No. 58. Fish-riding cat.Ā Illustrated catalog of day light bomb shells. Hirayama Fireworks. Late 19th century.Ā
Yokohama Central Library
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No. 58. Fish-riding cat.Ā Illustrated catalog of day light bomb shells. Hirayama Fireworks. Late 19th century.Ā
Yokohama Central Library
Night blooming cereus.Ā The Relief Society magazine. May 1950. Cover art.
Birds as metaphors for mood.Ā Advertising and selling. January 6, 1932.
Tormented by love. A legend of Camelot. 1898.
Getty Research Institute via the Internet Archive
From a book uploaded by gridigitalservices
Deer motif. Clothes economy for well dressed women. 1927. Chapter header.
Internet Archive
The Reconciliation of the Montagues and Capulets over the Dead Bodies of Romeo and Juliet (1855) Frederick Leighton
Four walls around you. 1940s. Pamphlet cover.
Science History Institute
Belgradeās hidden gems
Gretchen Marquette
ellagrace
ā Virginia Woolf, letter to Vita Sackville-West (March 1928)
ā Sylvia Plath, Mad Girlās Love Song (1953)
La maman et la putain (Jean Eustache, 1973)
La maman et la putain (Jean Eustache, 1973)
Gold Ring with Tutankhamunās Prenomen The ring bears the throne name of Tutankhamun (āNebkheperureā), whose spectacular tomb in the Valley of the Kings was discovered in 1922. Tutankhamun was raised in Akhenatenās court at Amarna, yet his reign saw the reversal of Akhenatenās revolution, including the return of the court to Thebes.
The ring was found in an elaborate Canaanite tomb. It is unclear whether it arrived in Canaan during the reign of Tutankhamun (ca. 1332-1323 BC) or later.
Excavated in Tell el-Ajjul, Gaza. Now in the Rockefeller Archaeological Museum, Jerusalem. 33.708
č©å ååļ¼Hagihara Takuya
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