- Title page
Title page - Title
A title page border for an art-related page - Jack
Baseball player - Eoanthropos
A second race of Subman, named " Eoanthropos " or " Dawn Man," was in existence (circa) 110,000 B.C. Their only weapons were branches torn from the trees - Pithecanthropos Erectus
The first race of Man (circa 550,000 B.c.) is called the "Pithecanthropos Erectus," or Ape Man. They were powerfully built individuals, with low foreheads, prominent bony ridges above the eyes, and retreating chins. Their forearms were heavy and clumsy, their thigh-bones bent and their shin-bones short, so they must have been bow-legged and awkward in gait. This type of human being became differentiated from animals because development of the faculty of primitive speech enabled them to sustain thought and created memory. - Cro Magnon
Circa 35,000-15,000 B.C. This date, 35,000 B.C., is given as the end of the Early Paleolithic Age and beginning of the Late Paleolithic Age. A fourth race, the Cro Magnon or " True Man " Type, lived during this period, and was akin to the Eskimo of the present day. These people occupied the cave-dwellings of their predecessors, but led a much freer life in the open. - Cowboy
Cowboy - Cowboys rounding up their herd
Cowboys rounding up their herd - Cowboy on a bucking bronco near Garden City, Kansas
Cowboy on a bucking bronco near Garden City, Kansas - Neolithic or New Stone Age Man
The Neolithic or New Stone Age: Circa 10,000 B.C. The people of this period constituted a fifth race of mankind, of moderate stature and slender proportions. Those who resided on the western side of the island now known as Great Britain were dark, and of the Iberian type. Those on the eastern side were fair, and very like the Gauls. - A Goddess
This Doric chiton is often seen on statues and paintings of Greek goddesses. The shoulders and breast part were usually surmounted by the "AEgis," a sort of scaled cape-cuirass. Athena is generally represented wearing it - The Toga Praetexta
The toga was draped on the figure by starting with point A at the left foot; the straight edge was taken over the left shoulder and arm, B. It was then passed across the back, and hung loose under the right arm, D, across the chest, over the left shoulder and arm again, E, with the remaining portion hanging down the back, finishing at point F. Having arranged the toga as described, it will be found that the straight edge at D under the right arm can be made, by turning it over, to form a second piece of curved drapery over the right upper leg. This is called the "sinus." Also, if the straight edge of the first portion (which passes over the left shoulder at B) is pulled out, and pouched over the top part which also crosses the left shoulder, the draped effect is obtained. This part, called the "umbo," was often used to envelop the right hand. The loose portion c at the back of the right shoulder was often drawn up over the shoulder, and attached to the belt at the waist, so as to form a sort of sleeve. It was also the custom to utilise this loose portion c alternatively as a head-covering; and it was in use for this purpose during all religious ceremonies—it also served as a protection from bad weather. The toga praetexta was used by noble youths. It had a straight band of purple or scarlet on the white toga. This toga praetexta, according to tradition, was also worn exclusively by kings at an earlier period. In later Republican times it was the distinctive garment worn by the higher magistrates (curule) and senators. It was awarded as a badge of `rank`. - Men's Hairstyles - Classic Greece
Men's Hairstyles - Classic Greece - Howard Thurston - Magician
Howard Thurston - Magician - Howard Thurston
Howard Thurston - Benjamin Disraeli
Benjamin Disraeli - Booth Tarkington
Booth Tarkington - John Masefield
John Masefield - Josef Lhevinne
Josef Lhevinne - Georges Clemenceau
Georges Clemenceau - Robert Herrick
Robert Herrick - Garet Garrett
Garet Garrett - Lorado Taft
Lorado Taft - Marshall Foch
Marshall Foch - Jack Dempsey
Jack Dempsey - Frederick the Great
Frederick the Great - Giovanni Martinelli
Giovanni Martinelli - Lafayette
Lafayette - Charles G. Dawes
Charles G. Dawes - Charles Darwin
Charles Darwin - Simon Bolivar
Simon Bolivar - Marshall Jofre
Marshall Jofre - Nicola the magician
Nicola the magician - Andrew Carnegie
Andrew Carnegie - Robert Tristram Coffin, Poet
Robert Tristram Coffin, Poet - William Ewart Gladstone
William Ewart Gladstone - Otto von Bismarck
Otto von Bismarck