- 1585 - 1620
- 1725-1750
- 1797
- 1798
- 1798
- 1798
- 1799
- 1800
- 1806
- 1810
- 1811
- 1813
- 1828-1836
- 1830-1840
- 1840-1860
- 1845 - 1855
- A Cafe Chantant
- A Contest with the Longbow
A Contest with the Longbow - A Drive in a Whiskey
- A game of Emigrette
- Alfred d Orsay
Alfred d Orsay - An absent desert - the Cromwell Road
An absent desert - the Cromwell Road - An appointment at the Cafe des Tuileries
- Ancient Britons
The country we live in is a large island, called BRITAIN. It is divided into two parts : the northern part is now named SCOTLAND, and the southern part, ENGLAND. At first there were no houses, gardens, or fields, such as we see now; but most of the island was covered with great forests and marshes. The people who lived in it were called BRITONS, and were wild, ignorant savages. In summer they went about naked ; and in winter they clothed them-selves with the skins of the wild beasts which they killed in hunting. Their hair was allowed to grow very long, and they stained their bodies of a blue colour, to frighten their enemies. They ate acorns and other wild fruits, and lived in caves, or in huts made of branches of trees covered over with mud. These were generally built together in little villages in the midst of forests. Their time was chiefly spent in hunting in the woods, or in fishing. For the latter, they used small boats called coracles, made of wicker-work covered with skins. They were often at war with each other, and fought with a rude kind of spear and arrows, of which the heads were made of sharp pieces of stone. The Britons were divided into many tribes. Each tribe had a chief, who led them in battle, and ruled over them in time of peace. - And transform long-haired students into members of the institute
- And you believe the guides
- Anne of Austria
engraved by W. Greatbach from a Print by Masson, after P. Mignard - Around some stately dignitary
- At Bruant's
- At the Black Cat
- At the Jardin de Paris
- At the Moulin Rouge
- At the Races on the Champ de Mars
- Augustine Preaching before Ethelbert
In the year 596 Augustine with forty other priests landed in Kent. The name of the king of that part was Ethelbert, whose wife Bertha was a Christian. Ethelbert allowed Augustine to preach before him in the open air ; and very soon he saw how wrong it was to worship idols, and was baptized in the Christian faith. The Britons soon followed the good example shown them by Ethelbert, and gave up their false gods, and became Christians. - Ball Costume 1825
Ball Costume 1825 - Beasts at the zoo
Beasts at the zoo - Benjamin D’Israeli
Benjamin D’Israeli - Bodice types. 1700-1725
- Bodice types. Period 1690-1720
- Boot shapes. Charles I to 1700
- Burdett, Hume and O'Connell
Burdett, Hume and O'Connell - Cap shapes. Period Henry VIII
- Caps - Saxon and Norman types
- Cardinal De Richelieu
Engraved by Bourgeois. - Charles I
- Citizen of Early tudor or Louis XI Period
Citizen of Early tudor or Louis XI Period - Citizens Dress of 1545
Citizens Dress of 1545 - Cock and Pie, Drury Lane
- Collar and Bodice types. Period Charles I
- Collar and Bodice types. Period Charles I to 1660
- Cossack Encampment on the Champs-Élysées
- Costume - Fifteenth century, 1st half
- Costume - Fifteenth century
- Costume notes, 1770-1780
- Costume notes, 1790-1800
- Costume notes, 1811-1812
- Costume notes, 1814-1816
- Costume notes. Period 1670-1690
- Costume of Manservant - reign of Louis XIII
Costume of Manservant - reign of Louis XIII - Costume type. 1695-1710