"Portrait of Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk, bust-length to right, wearing hat, decorated with cameo, broad fur stole over ornate doublet, collar of the Garter with George; in an oval."--British Museum online catalogue
Description:
Title etched below image., Publication information from that of the volume in which the plate was issued., Plate from: Thane, J. British autography. A collection of fac-similies of the hand writing of royal and illustrious personages, with their authentic portraits. London, J. Thane, [1788?-1793?]., Facsimile of the sitter's signature etched below title, with the caption: His autograph from the original in the possession of John Thane., and One print composed of two plates; the oval portrait and facsimile signature are printed from the smaller plate, and this combined design is surrounded by an etched ornamental border printed from a separate, larger plate.
Publisher:
John Thane
Subject (Name):
Suffolk, Charles Brandon, Duke of, approximately 1484-1545 and Strawberry Hill (Twickenham, London, England)
"An etching taken from a drawing made in 1836 by Cruikshank ... Issue on India paper. This print is mounted"--Podeschi. and Illustration signed: Geo. Cruikshank.
Publisher:
Frank Kerslake,
Subject (Name):
Cruikshank, George, 1792-1878 and Dickens, Charles,--1812-1870
Photographic postcard of the French Judge Paul Magnaud posed in legal attire, with medals on his chest.
Alternative Title:
Président Magnaud, Photographic postcard of Judge Paul Magnaud, and Legally themed postcard picturing Judge Paul Magnaud
Description:
Date from postmark., Postcard addressed to "Mademoiselle Marthe Petit."--Verso postcard., In French., Also available in original print http://morris.law.yale.edu/record=b1281726, Digital reproduction. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale Law Library, 2019 LM ZA Postcards v.1 no.10 tall., Online resource; description based on print version record. , Includes manuscript notation., and Paul Magnaud (born May 20, 1848 and died July 27, 1926) was a French magistrate and politician. He entered the judiciary in 1880 and became a judge in 1910 and then an adviser to the Paris Court of Appeal. He earned the nickname "good judge" by releasing Louise Ménard, a young single mother, who had stolen bread from a baker because she had not eaten for days. Judge Magnaud reimbursed the baker for the cost of the stolen bread.
Christine of Lorraine, Great Duchess of Tuscany and Christina of Lorraine, Great Duchess of Tuscany
Description:
Title from manuscript text on verso in Horace Walpole's hand., One from a group of six portraits cited in the 1774 Strawberry Hill catalogue: Six curious pictures in water-colours of Mary de Medici and Louis 13th. and five great duchesses of Tuscany; copied from a chamber at Poggio Imperiale near Florence, where the originals are dressed in the very cloaths [sic] they wore, pasted on the hangings, with the faces painted on sattin [sic]., and Cited in the 1842 sale text: Six curious pictures, in water colours, of Mary de Medici and Louis XIII, and five Great Duchesses of Tuscany, copied from a chamber at the Pazzio Imperiale, near Florence, where the originals are dressed in the very clothes they wore, placed on the hangings, with the faces painted on satin.
Subject (Name):
Christine, of Lorraine, Grand Duchess, consort of Ferdinand I, Grand Duke of Tuscany, 1565-1636 and Strawberry Hill (Twickenham, London, England)
Print shows Colonel Taylor in center and U.S. troops (Missouri Volunteers) on left in close combat with Seminole Indians on right
Alternative Title:
Colonel Taylor at the battle of Okeechobee
Description:
BEIN Broadsides4to Zc50 861cj copy 1: On sheet 22.2 x 28.8 cm. State without imprint., BEIN Broadsides4to Zc50 861cj copy 2: On sheet 21.3 x 25.9 cm., and Title from caption below image.
Publisher:
Virtue & Yorston
Subject (Name):
Taylor, Zachary, 1784-1850
Subject (Topic):
Seminole Indians and Okeechobee, Battle of, Fla., 1837