#
| Thumb |
Description |
Linked to |
401 |
 | Outer Coffin of Henetawy
|
|
402 |
 | Page of the Planctus
|
|
403 |
 | Paris besieged by Rolf Ragnvaldsson
|
|
404 |
 | Paul Boudreau and his Family
|
|
405 |
 | Paul I. Brindle
|
|
406 |
 | Penny of Henry III
|
|
407 |
 | Penny or 'kopje' with portrait of John I
|
|
408 |
 | Pépin the Short
|
|
409 |
 | Pharaoh Amenhotep III
|
|
410 |
 | Pharaoh Apries
|
|
411 |
 | Pharaoh Necho II
|
|
412 |
 | Pharaoh Osorkon I
|
|
413 |
 | Pharaoh Osorkon II
|
|
414 |
 | Pharaoh Pinudjem I
|
|
415 |
 | Pharaoh Psusennes I
|
|
416 |
 | Pharaoh Rameses II at Abu Simbel
|
|
417 |
 | Pharaoh Rameses III
|
|
418 |
 | Pharaoh Rameses XI
|
|
419 |
 | Pharaoh Seti I
|
|
420 |
 | Philip I of Namur
|
|
421 |
 | Philip II takes up the Cross King Philip Augustus takes the Oriflamme at Saint-Denis and receives the bourdon and pannetière of a pilgrim from the hands of his uncle William, archbishop of Rheims and legate of Pope Clément III, before his departure for Crusade, 24 June 1190.
|
|
422 |
 | Philippa of Hainault
|
|
423 |
 | Phillip III meeting with Pope Martin IV
|
|
424 |
 | Pierre Boudreau and Prisille Haché
|
|
425 |
 | Plaque in Leiden Memorializing Rev. John Robinson
|
|
426 |
 | Plinny Brit Goodell
|
|
427 |
 | Pons, Count of Toulouse
|
|
428 |
 | Pope Calixtus II
|
|
429 |
 | Pope Gregory V
|
|
430 |
 | Probably Cleopatra II
|
|
431 |
 | Ptolemy VI Philometor
|
|
432 |
 | Pvt. Marcus Harris Ward (1836-1864)
He sent home this drawing done in during his basic training.
|
|
433 |
 | Queen Boudicca
|
|
434 |
 | Rachel and Ernie Boudreau
|
|
435 |
 | Radbot of Klettgau
|
|
436 |
 | Ramon Berenguer I and his wife, Almodis de la Marche They are counting out 2,000 ounces of gold coins as payment to William Raymond and Adelaide, count and countess of Cerdagne, in return for their rights over Carcassonne in 1067.
|
|
437 |
 | Raymond of Burgundy Raymond in a miniature of the Tumbo A cartulary in the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, the chief bishopric of his dominion.
|
|
438 |
 | Rebecca (Stoner) Fleck Wife of Gabriel Fleck
|
|
439 |
 | Rebecca (Stoner) Fleck Wife of Gabriel Fleck
|
|
440 |
 | Rev John “Apostle to the Indians” Eliot
|
|
441 |
 | Richard Coulter Welty
|
|
442 |
 | Richard Dushion III on his Wedding Day (At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.)
|
|
443 |
 | Richard Koontz Brindle
|
|
444 |
 | Richard M. Dushion II and Kathryn Anne Carrell on their Wedding Day (At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.)
