- Marshall Foch
Marshall Foch - Lorado Taft
Lorado Taft - Lafayette
Lafayette - Josef Lhevinne
Josef Lhevinne - John Masefield
John Masefield - Jack Dempsey
Jack Dempsey - Giovanni Martinelli
Giovanni Martinelli - Georges Clemenceau
Georges Clemenceau - Garet Garrett
Garet Garrett - Frederick the Great
Frederick the Great - Charles G. Dawes
Charles G. Dawes - Charles Darwin
Charles Darwin - Booth Tarkington
Booth Tarkington - Benjamin Disraeli
Benjamin Disraeli - Andrew Carnegie
Andrew Carnegie - Boy
Boy - Profile of lady
Profile of lady - Lady
Lady - Young woman
Young woman - Haughty look from a young woman
Haughty look from a young woman - Lady
Lady - Three Girls
Three Girls - Young lady with wide-open eyes
Young lady with wide-open eyes - Sideways glance
Sideways glance - A Niam-niam girl
The social position of the Niam-niam women differ materially from what is found amongst other negroes in Africa. The Bongo and Mittoo women are on the same familiar terms with the foreigner as the men, and the Monbuttoo ladies are as forward , inquisitive and prying as can be imagined; but the women of the Niam-niam treat every stranger with marked reserve. Whenever I met any women coming along a narrow pathway in the woods or on the steppe, I noticed that they always made a wide circuit to avoid me, and returned into the path further on; and many a time I saw them waiting at a distance with averted face until I had passed by. - Hair fashions 1834 England
Hair fashions 1834 England - hair dressing which were in vogue in 1832
hair styles which were in vogue in 1832 - different styles of hair-dressing fashionable in 1830-31
different styles of hair-dressing fashionable in 1830-31 - different modes of dressing the hair.in 1835
different modes of dressing the hair.in 1835 - Hairstyles for 1837
Hairstyles for 1837 - bonnets worn in 1830
bonnets worn in England in 1830 - A Woman's Head
A woman’s head From the original drawing by Edwin Howland Blashfield - Alton B. Parker
Alton B. Parker - Sherlock Holmes
Sherlock Holmes - Omar Khayyam
Omar Khayyam - Caricature of Joseph Smith
Joseph Smith - Euclid
Euclid - Andrew Carnegie
Andrew Carnegie - Robert Burns
Robert Burns Caricature - Study of a head
Study of a head - Paul Robin
Paul Robin (1837–1912) was a French educator and scientist. - Negro Types
Some “anthropologists” have even indulged in a speculation whether mankind may not have a double or treble origin; the negro being descended from a gorilla-like ancestor, the Chinese from a chimpanzee-like ancestor, and so on. These are very fanciful ideas, to be mentioned only to be dismissed. It was formerly assumed that the human ancestor was “probably arboreal,” but the current idea among those who are qualified to form an opinion seems to be that he was a “ground ape,” and that the existing apes have developed in the arboreal direction. - Mongolian Types
Possibly they mingled to a certain extent. There is little to prevent our believing that they survived without much intermixture for a long time in north Asia, that “pockets” of them remained here and there in Europe, that there is a streak of their blood in most European peoples to-day, and that there is a much stronger streak, if not a predominant strain, in the Mongolian and American races. - Julius Cæsar
It is the custom of historians to treat these struggles with extreme respect. In particular the figure of Julius Cæsar is set up as if it were a star of supreme brightness and importance in the history of mankind. Yet a dispassionate consideration of the known facts fails altogether to justify this demi-god theory of Cæsar. Not even that precipitate wrecker of splendid possibilities, Alexander the Great, has been so magnified and dressed up for the admiration of careless and uncritical readers. - Heads of Australoid Types
Heads of Australoid Types - Caucasian Types
But it is this study of skull shapes which has led many ethnologists to divide the Caucasian race, not, as it was divided by Huxley, into two, the northern blonds and the Mediterranean and North African dark whites or brunets, but into three. They split his blonds into two classes. They distinguish a northern European type, blond and dolichocephalic, the Nordic; a Mediterranean or Iberian race, Huxley’s dark whites, which is dark-haired and dolichocephalic, and between these two they descry this third race, their brachycephalic race, the Alpine race. The opposite school would treat the alleged Alpine race simply as a number of local brachycephalic varieties of Nordic or Iberian peoples. The Iberian peoples were the Neolithic people of the long barrows, and seem at first to have pervaded most of Europe and western Asia. - Woman in hat
Woman in hat - Man with Moustache
Man with Moustache - The Gilded Youth
- The Actor manager
- The Baritone
- 004
- The Reviewer
- King Leopold
- The Music-Hall Comedian
- Horn Headdress
The horn-shaped head-dress appears in no pictorial documents or monuments older than the reign of Henry IV. In a volume entitled "Jougleurs et Trouvères," by M. Jubinal, is a satire on horned head-dresses, under the title of "Des Cornetes," from a MS. in the Bibliothèque Royale at Paris, of the beginning of the fourteenth century. In this poem it appears that the Bishop of Paris had preached a sermon directed against extravagance in women's dress, their horns and the bareness of their necks. "If we do not get out of the way of the women we shall be killed; for they carry horns with which to kill men." - Curls
Young lady with curls - i 189
- Lady
Lady in Hat - Woman with hat