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Black, white Charles J Noke 1918 1938 HN308 A Jester (Style Two) Black and lavender Charles J Noke 1918 1938 HN309 A Lady of the Elizabethan Period (Style Two, also called Elizabethan Lady) Dark blue, yellow-green Ernest W Light 1918 1938 HN310 Dunce Black and white with green base Charles J Noke 1918 1938 HN311 Dancing Figure Pink Unknown 1918
The book contains contributions by European and American ethnologists, art historians and collectors on aspects of traditional sculptural art from Tanganyika. More than 500 black-and-white photographs of sculptures and masks from public and private collections as well as maps, illustrations and a bibliography complement the individual chapters ...
[2] [4] The roof of the chapel is painted in black and white and decorated with embedded gold leaf. [4] An altar in the chapel has a bronze relief portrait of George VI by Sir William Reid Dick, a replica of the portrait of George which hangs in the church of St Mary Magdalene on the royal estate of Sandringham in Norfolk. [4]
In the photo, the moniker of the late queen — who died on September 8 at the age of 96 — is etched on the gravestone above that of her husband, Prince Philip, who passed away in April 2021 at ...
White, English, active in or around 19th-century Bath, Somerset) Mr. G. P. White of London, English, active in mid-19th-century England) The Chesapeake Memorial, Portsmouth, 1863. [78] Paton Wilson, English, brass tablet of R. Booth Campbell-Brown d. 1893 in the Arts and Crafts style, set in St. Mary the Great (Cambridge). [79]
The oldest known tombstone in the US belonged to an English knight and likely came from Belgium, according to a new study that sheds more light on trade routes linked to colonial America ...
These burial places of British royalty record the known graves of monarchs who have reigned in some part of the British Isles (currently includes only the monarchs of Scotland, England, native princes of Wales to 1283, or monarchs of Great Britain, and the United Kingdom), as well as members of their royal families.
Bible spends her days with “tombstone tourists” — fans of cemeteries who travel across the country and world to significant cemeteries to commune with those buried there and bask in the history.