|
|
445 |
 | Richard W. Whelpley
|
|
446 |
 | Rob and Jen Roy
|
|
447 |
 | Robert Asha Brindle
|
|
448 |
 | Robert Crawford, the husband of Mary Fleck
|
|
449 |
 | Robert I, Count of Dreux
|
|
450 |
 | Robert II, King of France
|
|
451 |
 | Robert Roy about 2000
|
|
452 |
 | Robert W. Roy
|
|
453 |
 | Rose Haché
|
|
454 |
 | Roxy M. (Ward) Swan
|
|
455 |
 | Rufus H. Eddy
|
|
456 |
 | Rufus Westley Goodell
|
|
457 |
 | Russian Imperial Badge Port-Arthur Fortress Metal
|
|
458 |
 | Ruth (Gallagher) Sullivan
|
|
459 |
 | Ruth (Ward) Woodman with two grandsons
|
|
460 |
 | Ruth Melinda (Delvey) Harding
|
|
461 |
 | Saint Enravota
|
|
462 |
 | Saint Ludmilla
|
|
463 |
 | Saint Margaret of Scotland
|
|
464 |
 | Samuel W. Brindle in 1965, holding his granddaughter, Mary Anne Lewis
|
|
465 |
 | Samuel Warren Dewy Brindle
|
|
466 |
 | Sapor III, King of Persia (383-388)
|
|
467 |
 | Sarah A. (Berry) Flanders (1829-1893)
|
|
468 |
 | Sarah Jane "Sallie" Fleck Lotz
|
|
469 |
 | Sarah Jane Gladwin
|
|
470 |
 | Sarah Osgood, wife of Milton C. Woodman
|
|
471 |
 | Saxons Invading Britian
|
|
472 |
 | Schloss Kyburg
|
|
473 |
 | Seal of Alan IV
|
|
474 |
 | Seal of Andrew II, 1224
|
|
475 |
 | Seal of King John
|
|
476 |
 | Seal of Philip II Augustus
|
|
477 |
 | Seal of Phillip the Fair
|
|
478 |
 | Seal of Theobald III
|
|
479 |
 | Seleucus IV Philopator
|
|
480 |
 | Serbian Royal Red Cross Order of St. Sava
|
|
481 |
 | Shannon at Birth
|
|
482 |
 | Shannon in 2010
|
|
483 |
 | Shannon Roy in 2015
|
|
484 |
 | Shirley (Woodman) Buell and Ruth (Ward) Woodman
|
|
485 |
 | Shirley and Harry Buell
|
|
486 |
 | Shirley F. Roy
|
|
487 |
 | Shirley Woodman in her Girl Scout Uniform
|
|
488 |
 | Sidney Orville Sherwin, seated.
|
|
489 |
 | Signature of Ephraim Smith
|
|
490 |
 | Signature of John Stone
|
|
491 |
 | Signature of Simon Wolcott
|
|
492 |
 | Signature of Thomas Greenwood
|
|
493 |
 | Signature of Thomas Pierce
|
|
494 |
 | Silhouette of Bradford White
|
|
495 |
 | Silver bowl Kavadh I, seated on his throne Silver bowl showing & Khusrau of the righteous soul & (Khusrau I Anushirvan, 531-579) seated on his throne, or his father Kavadh I (488-496). This became a model representation of kingship for Byzantine art and from there, in Carolingian art. Below the king is shown in a typical scene of the mystical hunter of mouflon (Leningrad: Hermitage).
|
|
496 |
 | Sisters Ellen and Julia Reardon c 1933
|
|
497 |
 | Solidus of Sigebert III
|
|
498 |
 | St Alkmund's Church, Derby, England The church was built in 1846 by the architect Henry Isaac Stevens[4] at a cost of £7,700 on the site of several earlier churches stretching back to the 9th century[5] all named after Saint Alkmund. It was constructed in ashlar stone in a gothic style. Inside the church was an architectural triumph, with high pillars and stone arches. The aisle and nave were wide and the church featured a chancel. The steeple was supported by flying buttresses.
The foundation stone was laid on 6 May 1844[1] and the completed church was opened on 15 September 1846 by the Bishop of Lichfield.[2]
Construction of the church caused controversy among the Roman Catholic citizens of Derby. The 216-foot (66 m) spire was built directly in the line of sight of the Catholic St Mary's Church and, for many years, the Anglican church was referred to as "The Church of the Holy Spite". Derby painter Joseph Wright was re-buried in St Alkmund's churchyard upon completion of the building in 1846.
The church was surrounded by many two- and three-storey townhouses that lined the square and churchyard. Other buildings of interest included The Lamb Inn, opened in 1835, which featured its own brewery; a gabled sweet shop dating from the 17th century sited on the corner of the square and Bridgegate; and several shops dating to medieval times, located at the Queen Street entrance to the yard. The area was described by Sir Nikolaus Pevsner as 'A revival of 18th century unmatched, a quiet oasis.'[6]
During the mid-1950s it was discovered that the load-bearing wood in the steeple was warping and rotting. This led to the steeple being 'capped' and the top 20 feet were removed for restoration work to be done. This was done due to structural weaknesses being found in the stonework and woodwork in the steeple itself. Plans were laid down to replace the top of the steeple, but was never completed. Along with the top of the spire, several of the gothic detailing pieces on the roof were also removed, but no reasons for this were ever given.
|
|
499 |
 | St-Joseph's Church, Chambly
|
|
500 |
 | St. Bartholomew's Church, Corham, England The area occupied by St. Bart’s church has been a centre of Christian worship for over one thousand years. There was certainly a Saxon church on this site long before the Normans invaded England in 1066 A.D. It is recorded that William the Conqueror granted the church at Corsham to the Abbey of St. Stephen at Caen in Normandy. The present building dates from the middle of the twelfth century, but there have been many changes and additions since then, ending with a major restoration in Victorian times.
|
|