloquent, truthful speech expected of royalty and the nobility. Crafted from a sacred material, a labret such as this would have underscored the ruler's divinely sanctioned authority, and asserted his position as the individual who could speak for an empire. Not surprisingly, therefore, the insertion of a labret was part of a ruler's accession ceremony. Labrets were also closely associated with military prowess. Specific types of labrets were awarded to warriors based on certain achievements. Gold ornaments, however, appear to have been restricted to royalty and the highest ranks of the nobility, although on occasion gold ornaments could be given by the king as gifts to provincial rulers. Because of its imperviousness to decay, gold would have been an appropriate material to suggest the enduring power of rulers. Such labrets would not have been worn on a daily basis, but rather as part of ceremonial or battle attire donned on specific occasions. Worn on ritual occasions and on the battlefield, this labret, like its wearer, a serpent ready to strike its prey, would have been a terrifying sight.Serpents have been a favored subject in Mesoamerican art from at least the second millennium B.C. As creatures that could move between different realms, such as earth, water, and sky, they were considered particularly appropriate symbols for rulers and mythological heroes such as Quetzalcoatl, the legendary "feathered serpent." The combination of the curled eyebrow and snout, along with the feathered headdress, may mark this creature as Xiuhcoatl, a mighty fire serpent conceived of as an animate weapon of the Aztec sun god, Huitzilopochtli. Stylistically, this labret has much in common with works in other media, from monumental stone sculptures to a turquoise mosaic double-headed serpent pectoral now in the British Museum (AOA AM 94-634). Although gold working developed relatively late in Mesoamerica (after AD 600), metalsmiths developed innovative approaches in different regions and produced works of great artistry and technical sophistication. Oaxaca, one of the major sources for gold, was also long considered one of the primary centers for the production of gold objects. Recent research by Leonardo López Luján and José Luis Ruvalcaba Sil, however, has revealed an important gold working tradition in the Basin of Mexico. Small cast gold bells and ornaments of hammered sheet metal have been excavated at Mexico City's Templo Mayor, or Great Temple, the sacred center at the heart of the Aztec Empire. The finds there include a bifurcated tongue fashioned from sheet gold, and cast-gold bells that once adorned a wolf and an eagle, animals that were sacrificed and placed in one of the Templo Mayor's dedicatory caches. Outside of the Templo Mayor finds, the majority of the Aztec works in gold that have survived--including this labret--are ornaments for the royal or noble body. Most Aztec labrets are plain obsidian or greenstone plugs (see, for example, MMA 1979.206.1090-1092), although exceptional examples were made in the form of raptors such as eagles (MMA 1978.412.218; Saint Louis Art Museum 275:1978; Museo Civico di Arte Antica, Turin; see also one in jadeite, MMA 02.18.308). Another serpent labret, possibly from Ejutla, Oaxaca, is now in the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C. (18/756). This serpent labret, perhaps the finest Aztec gold ornament to survive the crucibles of the sixteenth century, is an exceedingly rare testament to the brilliance of ancient Mexican metalsmiths. Monumental sculpture in stone, ceramic vessels, and other more durable forms of cultural production shed light on key aspects of Aztec ritual and daily life. But gold, in its infinite ability to be transformed, melted and re-worked, could always be remade to suit current needs, and thus rarely survives from antiquity. Though small, this masterpiece opens a window into Aztec culture at the very highest level, a world almost entirely obliterated when Hernán Cortés arrived on the shores of Mexico in 1519. Joanne Pillsbury, 2016Andrall E. Pearson CuratorArts of the Ancient Americas. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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dpa7366205 (dpa) - Honey drips from a knife into a pot of honey in Villingen-Schwenningen, Germany, 22 May 2003. Bee-keepers are expecting great losses as many hives are infected with the varroa mite. This parasite is responsible for a smaller crop of honey and also for problems in agriculture and gardening, as less bees are there to pollinate plants.
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dpa7364791 (dpa) - A cart with beehives is standing in a rapeseed field near Baerenklau, Germany, 15 May 2003. Bee-keepers are expecting great losses as many hives are infected with the varroa mite. This parasite is responsible for a smaller crop of honey and also for problems in agriculture and gardening, as less bees are there to pollinate plants.
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dpa7364504 (dpa) - Bee-keeper Manfred Hofmeister is presenting two glasses with honey, Munich, 6 June 2003. The honey bee (Apis mellifera) is presently endangered by the varroa mite. As many hives are infected with this parasite beekeepers are expecting great losses. The varroa mite is responsible for a smaller crop of honey and also for problems in agriculture and gardening, as less bees are there to pollinate plants. In Germany, 1.2 million bee hives are producing between 20,000 and 25,000 tons of honey per year.
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dpa7381494 (dpa) - Juergen Strube, departing chairman of the board of the world's leading chemical company BASF, smiles during the annual balance press conference in Ludwigshafen, Germany, 18 March 2003. The looming war in Iraq has a negative effect on the future of the chemical company. After a good start into the year 2003, the board of directors now expects stagnations. Because of the great incertainty, Chairman Juergen Strube does not want to talk about future prospects for the entire year 2003.
