If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
art blog(derogatory)

blake kathryn
Not today Justin
DEAR READER
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

oozey mess

Kaledo Art

Origami Around
occasionally subtle
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Misplaced Lens Cap
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
KIROKAZE
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
wallacepolsom
Stranger Things

PR's Tumblrdome
sheepfilms
almost home
macklin celebrini has autism

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@xinashouse
If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
If you’re here for my fandom stuff
you should head over to my sideblog, @xinasvoice. I’m dead on main, so there’s no point following this account. <3
I’d like to thank my friend Avistew Teague for translating this!
Hollywood
It used to be a security robot, but it was abandoned, so now it monitors flowers blooming and trees losing their leaves. It would love to show you its 36 hour recording of seedlings unfurling.
Eggwolf.
Gertrude Ellen Burrard (British, 1860 - 1928): Chedi, our bheestie (water-carrier) at Dehra [Dun] for many years (1909) (via National Army Museum, London)
I can’t find much info about Burrard online, but she did publish a book called An Amateur Artist in India, and she painted loads of Indian folks of different races:
Gertrude Ellen Burrard Subadar Major Judbhir Thapa, 2nd (Prince of Wales’s Own) Gurkha (Rifle) Regiment (The Sirmoor Rifles) India (1893) [Source]
Gertrude Ellen Burrard A Native of Garwhal in the attitude of moving forward India (1908) [Source]
Gertrude Ellen Burrard A Hill Woman from Ladakh, Cooking Her Food India (1893) [Source]
And even a non-Indian from Burma!
Gertrude Ellen Burrard Maung Pe, a Chaprasi (messenger) in the Triangulation Survey Party (brought from Burma by Captain C. F. Close, RE India (1892) [Source]
Lady Mary Montagu in Turkish dress, British School, 18th century
So I thought this was just an example of Turquerie in Western art, but the story of Lady Wortley Montagu herself reveals so much more!:
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (baptized 26 May 1689 – 21 August 1762) was an English aristocrat, letter writer and poet. Lady Mary is today chiefly remembered for her letters, particularly her letters from travels to the Ottoman Empire, as wife to the British ambassador to Turkey, which have been described by Billie Melman as “the very first example of a secular work by a woman about the Muslim Orient”…
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu defied convention most memorably by introducing smallpox inoculation to Western medicine after witnessing it during her travels and stay in the Ottoman Empire. In the Ottoman Empire, she visited the women in their segregated zenanas, making friends and learning about Turkish customs. There she witnessed the practice of inoculation against smallpox—variolation—which she called engrafting, and wrote home about it a number of her letters. Variolation used live smallpox virus in the pus taken from a smallpox blister in a mild case of the disease and introduced it into scratched skin of a previously uninfected person to promote immunity to the disease. Lady Mary’s brother had died of smallpox in 1713 and her own famous beauty had been marred by a bout with the disease in 1715.
Jean-Étienne Liotard Lady Montagu in Turkish dress UK (1756) [Source]
Lady Mary was eager to spare her children, thus, in March 1718 she had her nearly five year old son inoculated with the help of Embassy surgeon Charles Maitland. On her return to London, she enthusiastically promoted the procedure, but encountered a great deal of resistance from the medical establishment, because it was an Oriental folk treatment process.
In April 1721, when a smallpox epidemic struck England, she had her daughter inoculated by Charles Maitland, the same physician who had inoculated her son at the Embassy in Turkey, and publicized the event. This was the first such operation done in Britain. She persuaded Princess Caroline to test the treatment.
Jacopo Amigoni Portrait of Caroline of Ansbach UK (1735) [Source]
In August 1721, seven prisoners at Newgate Prison awaiting execution were offered the chance to undergo variolation instead of execution: they all survived and were released. Controversy over smallpox inoculation intensified, however, Caroline, Princess of Wales was convinced. The Princess’s two daughters were successfully inoculated in April 1722 by French-born surgeon Claudiius Amyand. In response to the general fear of inoculation, Lady Mary, under a pseudonym, wrote and published an article describing and advocating in favor of inoculation in September 1722.
In later years, Edward Jenner, who was 13 years old when Lady Mary died, developed the much safer technique of vaccination using cowpox instead of smallpox. As vaccination gained acceptance, variolation gradually fell out of favor.
So don’t forget: the earliest form of vaccinations came from Asia (variolation was practised across Asia and Africa for centuries) and was introduced to Europe by women. :)