Art Print
MAGDALEN COLLEGE CREST
This card is based on a chromolithographic college crest designed by Albert Henry Warren and published in Oxford, by T. and G. Shrimpton in 1869.
Art Print
This card is based on a chromolithographic college crest designed by Albert Henry Warren and published in Oxford, by T. and G. Shrimpton in 1869.
Art Print
This card is based on a chromolithographic college crest designed by Albert Henry Warren and published in Oxford, by T. and G. Shrimpton in 1869.
Art Print
This card is based on a chromolithographic college crest designed by Albert Henry Warren and published in Oxford, by T. and G. Shrimpton in 1869.
Art Print
This card is based on a chromolithographic college crest designed by Albert Henry Warren and published in Oxford, by T. and G. Shrimpton in 1869.
Art Print
This card is based on a chromolithographic college crest designed by Albert Henry Warren and published in Oxford, by T. and G. Shrimpton in 1869.
Art Print
The border caption reads: "The heart of Britain's empire here is spread out for your view, it shows you many stations & 'bus routes not a few. ...
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Art Print
This card is based on a chromolithographic college crest designed by Albert Henry Warren and published in Oxford, by T. and G. Shrimpton in 1869.
Art Print
This card is based on a chromolithographic college crest designed by Albert Henry Warren and published in Oxford, by T. and G. Shrimpton in 1869.
Art Print
This card is based on a chromolithographic college crest designed by Albert Henry Warren and published in Oxford, by T. and G. Shrimpton in 1869.
Art Print
This card is based on a chromolithographic college crest designed by Albert Henry Warren and published in Oxford, by T. and G. Shrimpton in 1869.
Art Print
A colourised adapation of a lithograph by Charles Radclyffe, who worked in London in 1842 to capture this South Western view of St Paul’s Cathedral...
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A contemporary William Morris adaptation of a Japanese woodblock print dating 1814. The Japanese word for frog is “kaeru”, which can also mean “to ...
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Art Print
From The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britaine (1611) by celebrated English cartographer John Speed (1552-1629). In the making of this map, Speed...
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Art Print
From The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britaine (1611) by English cartographer John Speed (1552-1629). Speed labels North Burcombe 'quaere' (query...
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Liverpool measures 43.2 square miles (111.8 km2). The city impressively holds the Guinness Book of Records for being the "Capital of Pop". No other...
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Art Print
Liverpool measures 43.2 square miles (111.8 km2). The city impressively holds the Guinness Book of Records for being the "Capital of Pop". No other...
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Art Print
Pissarro painted this from his balcony at No.1 Gloucester Terrace, with Kew Green in the foreground, Kew Road to the left, and River Thames behind ...
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Art Print
Similar to several other great artists, Pissarro found refuge in London to escape the Franco-Prussian war and first visited in 1870, and revisited,...
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Camille Pissarro worked mainly in the Paris area but painted in London during visits. Similar to several other great artists, he found refuge in Lo...
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This steel engraving of Liverpool was drawn and engraved by John Rapkin and published by English cartographer John Tallis. The upper illustration, ...
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Map of Liverpool published in 1836 by Chapman and Hall. Some of the most famous landmarks of the city are showcased in the lower part.
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This map of Liverpool by American cartographer George Washington Bacon shows a detailed view of the streets of the city. We can particularly observ...
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The pink version of the union jack was popularised by British artist and photographer David Gwinnutt, creating the Pink Jack in an art exhibition i...
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Art Print
The Queen’s Guard (called King’s Guard when the reigning monarch is male) are the names given to the soldiers guarding the Royal Palaces since 1660...
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Art Print
The pink version of the union jack was popularised by British artist and photographer David Gwinnutt, creating the Pink Jack in an art exhibition i...
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Art Print
A 1926 image from "Wonderful London" with the caption: "Here we are back in the heart of London... A rainy night has driven folk indoors and the la...
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With a diameter of 23ft (7 metres), the clock face of big ben is composed of 312 sections of opal glass, that contains an hour hand measuring 9.2ft...
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It is pointless to waste time trying to impress people who won’t accept you for who you are. Unleash the inner queen!
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A double hemisphere hand coloured map of the world, Nova Totius Terrarum Orbis Geographica by Pierre-Jean Mariette (1603-1657) published in Paris. ...
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A Ground Plott of Canterbury by Wenceslas Hollar, which was originally published around 1670. The copper plate engraving was taken from a strike of...
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The antique map of the county of Gloucestershire, as part of "A Topographical Dictionary of England with Historical and Statistical Descriptions" b...
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This antique map of Gloucestershire by Thomas Moule (1784 – 1851), contains vignettes of Gloucester Cathedral, Tewkesbury Abbey church and the New ...
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The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britain by the famous English cartographer John Speed (1552-1629). It reads: "Gloucestershire contrived into thi...
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The county of Gloucestershire is home to Gloucester Cathedral which has the Crecy Window which is the biggest stained-glass window in the UK. Furth...
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For centuries until the kingdoms in the UK united, the flag of the union jack was restricted to use at sea. This was the likely origin of the name ...
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Titled "Brightstowe, vulgo" was published in Cologne in 1588 in the book Civitates Orbis Terrarum (Towns of the World). The sheep showing in the ma...
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