- A Birch-bark Canoe
In many parts of the world savage people have learned to build light frames over which they have stretched the best material available to them. The Indians of North America commonly utilize birch bark. - Initial Letters extracted from the “Rouleau Mortuaire” of St. Vital, Twelfth Century
- Fragment of an engraved and stamped Binding in an unknown Material
- Ferdinand I., Brother of Charles V
- Greek Greaves
- The Apostles in the Garden of Gethsemane
- A Bishop’s Crozier, which appears to be of Italian manufacture. (Fourteenth Century)
- Doorways of the Hôtel de Sens, at Paris
- The Holy Family
- F
- The Virgin and Infant Jesus
- The Prophet Isaiah
- The Holy Virgin, St. George, and St. Donat
- The Castle of Vincennes, as it was in the Seventeenth Century
- A Knight armed and mounted for War
- Etruscan Helmets
- Border taken from the Bible called Clement VII.’s. (Fourteenth Century.)
- A Greek Helmet 2
- Divider
- W4
- T4
- Triangular Saxon Harp of the Ninth Century
- Arms and Armour
- Frame 2
- The Toxodon
The skeleton of a gigantic extinct rat-like animal - the Toxodon - from the Argentine, South America. Length from the snout to the tail, nine feet. - Fac-simile of a page of the Psalter of 1459
- The Holy Virgin
- Arms of the Stone Period 2
- Fac-simile of the fifth Page of the first Xylographic Edition of the 'Ars Moriendi'
- A Greek Helmet 3
- Fac-simile of the Inscription Ex libris, &c., in the beginning of a Manuscript
- Clovis the First and Clotilde his Wife
- Votive Crown of Suintila, King of the Visigoths from 621 to 631
- The Swarm spirit
- Design of a Caligraphic Ornament taken from a Charter of the University of Paris
- Writing of the Fifteenth Century, after the First Page of a Breviary
- W
- A loaf of bread
- Bird 2
- An Egyptian Boat of the 5th Dynasty
The double mast, shown in this drawing, was in common use in Egypt about 3000 B. C. It is occasionally to be seen on native boats in the Orient to-day. - Border taken from a Book of the Gospels of the beginning of the Eleventh Century. In the Royal Library, Munich
- Tomb of Dagober
- A Peruvian Balsa
These “boats” are really rafts made of reeds. - Ancient Church of St. Paul-des-Champs, at Paris, founded, in the Seventh Century
- A 13th-Century English Ship
The Viking influence is still easily traceable in this ship, but the forecastle and the sterncastle have put in their appearance. Also the hull is heavier than and not so sharp as in the earlier Viking ships. - The Virgin and Child
- Interior of the Palace of the Alhambra, at Granada
- A 3
- A Ship on the Ways
While a ship may look large on the water, she looks gigantic when on land. The great hulls and the collection of scaffolds and machinery in a shipyard are always a source of surprise to the visitor who is unfamiliar with the construction of ships. - Interior of a Printing-office in the Sixteenth Century
- Owl
- Marriage of Louis XII. and Anne of Brittany
- Roman Soldiers
- Basilica of Constantine, at Trèves
- Cloister of the Abbey of Moissac, Guyenne. (Twelfth Century.)
- A Knight entering the Lists
- Bird 3
- Interview between Francis I. and Henry VIII
- Last Judgment
- Large Painted Initial Letter in a Manuscript in the Royal Library, Brussels