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dpa7457958 (dpa) - The pictures shows illuminated Tall Ships moored in the harbour during the international Tall Ships festival 'Sail 2005' in Bremerhaven, Germany, 13 August 2005. Around 340 ships from 20 countries participate in the maritime spectacle 'Sail 2005', which runs from 09 August to 14 August 2005, concluding with a great Tall Ships parade on the River Weser on Sunday 14 August 2005. Over a million visitors totalling are expected to attend the event. Photo: Maurizio Gambarini.
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dpa7457955 (dpa) - Thousands of visitors take a look at the Tall Ships moored in the harbour during the international Tall Ships festival 'Sail 2005' in Bremerhaven, Germany, 14 August 2005 . Around 340 ships from 20 countries participate in the maritime spectacle 'Sail 2005', which runs from 09 August to 14 August 2005, concluding with a great Tall Ships parade on the River Weser on Sunday 14 August 2005. Over a million visitors totalling are expected to attend the event. Photo: Maurizio Gambarini.
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alb4058469 "Boundless confidence". A group of men in a room sitting, talking and smoking. Great Expectations. By Charles Dickens. [Twenty-one engraved plates, including a titlepage, after etchings by F. W. Pailthorpe.]. London : Robson & Kerslake, 1885. Source: K.T.C.28.b.20 page 18.
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alb2112257 REPAVEMENT OF THE STRAND, LONDON, UK; The usually crowded roadways of Fleet Street and the Strand have just been in part re-laid with granite pavement, in well-timed anticipation of the additional amount of traffic to be expected during the approaching Great Exhibition. The system now generally adopted in the metropolitan carriage roads is, to prepare a foundation of concrete, and then place upon it the granite blocks to a proper curve, generally a flat segment of a circle, so as to throw off the water into the side gutters. The interstices are then grouted with liquid mortar, and the whole surface is afterwards strewed with sand, and thus made ready for traffic., 1851 engraving.
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dpa10536174 One of many helicopters takes off for a navigation flight during the 'Open German Helicopter Championships' (Offene Deutsche Hubschraubermeisterschaften) at the airport in Eisenach, Germany, 31 August 2007. Over 30 international teams (Great Britain, Austria, France, Russia) compete against each other in the scope of the event, running until 02 September. The various tasks orient by the realistic requirements of rescue operations, such as navigation and slalom flights. The 2008 world championship in helicopter flying is expected to be held near Eisenach. Photo: Martin Schutt.
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alb4072277 "Here's old Bill Barley, bless your eyes." Bill Barley in bed being attended by his daughter, Clara. Great Expectations. By Charles Dickens. [Twenty-one engraved plates, including a titlepage, after etchings by F. W. Pailthorpe.]. London : Robson & Kerslake, 1885. Source: K.T.C.28.b.20 page 16.
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alb257012 JEAN SIMMONS and MARTITA HUNT in CADENAS ROTAS (1946) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by DAVID LEAN. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS. Portuguese title: GRANDES ESPERANÇAS.
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alb570040 ANNE BANCROFT in GRANDES ESPERANZAS (1998) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by ALFONSO CUARON. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS. Portuguese title: GRANDES ESPERANÇAS.
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alb4089729 Mr. Jaggers and his Clients. Etching for the novel "Great Expectations". Great Expectations. By Charles Dickens. [Twenty-one engraved plates, including a titlepage, after etchings by F. W. Pailthorpe.]. London : Robson & Kerslake, 1885. Source: K.T.C.28.b.20 page 8.
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alb570041 ETHAN HAWKE and ROBERT DE NIRO in GRANDES ESPERANZAS (1998) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by ALFONSO CUARON. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS. Portuguese title: GRANDES ESPERANÇAS.
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akg7861188 VOS, CORNELIS DE1585 Hulst - 1651 AntwerpDiogenes and Alexander the Great. Oil on canvas. Relined. 170 x 213cm. Framed. Expert Assessment: Prof. Dr. Müller Hofstede, Bonn, July 21, 1986; According to verbal confirmation by Jan Kosten, RKD, The Hague dated October 7, 2013 the oeuvre was created by Cornelis de Vos and his workshop. A similar painting depicting Diogenes of Sinope and Alexander the Great is listed in the RKD, The Hague, under the number 119885. Both paintings are very probably products of a workshop, which is why they were not exclusively rendered by the hand of the master. Provenance: Private collection, Rhineland The anecdote describing Diogenes and Alexander the Great meeting in Corinth was mentioned by several ancients. Plutarch, The Life of Alexander, 14 reads as follows:""And now a general assembly of the Greeks was held at the Isthmus, where a vote was passed to make an expedition against Persia with Alexander, and he was proclaimed their leader. Thereupon many statesmen and philosophers came to him with their congratulations, and he expected that Diogenes of Sinope also, who was tarrying in Corinth, would do likewise. But since that philosopher took not the slightest notice of Alexander, and continued to enjoy his leisure in the suburb Craneion, Alexander went in person to see him; and he found him lying in the sun. Diogenes raised himself up a little when he saw so many persons coming towards him, and fixed his eyes upon Alexander. And when that monarch addressed him with greetings, and asked if he wanted anything, 'Yes,' said Diogenes, 'stand a little out of my sun.' It is said that Alexander was so struck by this, and admired so much the haughtiness and grandeur of the man who had nothing but scorn for him, that he said to his followers, who were laughing and jesting about the philosopher as they went away, 'But verily, if I were not Alexander, I would be Diogenes.' [English translation from Loeb Classical Library edition, 1919. The text is in the public domain.]Müller Hofstede writes: ""... The composition is particularly captivating through its great wealth of narrative detail. The book still-lives on the left, the contrast between the splendidly clad, armoured and helmeted figure of Alexander and the deliberately modest and poor philosopher in front of his barrel as well as the large animal motifs of the horses painted in great detail provide the painting with an exceptional charm."" [translation].
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MBDGREX_EC079 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, Henry Hull, 1934
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MBDGREX_EC078 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, Henry Hull, 1934
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MBDGREX_EC077 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, Henry Hull, 1934
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MBDGREX_EC076 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, John Mills, 1946
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MBDGREX_EC074 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, from left, John Mills, Finlay Currie, 1946
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MBDGREX_EC075 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, from left, Bernard Miles, Francis L. Sullivan, John Mills, 1946
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MBDGREX_EC072 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, John Mills, 1946
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MBDGREX_EC073 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, from left, John Mills, Martita Hunt, Valerie Hobson, 1946
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MBDGREX_EC071 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, from left, Martita Hunt, Valerie Hobson, 1946
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MBDGREX_EC070 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, from left, Martita Hunt, Anthony Wager, 1946
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MBDGREX_EC066 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, Valerie Hobson, 1946
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MBDGREX_EC067 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, from left, Martita Hunt, Valerie Hobson, 1946
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MBDDRUM_EC026 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, Valerie Hobson, 1946
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MBDGREX_EC069 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, from left, Valerie Hobson, John Mills, 1946
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MBDGREX_EC068 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, from left, John Mills, Valerie Hobson, 1946
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MBDGREX_EC065 GREAT EXPECTATIONS, from left: Alec Guinness, Finlay Currie, 1946
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alb1956082 JEREMY IRVINE in GRANDES ESPERANZAS (2012) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by MIKE NEWELL. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS.
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alb1790917 HELENA BONHAM CARTER in GRANDES ESPERANZAS (2012) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by MIKE NEWELL. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS.
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alb1956083 RALPH FIENNES in GRANDES ESPERANZAS (2012) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by MIKE NEWELL. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS.
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alb1956081 JEREMY IRVINE and HOLLIDAY GRAINGER in GRANDES ESPERANZAS (2012) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by MIKE NEWELL. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS.
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alb4491918 HELENA BARLOW and TOBY IRVINE in GRANDES ESPERANZAS (2012) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by MIKE NEWELL. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS.
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alb570032 ETHAN HAWKE and GWYNETH PALTROW in GRANDES ESPERANZAS (1998) -Original title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS-, directed by ALFONSO CUARON. English title: GREAT EXPECTATIONS. Portuguese title: GRANDES ESPERANÇAS.
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alb4363690 Rhea americana, Print, The greater rhea (Rhea americana) is a species of flightless bird native to eastern South America. Other names for the greater rhea include the grey, common, or American rhea; ñandú (Guaraní and Spanish); or ema (Portuguese). One of two species in the genus Rhea, in the family Rheidae, the greater rhea is native to Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. It inhabits a variety of open areas, such as grasslands, savanna or grassy wetlands. Weighing 20–27 kilograms (44–60 lb), the greater rhea is the largest bird in South America. In the wild, the greater rhea has a life expectancy of 10.5 years. It is also notable for its reproductive habits, and for the fact that a population has established itself in Northern Germany in recent years. The species is listed as Near Threatened by the IUCN., 1825-1834.
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alb4361926 Rhea americana, Print, The greater rhea (Rhea americana) is a species of flightless bird native to eastern South America. Other names for the greater rhea include the grey, common, or American rhea; ñandú (Guaraní and Spanish); or ema (Portuguese). One of two species in the genus Rhea, in the family Rheidae, the greater rhea is native to Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. It inhabits a variety of open areas, such as grasslands, savanna or grassy wetlands. Weighing 20–27 kilograms (44–60 lb), the greater rhea is the largest bird in South America. In the wild, the greater rhea has a life expectancy of 10.5 years. It is also notable for its reproductive habits, and for the fact that a population has established itself in Northern Germany in recent years. The species is listed as Near Threatened by the IUCN., 1863.
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